QueerTheory.com
Books Used Books Book Series News Music Film Travel Shopping

 

Petrolio by Pier Paolo Pasolini

Petrolio 
by Pier Paolo Pasolini

Pier Paolo Pasolini (1922 - 1975)

Online Resources
Films:  Pier Paolo Pasolini
Texts:  Pier Paolo Pasolini
Texts:  Queer Histories
Texts:  Authors Index
Films:  Queer History
Used Books:  LGBT Studies
 

 

Free Newsletter

Roman Poems (Pocket Poets Series, No. 41)

Names Index:
A
B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
| Authors Index | Scholars Index |

A Certain Realism : Toward a Use of Pasolini's Film Theory and PracticeA Certain Realism : Toward a Use of Pasolini's Film Theory and Practice by Maurizio Sanzio Viano

Pier Paolo Pasolini (1922-1975) was arguably the most complex director of postwar Italian cinema. His filmsAccattone, The Canterbury Tales, Medea, Salcontinue to challenge and entertain new generations of moviegoers. A leftist, a homosexual, and a distinguished writer of fiction, poetry, and criticism, Pasolini once claimed that "a certain realism" informed his filmmaking. Masterfully combining analyses of Pasolini's literary and theoretical writings and of all his films, Maurizio Viano offers the first thorough study of Pasolini's cinematic realism, in theory and in practice. He finds that Pasolini's cinematic career exemplifies an "expressionistic realism" that acknowledges its subjective foundation instead of striving for an impossible objectivity. Focusing on the personal and expressionistic dimensions of Pasolini's cinema, Viano also argues that homosexuality is present in the films in ways that critics have thus far failed to acknowledge. Sure to generate controversy among film scholars, Italianists, and fans of the director's work, this accessible film-by-film treatment is an ideal companion for anyone watching Pasolini's films on video.

"Superb. . . . In its careful handling of the biographical and the autobiographical, the factual and the speculative, this book will become a model for how studies of individual directors should be done in the future." -- Peter Brunette, author of Roberto Rossellini

Click here for more info

TeoremaTeorema (1968)

Pasolini's fusion of Marxism, sex and religion stars a very young and attractive Terence Stamp as a divine stranger who enters the household of a bourgeois family and profoundly affects their lives when he seduces the mother, father, son, daughter and maid. A surreal and sensual allegory with the Pasolini postulation that the ruling class can be undermined and destroyed by the one thing that it cannot control -- sex. Despite winning the Grand Prix at the Venice Film Festival in 1968, the film was publicly denounced by Pope Paul VI and banned as obscene in Italy. Pasolini was arrested, but in a celebrated trial he was acquitted of all charges. (Italian with English subtitles)

Click here for more info

Solo:  120 Days of SodomSalo:  120 Days of Sodom (1975)

Pasolini's adaptation of the Marquis de Sade's 18th century novel places the action during WWII in Italy, where Fascist rulers brutalize and debauch 16 adolescent girls and boys. Pasolini's last film, soundly condemned at the time of its release by Italian censors.

Pasolini's last film is an unbelievably bleak and depressing vision of the human condition which shocked audiences with its brutally graphic scenes of sexual degradation and oppressive violence. The director transposes the Marquis de Sade's novel about the debauching of the four pillars of 18th century French Society to World War II Italy. A group of older Fascists (men and women) bring together a group of teenagers of both sexes and subject them to all kinds of sexual, mental and physical degradation. (Italian with subtitles)

Click here for more info

Pier Paolo Pasolini Filmography:
Accattone (1961)
Mamma Roma (1962)
Rogopag (1962)
La Rabbia (1963)
Comizi D'Amore (1964)
Love Meetings (1964)
The Gospel According to St. Matthew (1964)
Sopraluoghi in Palestina (1964)
The Hawks and the Sparrows (1965)
Le Streghe (The Witches) (1966)
Oedipus Rex (1967)
Capriccio all' Italiana (1968)
Notes for a Film on India (1968)
Teorema (Theorem) (1968)
Love and Anger (1969)
Medea (1969)
Porcile (Pigsty) (1969)
Appunti per un Romanzo dell' Immondeza (1970)
The Decameron (1970)
Notes for an African Orestes (1970)
The Canterbury Tales (1971)
Dodici Dicembre (1972)
Arabian Nights (1973)
Salo, 120 Days of Sodom (1975)

    

Paolo Pier Pasolini

This site offers an in-depth biography in English, Spanish, French, German, Italian.

Excerpt:

Pasolini said among other things: on me there's the sign of Rimbaud, or of Campana or also of Wilde, whether I like or not, whether the other people agree or not...

  

The Art of Pier Paolo Pasolini

From kara art 

The site has two sections:

The Permanent Exhibition section presents some of his paintings / drawings and also critical texts.

The second section is dedicated to the cultural death issue including important texts written especially for this site by Giuseppe Zigaina, as well as other articles (English, Italian, German), which are the contribution of further authors.

   

The Art of Pier Paolo Pasolini

In The Decameron, Pasolini appeared as a disciple of the early Renaissance artist Giotto, commissioned to paint a fresco for the church in a Neapolitan town. This is how Pasolini looked on himself: as an artist, and as a disciple of past masters. In his films, images of Renaissance art are constantly evoked through visual cues...

 

Agony and Ecstasy:  A legend in life and death, Pasolini made excess into art

By Deborah Hochberg, Metro Times

Italian director Pier Paolo Pasolini (1922-75) was renowned as a controversial poet, novelist and essayist before he even considered picking up a movie camera. His unique sensibility was shaped by the mystical Christianity practiced by peasants in the region of Friuli, where he spent his youth, as well as Marxism, particularly the variant espoused by Antonio Gramsci, founder of the Italian Communist Party. And then there’s the well-known fact of his homosexuality, which he sometimes experienced as some strange kind of excess grafted onto his being...

  

Pier Paolo Pasonlini

From encarta.msn.com

Italian motion-picture director and writer of poems, short stories, novels, and essays, best known for his controversial cinematic portrayals of individuals in conflict with mainstream society. Born in Bologna, Italy, Pasolini published poems at the age of 19, while studying at the University of Bologna. His endorsement of Communism during World War II (1939-1945) prompted his arrest in 1943 by German forces then occupying Italy. Pasolini later escaped from a German prison camp and settled in the countryside of Friuli, Italy. In 1950 he moved to Rome, where he wrote poems, essays, and stories influenced by theories of class struggle in the work of Italian philosopher Antonio Gramsci...

    

Click here for Resource Query Click HERE for Sources for the Biographies

Names Index:
A
B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
| Authors Index | Scholars Index |

up

 

Click Here for Queer History Books

| Home | Bookshop | CFP | Add URLEmporium |

Associate PartnershipTLA Video Affiliate
In Association with the Philosophy Research Base at  erraticimpact.com
Web Design Copyright © 2000 by queertheory.com