It’s 1958, the year of the death of Pius XII, the most clerical and authoritarian of modern pontiffs. In a boarding school, the handsome, rich and rebellious Angelo Transeunti arrives. He is a devotee of the “overman“. With his arrival, the school life is shattered – the boy puts into action plan to deride and destroy the institution against the deputy rector, Father Corazza. According to his theory by which power needs fear, he stages, with help from a group of students under the influence of his charisma, a grotesque and blasphemous show, which wreaks havoc in the school’s apparent order. Meanwhile, the school’s servants – marginalised human relics being exploited beneath a veneer of Christian charity – led by Salvatore, decide to rebel and go on strike. Transeunti has the evil prefect Diotaiuti expelled and turns the school upside down: dressed up as a dog he goes around the place carrying on his shoulders the corpse of a priest, Mathematicus. The boarders rebel under his lead… but in the end everything remains unchanged. –Venice Film Festival
Born in Piacenza in 1939 from a family of the upper middle-class, he attended the Liceo of the Barnabite Fathers; in 1959 he abandoned his studies in philosophy at the Catholic University in Milan and enrolled at the Centro Sperimentale di Cinematografia (The National Film School in Rom). Then, in London, he followed courses in cinema at the Slade School of Fine Arts, graduating with a thesis on Antonioni and Bresson. He made his debut in full-length films with Fist in His Pocket (I pugni in tasca) (1965), considered one of the best first works in the history of the Italian cinema. In this great film, the rebellious tendency of the young is skilfully expressed in terms of revolt against family and normality, through the story of a young man who decides to exterminate two members of his own family. His next film, China is Near (La Cina è vicina) (1967), marked a turn towards comedy, in the clash between bourgeois hypocrisy and the vain ambition of the fake revolutionaries… read more
The visions are from the 1970s, the adaptations from the mid-19th century.