Encapsulating Evil | Salò, or the 120 Days of Sodom - Shocking Cinema
HTML-код
- Опубликовано: 12 апр 2021
- I hope this video illustrates to you that Salo is much more than just a shock movie. I'd love to hear what you all think about Salo in the comments down below. Don't forget to like and subscribe!
Social
Patreon: / thekinocorner
Twitter: / thekinocorner
Letterboxd: letterboxd.com/TheKinoCorner/
Instagram: / the_kino_co. .
Music by:
Shuler
Sweet Release
Script Help by
@AttarProductions
Movies Shown
Salo, or 120 Days of Sodom
The Decameron
The Canterbury Tales
Arabian Nights
Idiocracy
Mac and Me
Accatone
Nights of Cabiria
They Live
The Blob
Avengers Endgame
Where you can watch/purchase Salo: www.criterion.com/films/532-s...
Pasolini predicted modern Hollywood with this movie
Pasolini predicted modern society with this movie.
If someone remade this movie today it would have to take place on Epstein's island.
Have you seen the recent video about the making of The Wizard of Oz, how abused the actors were (a couple were scarred/damaged for life) and how hellish the production was? I'd say Hollywood has always been a shady place, who knows what horrors are going on right now that they're good at hiding.
Please don't the film is disgusting there are no redeeming features in it whatsoever it's horrible i fat to the ground total of 15 minutes of it and i started to be sick don't watch it with a family it could do somebody to be traumatized
@@stuartashbourne-martin9629 anyone who needs to be told salo shouldn't be viewed on family night is immune to any advice what a bit of Genius... goes in the same box as no Christmas Eve screening of irreversible...
Great video. There are 2 interesting things that you don't mention.
1. The suicide of the piano player. She never hurt or molested anyone throughout the movie, but realized that by standing aside while all of this went on, she was complicit. She was guilty.
2. In the final scene, the boys turn the radio dial and it shuts off the dark theme music from the murder scene. As we all often do, they used entertainment to block out the horrors that were happening around them, choosing a light distraction so they don't have to face their own reality. Inside this bubble, they relax and dance, but the murders are still happening.
I understood the piano player as the archetypal artist, who's love of life and craft is coopted and relegated to the backgrounds of the ruling class and therefore in essence destroyed.
1. The suicide of the piano player is an homage to the final scene of Roberto Rossellini's "Germany Year Zero" (1947), in which the main character, a boy named Edmund, jumps to his death through a hole in a bombed out building after having euthanized his father with poison in his tea and watching the coffin being carried away. Most of Pasolini's films (e.g., "Mamma Roma", "Uccellacci e uccellini", "Teorema") contain at least one unmistakable homage to Rossellini, who was his cardinal influence as a filmmaker.
2. My Italian professor, who wrote a chapter discussing "Salo" in one of his books, has stated that the last line of dialogue between the two boys dancing ("What's your girlfriend's name?" "Margarethe") is in fact a reference to Paul Celan's famous poem about the Nazi holocaust, "Todesfuge" ("The Death Fugue", written 1945; published 1948). In Celan's poem, the couplet "your golden hair Margarete / your ashen hair Sulamith" allegorically juxtaposes a character from Goethe's "Faust" ("Margarete", the woman seduced by Faust, representing Germany) with the woman mentioned in the Song of Songs in the Hebrew Bible ("Sulamith", the woman seduced by King Solomon, representing the Jews).
Indeed one who do not oppose evil is evil. Remember this there is only 2 ways, good and evil. There is no middle ground in universe.
@@mladendenni7062 there isn't?
@@declanp1 There is no good and evil.
It was great to learn that the actors were actually having a good time while filming and weren't traumatized or disturbed by it. Salo is often put in disturbing film lists alongside Cannibal Holocaust and that director treated the cast and extras very poorly.
RIP Ruggero Deodato tho
Yeah that's still freaky they was enjoying themself while acting this out.
Some of the actors were minors. Minors he committed certain acts with...
@Youngdagger well I’m not sure if that’s any better but still doesn’t seem like behavior that should be normalized :/
You can see some of them laughing and I can imagine how entertaining some of this would’ve been to film. Imagine a group of actors nude in this mansion, eating chocolate fudge off the floor.
The worst part of all of this is that his whole point collapsed on itself when he himself decided to sexually involve himself with minors-if he’s criticizing such behavior he can’t partake in it. It may have a message, but when I think of how it must feel to be one of the young men he groomed knowing he’s made this, it would feel like a mockery.
particularly since he was using his position of power as a schoolteacher to indulge his pederast urges. there is definitely some projection going on in this film.
An underrated take, honestly. The second I heard that information really made my ears perk up. What a shame that such debauchery would be committed to film and yet underwritten by the actions of a perverted creator.
Unfortunately I feel a film like this cant be made without some serious projection.
He did that therefore he has no say
That's maybe because most pedophiles are delusional about what they are doing. They tend to see themselves as the good ones "caring" for the kids. Some may know they are monsters and don't care about it. But a lot of them don't feel guilt and construct their own system of "values" around their deeds. Like stalkers that think they have a relationship with their victims.
One thing I find super interesting is how none of the cast really got how dark the movie was because they were all friends so the bad acts were nullified in their minds.
Makes you wonder how intense the other two films in the trilogy of death would've been
Along with "Teorema" (1968) and "Porcile" (1969), "Salò" arguably qualifies as the belated third installment in such a trilogy.
He did write the basis of a novel that was planned to be the second movie of the planned trilogy which was to be called "Petrolio", a criticism of state-sanctioned corporatism and Italy's foreign policy. It seems to have included three orgies and a scene where newborns were murdered in bizarre "bourgeois" rituals, so it would've been... worse.
I read somewhere that the second instalment of the Trilogy of Death was going to be about the life of Giles de Rais. I wonder also what the trilogy would have been like.
There's a whole trilogy 😳😳😳😳😳😳
@@lobi4836 "Planned". He died before going onto the second phase.
this is a very informative video about Salo, will definitely watch it with my family tonight.
Hey family we are gonna watch a wacky comedy about some rich guys who get into some shenanigans.
I just got it for movie night at my grandmas old folks home.
@nappyheadfredo
He meant it as a joke, not literally. XD
Greaaaaaat and expect ass whippin later
@robelle - I really hope you did watch it with your family, although I suspect you're joking.
;-)
The extremities depicted in this film are indicative of what kind of trajectory people like Epstein were looking to facilitate and what is more than likely happening now somewhere.
Totally that's exactly what I think epsteins island was a modern day salo
Yeah, really makes you think when they won't release Ghislaine Maxwell's "list". Gotta be a lot of biiiiiig names on that list
@@demyx0067 And almost certainly, The Donald is at the head of the list.
@@SkepticalSteve01 Why?
@@SkepticalSteve01 Hollywood is trans
The most disturbing thing about the film is that there are people like this that exist/ have existed.
I’ve never wanted to watch but NOT watch a movie so badly lol truly conflicting
Just Watch it and get it out of your system
Ikr l. I hate it.
same i wanna watch it without watching jt
Right, I’m gonna need any crazy torture scenes edited out, at least one of which I already saw in the trailer wtf
Just power through it, cry if you need to, pretty sure I did. It lingers a bit, but I def think it was worth it
Anyway, this is one of the very few movies I've seen that actually made me lose sleep. I haven't read 120 Days of Sodom, but I've read enough de Sade that I recognized his voice in the movie. The Marquis de Sade is the only author I've ever read who genuinely made me think that the world was a worse place because his writing exists, and made me feel like a worse person for having read it. This movie captures a similar unsettling feeling of grim despair. It's Hell on Earth. It shows you that evil is real. And I don't ever want to sit through it again.
I listened to the audio version of it. And I truly believe that de Sade is one of the grossest people to live. What’s worse is that his “book” is considered a historical treasure in France. (free on RUclips for those who want to torture themselves.)
Nice to hear others being deeply disgusted by that horrifying 'artwork'. I tend to believe a disgust for that is a sign of goodness.
Almost felt like 'finding God' after watching, despite being lifelong atheist. Will have to shake off the memory of it.
@@Counterreactionary I'm not kidding about this, but you can actually sort of read de Sade's work as a negative argument for the existence or necessity of God. It's like looking at a painting of a room that contains everything except the chair in the middle. When you notice the negative space, the chair is clearly expressed by its absence.
@@Thagomizer Interesting thought. I'm willing to believe that, but I don't understand the analogy: Is the chair here a metaphor for God and does the abscense of it indicate its obsoletion?
@@Counterreactionary The negative space where the chair should be is chair-shaped, so you have a clear notion of what's missing. I'm not sure that's the best metaphor, but you felt it yourself, going by your reaction to the movie. Maybe it's a really a variant of the moral argument, or the argument from desire?
The whole point of this movie collapses on it's own when you hear that he had sexually involved himself with a minor. At that point, it just ends up being a sick fantasy of a sexual deviant, since he himself was complicit in such behavior.
God damn, who fucking cares?
Yeah i'm not really interested in a film about the ugliness of the modern world and the corruption of power from a sexual predator.
I wouldn‘t say he got off on it, but i get your point
He had a mutual masturbation session with 16 year old boys. There was no penetration, stop acting like he was raping children. Just because you can't understand the film so you use this as reasoning doesn't make it right
Exactly. This was not based on anything mentioned, but his own evil inner workings and desires.
Great video. I read the plot on Wikipedia before watching and was totally disgusted. This helped contextualize it and make it seem more like a statement piece rather than a snuff film.
To qualify as a snuff film, the actors themselves must be actually killed irl & not the fictional characters they play in a film's fictive storyline
Great tip. I copied your idea.
Yo selfie, great to see you here, would be great to see videos on film topics from you, if you make a actual return of course.
The statement is hollow and laughable considering the director was a pederast.
This wasn’t a brave genius statement, it was a mirror for the obsessive deeply disturbed and self-serving fantasies of the director.
But that's whst he's saying...media makes abomination mainstream by saying it's a "statement ".
Salo is by far the best unwatchable movie
I basically have it memorized as a result of making this video. It lives in my head rent free
Now compare it to something equally 'unwatchable', like "Pulp Fiction", that contains no moral or socially relevant thematic intent. Passolini predicted Tarantino....
My favorite movie actually 😅
That and Requiem for a dream
@@apatheticviewer234 Interesting tastes, do you like Irreversible and come and see too?
@@Mr.Goodkat I like Enter The Void. Gaspar Noe is probably my favorite director
The director said Salo was about "The Pornography of Power". A really good way to put it and changed how I think about certain things in the real world.
I could not force myself to respect this movie or it’s creator. Some men are obsessed with exposing the dark and gritty when it’s just a mirror. They’re just looking straight into a mirror and thinking they’re geniuses
Stop being full of yourself we're all capable of these acts funny thing is that most of us would be involved if consequences didn't exist.
@@godloveszaza Not sure what you mean by “we” there. I was referencing how he was intimate with a child. I’m pretty confident I’m not capable of torturing innocent people or pdophilia. I don’t think that makes me full of myself.
You put it so well. You watch it and you can tell it's a bit too personal..
@ratking927 yet it does
@@godloveszazayou need to be put on a watchlist Jesus
"Salò" can arguably be seen as the third installment in a film trilogy about the decadent and alienating effects of a modern postindustrial consumer-capitalist civilization, after "Teorema" (1968) and "Porcile" (1969). In all three of these films, Pasolini shows the degradation and destruction of traditional art and culture, natural family and sexual relations, and authentic religious beliefs and feelings among ordinary Italians.
"authentic religious beliefs". And who makes that determination, when "religion" tends to be in the realm of the non-/irrational?
@@jnagarya519 And what makes you think that YOU get to make the determination that "religion" (the word framed in pretentious, condescending scare quotes) "tends to be in the realm of the non-/irrational"?
But getting back to the main topic, Pasolini himself tended to associate authentic religious beliefs and feelings with the spontaneous joie de vivre of pre-industrial peasants who lived a traditional way of life close to the natural elements (like the Friulians and the Calabrians once did not so long ago). This ties into Pasolini's Gramscian Marxist sympathies: peasants typically lost their ancestral faith when they became corrupted by modernity and petit bourgeois aspirations.
Ok. What does Capitalism have to do with this film? War, and the extreme over-reach of a fascist seem to be the culprit here. Can you please elaborate on how "right leaning capitalist pigs" are to blame for the atrocities here?
@@frankbooth2427 You're missing the point entirely. No one said anything about "right leaning capitalist pigs". Capitalism makes possible the advanced industrial consumer economy which modern authoritarian systems of political and social control (Communism and Fascism) effectively hijack and feed off of like mutant parasites.
While an industrialized consumer capitalist economy raises the material standard of living for large numbers of people, it also brings about a profound disruption of traditional pre-industrial relations.
Historically, this disruption tends toward an oppressive top-down over-mechanization, over-commodification and homogenization of society and culture, which causes individuals to become alienated, apathetic and atomized.
@@lysanderofsparta3708 they're always irrational.
Years ago, I drove along the sea-front of Ostia and remember seeing the bare ground, not knowing that this was where Pasolini may have been murdered. Fascinating character.
0
Had it coming. He was no different from his “libertines” in this movie except that he lacked absolute power over his prey.
@@eerkesCommitting Murder is cowardly.
@@Rage_Harder_Then_Relax Wrong sir, not murder. Justice.
@@eerkes Did he murder people and feed them shit?Didnt know that about Pasolini.
After seeing Salo', I knew Hell was a real place and I didn't want to go there! I watch a lot of "shock cinema" and usually can't wait to tell someone: "You've got to see this! It's so messed up!" This is the one I warn people off of. If someone is a little depressed, this could put them over the edge. Pasolini truly did as he was trying for. Making a film about the utter degradation and destruction of the human soul. Of all those films that people say are "cursed", this is the one that I think MIGHT be.
IMO the movie was boring and stupid
Money is evil, give me all of your money or you’re going to hell.
Obviously you've never seen "A Serbian Film" (uncut version).
I'm not exaggerating when I say it makes Salo seem like a comedy. Seriously, I'm not being hyperbolic.
@@holeymcsockpuppetye. the cut version of Serbian film was bad, but I know the uncut version was absolutely horrid, and I don’t want to watch the uncut version
Just watch Shawshank redemption afterward: faith restored
He was just as depraved. This was like a serial killer telling people killing is wrong.
There’s layers to crime. I wouldn’t say he’s *just* as depraved/bad as the evil cult
As a whole...the film is not watchable, when you see depraved men and women doing crime scenes all of the time...but Passolini had a point when fascism from the 40's could really set things in our fastfood consumerism/culture. He nailed it when it comes to what we see and suffer NOW! W.H.O ; W.E.F...all those tyrranic powers we have to deal with today! Yesteryear it was rightwing...now...
What did he do?
@@mclarsjNow, still right wing 😉
He was not depraved at all. He is known personally by many Italians in Rome and Salò and none of them claim this blind fact. Learn to seperate the artist from the artwork.
I watched this when I was eighteen and it really disturbed me. I didn't get any of the subtle points. I just suffered from the psychic assault and for years felt polluted by it.
Psychotic?
Same. The deeper meanings went right over my head.
I saw it too around High School time. Made me cynical to this day
I will forever be shocked and horrified. I've only ever seen Salo once. I agree with my fellow reviewer that the book by de Sade is 100 times worse and much more graphic and unbelievable. The old adage absolute power corrupts absolutely couldn't be more appropriate. A must see for film afficianados, but be warned.
I saw Salo on a double bill with Pigpen in the late 1970's in NYC. The audience was more grotesque than the film.
@@haha-kq6rz I can believe it.
The works of De Sade are beyond disgusting as was he. De Sades family kept it hidden for a long time before it seemed it was a fine work of literature and part of French history, those books should have been destroyed, what's even worse is that people like De Sade exsist today
That's probably why my ex was abusive. He loved that book and it warped his already fragmented mind
I've seen this film once but never had the guts to finish it. Even as a cold man, I can't even take this movie.
Thank you, this is probably the best description and breakdown of this film that I have found, I wanted to understand it without having to watch it.
This is a brilliant interpretation of the film and I had no idea about the background of the director. I now have a new appreciation for this film, thank you!
Ah yes, the most powerful business men: Hank Hill and Bald Doug Walker
now its just regular doug walker
This movie is very horrifying and a sadistic look into the darker aspect of power and greed, but the marriage scene where the rich doods marry their guards made me laugh cause it came out of nowhere. I haven't scene the actually film but I saw a review and saw the scene in it.
We saw the same review lol 😆
This is my new proudest subscription to a channel under 100k subs. I've seen Salo covered by tons of the popular movie review channels for a long time, but none have bothered to go into any actual depth beyond "haha dey eat da poopoo." You seriously deserve so much more recognition.
Saying "consumerism" a hundred times... "depth".
I believe that watching a lot of horror movies growing up contributed to the depression I experienced for years of my life. Be careful what you watch. I would never watch a film like this now. I’m amazed I’ve never seen it.
Horror movies always made me happy - I couldn't wait to see the The Wolfman 8 times or The Thing (both iterations) & many others like Dr. Jekyll & Mr. Hyde - Rosemary's Baby The Tenant - man, sorry you're on the other end of it
@@TAROTAI SLAY
What? Skill issue.
@@TAROTAI Those horror movies are simply made to terrify. Movies like these are made to stick with you, fester, linger, and disturb. This is horror because it’s reality, all true horror is based on the barbarity of our fellow man. ‘The Thing’ is nothing like A Serbian Film or 120 Days of Sodom.
I’m convinced there is definitely some link in culture you imbibe and general mood. Humans weren’t designed for the tech we have access to now. In b4 “video games Don’t create school shooters” crowd…..
It’s a moral wounding and continual loss of innocence. I sometimes meet old people and think “this guy has no idea what SawIII is and is better for it”.
Might be the best review of this film I've seen on here. Perfect!
Thank you!!!
I absolutely second that...the first time i saw the film, my sister gave it to me and it was a vhs tape...it was just disgust... i looked at it a second time on a streaming site, with a different mind, and your review just put the words that were missing for me...great review!
He just shoehorns in his idiotic hatred for "consumerism".
This is incredible. Watching it the first time, it's all shock. But listening to the dialogue, it's so much more.
I remember accidentally coming across this movie one night on TV. I was about 16 years old and it was airing on TVO at about midnight. The subtitles were in French which wasn't an issue since I am fully bilingual (English/French). I got sucked into it and although it was extremely disturbing I couldn't ignore the moralistic and philosophical questions that came to me while watching it. That was 24 years ago and only today did I find out once-and-all what the name of that film was.
It was just casually playing on tv my god lol
@@grayonthewater yeah, granted it was airing at about midnight
That was my experience too. I watched it on Spanish TV many years ago by chance. Truly disturbing.
It was on tv? I find that hard to believe
@@chickenandksivideoreviewer9739 In my case, it was. I found it very hard to stomach to say the least.
Watching this film doesn't just make you feel dirty...IT MAKES YOU FEEL LESS HUMAN!
Made me feel more human, because we’re the only evil species on Earth.
@@coleozaeta6344 Speak for yourself buddy boy... Not everyone is a degenerate.
@@coleozaeta6344some animals like dolphins are perfectly aware of the torture they subject their prey to and revel in it, we are far from the only "evil species"
I love your work. Really satisfying getting a real thorough historical take.
Really great video! I always thought of Saló as the “uh oh stinky” movie, but now I see it in a whole new light
Great job analyzing this incredible piece of art. I commonly see it placed alongside shock pieces that have nothing to say. When I finally got around to watching it, though I was still utterly disgusted; I understood it wasn't just the gross aspects the churned my stomach, it was the the themes and messages. The utter depravity of humanity, dominance and power stayed with me well beyond what the film is commonly known for. I did however not pick up on the consumerism critique, likely due to me being still pretty young when I watched it; it really just makes me love it all the more. It also warms my heart knowing that Martin Scorsese helped get the film released in America, he's a true icon of a bygone era in cinema. If one can stomach it, it would be a crime to art and cinema to not watch this before you depart this mortal coil
I recall watching this back in the late 80's and feeling quite sick through most of it. To this day i still remember how i felt watching it. Having said that, I had no idea that Passolini had been murdered.
I’ve known about this film since I was a teenager and I’m 33 now. I adore film but I’m incredibly averse to violence like this in cinema. I’m just a squeamish and sensitive person and often can’t see past brutality to accept its function in a film. However, I’m getting better (I mean, one of my favourite films is irreversible), and I can’t tell you how much I appreciate your video on this 💗I’ll definitely watch it now that I feel prepared, as I love the messages and the meaning already. Thank you!
Brilliant insights, and ooh, your cheeky coda at the end--! I saw SALÒ in a theatre, the old Silver Screen in Atlanta. I was an art-movie fiend and frequented the theatre to see such fare as RASHOMON, WR: MYSTERIES OF THE ORGANISM, and EL TOPO...but when I slid into that velveteen seat I had no idea I was strapping myself in for a personal endurance test. I'd simply heard SALÒ was an incisive study of decadence and power by an Italian director. Ye ghods, what a brain-reaming trip it was to experience it from the center of the third row on a towering screen! Thanks for your discerning teatment of a very uneasy subject to face.
I went to see this in the cinema with a friend in the 90s, after it was "unbanned" in my country. We really had no idea about it, just that it was banned and as a 19yo at the time that was enough to get me to see it.
It's 30 years later and I'm still not over it. :/
Never watch anything that you know you'll want to forget.
I'm shocked by how many commenters do not seem to know this film was based on the writing of Donatien Alphonse François aka Marquis de Sade.
@Nicko s Ikr. The film didn't shock you? 😂😂😂
The book is 100x worse
Sade can rot in hell, he was so disgusting. And talking about power, knowing that he was spared so many times due to his position and money, for example for abusing this maid, fits with the movies theme as it seems. I watched a video on him a long time ago, I know some basics about the book. I am not a fan of censor, but with him, I wouldn't have cared if they just burned it.
😂 That's what made me click as I did forget that this controversial film is connected to Marquis de Sade...
Why are you shocked? The level of literacy on RUclips tends to hover around Third Grade.
Saw it several years ago as a long term Pasollini fan my expectations were high and they weren't disappointed. Really not an easy watch though but absolutely defensible, This short video is an excellent illustration of why this film is important.
Ironically the people who made this film had a blast and apparently it was quite a wholesome and kind working environment to be apart of. Apparently the Director heard a rumor that a actress on set felt that she had been snubbed, the director took her out to dinner and their were frequent soccer ( football for everyone else) games and the director got to make up with his old mentor.
thank you for honestly explaining the meaning of this movie. i went into it a couple of hours ago completely blind out of curiosity, and the meaning about consumerism can be completely lost if you dont know the proper context behind it. plus, looking it up online, people either act as if the shock factor is the only noteworthy thing or, on the other hand, they just praise it without elaborating further. it is a really meaningful story though, and im glad that there are people out there willing to explain it more without being condescending about it lol
Yeah, buying stuff is exactly like torturing people.
Big brain take.
I have to give you a lot of respect for giving a better understanding about this film. So many people get caught up on the sex and poop eating but you actually contextualized it.
What can I say..I watched this movie about 35 years ago for the first time and this is the first time now I find a decent review for it which reveals details I did not know nutil now and appreciates this movie as it is: pure arthouse and ambitious political cinema. Great work from "The Kino Corner". I jsut distributed you channel's name to 3 of my friends you will appreciate your work as I do.
Thank you for making this!
Thank You for covering such a challenging movie!
Man gets caught doing the deed with a child. Not surprising he decided to go into film making after that
Brilliant presentation. Sad part is this is the world today and very few realise its happening.
I just watched Salo for the first time. It's so disgusting, and so beautiful. Cinematography has painterly compositions, sumptuous color palette, handheld camerawork. The mise en scene sells it and it's also beautiful paced. Truly a masterpiece, but I wanna throw up
It has its cinematographic moments, agreed, but all the rest of the film was technically worthless (editing? dubbing? syncing?). It's disgusting like a 'horror-porn' flick such as Eli Roth's Hostel, just trying to be more smart. This movie is so overrated, simply due to the dramatic fate of the director.
@@yannicschelfhout5370 Strong disagree here, from someone who wrote a dissertation on an artist (Carl Orff) under totalitarianism. Yes, there's some clumsiness in the editing and dialogue, but it's a brilliant film in its commentary.
@@andrewkohler3707 Valid remarks. And indeed, I agree with the social commentary and the consequent debate it provokes. However I think that the unnecessary esoteric dialogue is just too much, thus overshadowing its message. But again, good point!
@@yannicschelfhout5370 Thanks for the reply! I assume that "the unnecessary esoteric dialogue" you reference are those highfalutin' conversations the four fascists have in which they quote Nietzsche and (anachronistically, I believe) Klossowski and such. I find those among the less powerful sections of the film (compared the "Mangia!!", the pianist's skit with Signora Vaccari, the presentation of the blue ribbons through the end, etc.), but I think they are justified by the Brechtian framing (the Verfremdungseffekt, or "alienation effect"). It's also a stunning contrast to see these people committing the most heinous crimes and then sitting around musing about it, since it's all an exercise to them-the banality of evil.
@@andrewkohler3707 Sir, never thought I would say this, but your remarks make me contemplate watching Salò again with the philosophical background you've provided. I have watched it with an adequate understanding of the underlying themes, but it's clear you have a more complete understanding than I did. Thanks for this - Pauline Kael would be proud of your analysis! 🙂
10:58 🤣🤣🤣 i love that you used such an obscure reference that would only be known by a specific type of person that lives on youtube
Reminds me of NYC in the 70's. There was a bar that had a shit & piss pit in the basement.
I think you're referring to the Mineshaft, which I've read a great deal about. Oh boy 😳
@@rubaidaallen2764 Mineshaft was reportedly the source and inspiration of Minecraft Video Games, which have become addictive entertainment for popular consumption.
one of the most vile depictions ever put to film; and yet, the absurdist humor comes through. a bravura piece of work.
Try Human Centipede 2. Great fun.
Ty for analyzing this!
I remember watching Cradle of Filth's video 'So glad for the madness' around 2002 and being creeped out by it. Shortly after, I learned it was based on this film.
He'd absolutely be horrified by the way things are now.
fax
Why?
Congratulations, you’ve made the definitive RUclips video on Salò! Great job.
thank you for making a deeper explanation for this movie
Telling the actors their script and role only moments before recording would be a very valuable source of study for the social sciences like phycology.
Another banger, Kino
Well, thanks for this - as I've read 5/6th's of de Sade's 120 Days of Sodom, before abandoning it as I felt it was simply beyond my threshold for tastelessness and over indulgence. Possibly as a lover of classic cinema this film by Pasolini may engross me sufficiently enough to watch it until its' fruition. Thanks Kino Corner 🤓
I highly recommend the film Teorema by Pasolini. It is shocking, but not in the way Salo is. There is something seismic and terrifying underneath a calm, almost humorous surface. The ending will stick with you.
I had nightmare for days after watching this movie. Thank you for explaining it.
Thank you so much for this! I've heard so much about the controversy around Salo but never what it was actually about. While brutal and grotesque it's so apt and ahead of it's time.
The most barbaric thing here is how you wear that collar
I am very glad to have found this analysis of such an intriguing and strange movie :)
"I can only imagine the duke as Sargon of Akkad."
This made me burst out laughing.
In analyzing this, we must understand that Fascism was also against "Globalism" and "consumerism" (at least by-appearences for the last)
Fascism was an enforced globalism.
I watched this movie uncut on You Tube over 12 years ago. There used to be no commercials or censors. It's a complete mind fuck of a film. Probably, the most disturbing film of all time.
Just a like global world today!!!
this is a really great video. nicely done.
That was very interesting. I've always been curious about this movie but did not want to see it because I can't handle material like that. The summary basically told me enough.
An excellent film interpretation. Thank you.
No it's not. It's nowhere near on point.
The Marquis De Sade wrote this book I could not finish reading it, it is absolutely "f--king" mind blowing
Spot on analysis. One of my favorite pictures
Where do u find ir
well that was interesting!! never heard of any of this .. i think i've been deprived!! thxs for the vid .. i think..
Dam dude this video is beast. I still won't see the movie but at least I understand the importance behind it.
It really isnt bad visually. Yeah the feces scene is rough, but listening to the reasoning behind the feast helps.
Its boring as all hell, makes absolutely no sense, the entire time the only thing that will pass your mind will be "WTF was that supposed to be??"
I saw this film about 40 years ago as a midnight film. I was attracted to it as it was an edgy film. I had a young coworker mention it to me after all these years and I bought Blue Ray of it and watched it again. I'm glad I did. Despite how disturbing the film is, it was well made, especially the cinematography.
Wow thank you for breaking all of this down.
My opinion is that these were his fantasies. I don’t think anyone needs to understand his nor any other pervert or pedophile.
You don’t know Pasolini and you don’t understand this monument to the triumph or death as the consequence of the rot of contemporary power
A little detail I liked is how most of the paintings that can be seen hanging have a cubist or avant-garde style of sorts, which the fascists consider degenerate art
My mom and I watched this together.
We haven't spoken since.
Salo is my favorite Pasolini film, and one of the best movies of all time as it carries an important message, which you covered thoroughly in this video. I've seen it countless times and on every watch I find something new. The four libertines are all different personalities imo, The Duke acts as a sort of leader throughout, The Bishop clearly has the most anger issues, The President revels in all the nastiest perversions they do, but I find The Magistrate the most repulsive and vicious of them all. He isn't as loud or prominent as The Duke or f'd up like The President, but he does so many cruel, hateful things (the nails in the sponge cake) and remains mostly calm while doing them. All four did a great job acting, so did the women telling the stories. But apart from the victims, the guilt-ridden pianist is the only character who shows even a hint of humanity.
I enjoy Pasolini a lot. He has such a wide and prolific filmography, for example The Trilogy of Life and The Hawks and Sparrows are more light, enjoyable and even funny films. Teorema has such beautiful cinematography But at the same time Porcile and Salo prove that Pasolini had a lot of guts and wasn't afraid to get political at a time when it was kinda rare in cinema. Just like you said Salo is a black comedy, but also a grim, depressing and hopeless story of wealthy upper class people abusing their power.
I have never heard of the film or Director, its amazing to think that something like this could be made now let alone back then.
Excellent review.
I'm about to watch this for the first time tonight, but the commentary really helps frame a lot of the actions, so thank you.
Where did u find it?
Awesome vid, gonna go watch this movie
Thank you for talking about Pasolini,from Italy
I cheered for the pudding cup. Never seen your channel before but looks like I might be sticking around!
Thank you! Excellent review. I've been fascinated by this film ever since I saw it the first time 30 years ago. Like the actors themselves, I had no idea what to expect from scene to scene. The circle of shit made me physically gag. And I felt pummeled at the end. But you have convinced me that what I thought was depravity in the film is actually corruption. I'm still fascinated by the 4 madams. (doesn't the pianist commit suicide?) On one end of the spectrum are the innocents, on the other, the libertines, and in the middle, the madams. I totally agree that the film is visually stunning. Thank you for mentioning the long shots, the staged shots. They can be compared only to some of Peter Greenaway's films, IMO. They give it a feeling of depth and isolation. Seems to me I also heard the "estrangement effect" as being a theme of Brecht's. Verfremdungseffekt. Verga's straniamento would predate Brecht.
eyes wide shut kubrick died 6 days after he showed wb the final cut.
I know....I love S. Kubrick. I'm sad he's gone. He was very handsome in his youth.
@@purpledodecahedron7169 yeah he was especially good when he abused Shelley Duvall on set, making her shoot a scene over 100 times and bullying her, telling everybody to not talk to her. She would cry everyday on set until she couldn't anymore. Also how he always called her ugly and regretted casting her. Yeah, an amazing person right.
Also after his death the studio cut some of the movie out. Curious what the full movie would have shown had it not been edited.
@@corinnae.7877 he was awesome. Name a director that’s not secretly a piece of shit. We’re separating the art from the artist here bud.
@@corinnae.7877 I think he "forced" Vincent d'onofrio to shoot a scene on the bathroom (full metal jacket) probably 100% times too,so no,it wasn't personal
This was a beautiful review.
i had no business watching this movie at 14 😭
Fuck, man, you’ve just explained Pasolini into my life!
I hadn’t seen the movie before stumbling into this video of yours, but ended up watching it after 2 minutes into your explanation. Finished the movie first then returned to your essay.
Hats off to you, mate, you should charge for this kind of content! 👍🏻👌🏻
You should go back to the beginning and look at Pasolini's other films.
@@jcudal32 he took the effort to spread the word.
@@jcudal32 also, how do you know that it wasn’t him who wrote the Wikipedia article?
I didn't know that's how you made shit, I make mine for the Salo watch party another way
You're very good at this.
The movie sounds like a beautiful, thought provoking work of art. It sounds like the premise of it encapsulates is a reality we should all strive towards. Sounds like a better world
It traumatized me for years. I was too young to understand the subtexts.
has anyone ever seen The Duke and Sargon of Akkad in the same room?
😆
I remember as a kid (like 2003?) i searched through the collection of burned DVD's of my older sister.
I remember reading "120 days of sodom" on one DVD and thought it would be some documentary of sodom and gomorrha or something (i was like 12).
Man was i wrong...
The shit eating scenes and the mashed potatoes with needles in it haunt me to this day. 😅
As an Italian I couldn’t understand most of the cities’ names and even Salò sounded so weird until you mention Mussolini and my brain switched back on
I NEVER ever thought I would watch this movie in its entirety. The first time I tried to I was eating a really nice prepared ribeye steak broccoli and mashed potatoes. 20 minutes later I threw up what I had eaten and stopped the movie. I tried again watching it and I made it through the film. I really to this day find this to be the most disturbing movie I've ever seen. Its a movie I am torn to recommend, because its that dangerous. It can change your life. Some of the movie you wish you could unsee. Do I regret watching it? No. I think the message behind it all is important and needs to be known than this kind of thing exists in our lifetime. Right now somewhere in the world at this very moment this is happening. Good luck to those who choose to go forward.