$30.00
PIGSTY (PORCILE) Pier Paolo Passolini (1969); DVD
Arthouse DVD
Two stories form the whole: 1) one young man (Pierre Clementi) who has killed his parents and ate their flesh walks around from village to village after being sentenced to perish in the vast desert. The only thing he’ll be able to do is to kill whoever show up on his way and then eat them too. That’s the story of the young cannibal, marvelously presented without words (he only has one spoken line repeated towards the ending). Beautiful cinematography, scary and thrilling sequences in it. 2) this story, very talky and quite messy brings Jean-Pierre Léaud (who was also in “Week End”) as the son of an German industrialist who can’t connect with people, preferring the company of the pigs (“Porcile” translates to “Pigsty”). He tries some involvement with a girl (Anne Wiazemsky) but with no luck. And there’s his father (Alberto Lionello) business deals with a former Nazi of name Herdhitze (Ugo Tognazzi) also businessman but a rival of his, who hasn’t aged through the war years after successful plastic surgeries. Foggy speeches about life, politics, mankind are dissolved into this other story and it’s very hard to form a whole idea.