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The Rage

La Rabbia di Pasolini

Italy

2008

83 Min
Color, Black and White
2.35:1
Italian, English
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DIR Pier Paolo Pasolini, Giuseppe Bertolucci

PROD Cineteca di Bologna, Giuseppe Bertolucci

SCR Pier Paolo Pasolini

CAST Giorgio Bassamo, Renato Guttuso, Giuseppe Bertolucci, Vittorio Magrelli, Pier Paolo Pasolini

ED Fabio Bianchini, Pier Paolo Pasolini, Nino Baragli

SOUND Gilles Barberis

Synopsis

With his 1963 Rabbia (Rage), Pier Paolo Pasolini sought to construct an essay film out of found footage, that would enable him to impose his extreme Marxist ideological framework on some seminal events of the 20th century, thus telling history “his way.” Using clips of such subjects as the Congo in the early 60s, atomic blasts from 1956, a celebrity visit by Sophia Loren to an eel festival, and exploitation of workers at a Fiat plant – accompanied by a prose poem, authored by Pasolini and then read by him on the soundtrack – Pasolini speaks out against bigotry, intolerance, middle-class hypocrisies, human complacency and a host of other ills that concerned him. His unusual method of juxtaposing unrelated images (and short-circuiting the audience’s reactions in this way) anticipates his contributions to Dusan Makavejev’s Sweet Movie in the mid-1970s, which employs similar associative techniques but waxes far more shocking. This film incurred a massive amount of trouble almost immediately after it went into production; its original producer, Gastone Ferrante, had the wild and antagonistic idea of turning the project into an episode film, of which Pasolini’s segment would constitute 1/2; Ferrante asked the ultra-rightwing ideologue Giovanni Guareschi to do the other half, planning to “pit” the two halves against one another in the same program. This, of course, drew ire from Pasolini, who so detested Guareschi’s philosophies that he wanted nothing to do with the conservative. The picture was nevertheless released as planned, to dismal box office draws, and thereafter disappeared for 45 years. In 2008, a second, “reconstructed” version emerged (33 years after Pasolini’s murder) and played at the Venice Film Festival, minus the Guareschi elements; retitled La Rabbia di Pasolini, it was supervised by Giuseppe Bertolucci, who receives co-directing credit with Pasolini and does a two-minute filmed introduction.

Director

Original

Pier Paolo Pasolini

Pier Paolo Pasolini was among the most controversial and provocative filmmakers ever to impact the international cinema community. Emerging during the 1960s, Pasolini broke from his New Wave-inspired peers, drawing influence for his work not from other cinematic sources but from art, literature, folklore, and music. He was also among the few directors of his era to focus less on the process of filmmaking than on his subject matter, bringing to the screen the gritty desperation of life on the fringes. Pasolini was born in Bologna, Italy, on March 5, 1922. The son of an army officer, he grew up at various points throughout the country, and began writing poetry at the age of seven. While studying art at the University of Bologna, he published his first book of poetry, Poesie a Casarsa, in 1942. A year later, he was drafted to serve in the armed forces during the waning months of World War II, and after Italy’s surrender his regiment was captured by the Germans. Pasolini soon escaped and… read more

Original

Giuseppe Bertolucci

Giuseppe Bertolucci (younger brother of Bernardo) was born in Parma, Italy in 1947. He is the director of 17 feature films, including Dolce rumore della vita (1999), Probably Love (1998), Pratone del casiliono (1996) and Troppo Sole (1994). —filmfestivals.com 

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