Pier Paolo Pasolini on DVD
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Blindside:
Sorry if that last remark sounded dismissive, but it was late and I knew you could dig it up if you knew where to look.
The best book to look through would be Pasolini's Heretical Empiricism, which has a number of essays on a wide variety of subjects, including semiotic film theory. The book does a good job of collecting disparate material to demonstrate the coherence of Pasolini's diverse preoccupations, even if his writing style is rather idiosyncratic. Lutheran Letters is less useful (as it is mostly journalistic work), but might give you some contextual insights.
As for Pasolini's place in the grand scheme of semiotic film theory, I actually think he's wrongly overlooked. Bob Stam has an essay on semiotics in the Braudy & Cohen collection in which he sides with Umberto Eco's dismissal of Pasolini's cinesemiotics, but I think the argument is wrong-headed. If anything, I think Pasolini is a far better practitioner of semiotic film theory for the simple reason that he employs it as a metaphor and doesn't claim (like most others do) that cinema can be described, in any literal way, as a language (which, it seems to me, it plainly is not). Furthermore, Pasolini's film semiotics is particularly interesting in that it arises out of a very specific historical/national/political/linguistic moment: specifically, the homogenization of Italian dialects into the singular (and bourgeois) Florentine "language." For this reason, The Decameron is a particularly key work in Pasolini's career because, on the one hand, it revives the Neapolitan dialect, and on the other, it asserts naked bodies as a kind of brute, proletarian, colloquial "response" to the chaste, homogenized, and bourgeois film "language" of contemporary cinema as he saw it.
This is getting a bit ahead of the game, but if you're interested in reading an essay that I wrote on Pasolini's semiotic film theory (in a context similar to your own), feel free to PM me.
Sorry if that last remark sounded dismissive, but it was late and I knew you could dig it up if you knew where to look.
The best book to look through would be Pasolini's Heretical Empiricism, which has a number of essays on a wide variety of subjects, including semiotic film theory. The book does a good job of collecting disparate material to demonstrate the coherence of Pasolini's diverse preoccupations, even if his writing style is rather idiosyncratic. Lutheran Letters is less useful (as it is mostly journalistic work), but might give you some contextual insights.
As for Pasolini's place in the grand scheme of semiotic film theory, I actually think he's wrongly overlooked. Bob Stam has an essay on semiotics in the Braudy & Cohen collection in which he sides with Umberto Eco's dismissal of Pasolini's cinesemiotics, but I think the argument is wrong-headed. If anything, I think Pasolini is a far better practitioner of semiotic film theory for the simple reason that he employs it as a metaphor and doesn't claim (like most others do) that cinema can be described, in any literal way, as a language (which, it seems to me, it plainly is not). Furthermore, Pasolini's film semiotics is particularly interesting in that it arises out of a very specific historical/national/political/linguistic moment: specifically, the homogenization of Italian dialects into the singular (and bourgeois) Florentine "language." For this reason, The Decameron is a particularly key work in Pasolini's career because, on the one hand, it revives the Neapolitan dialect, and on the other, it asserts naked bodies as a kind of brute, proletarian, colloquial "response" to the chaste, homogenized, and bourgeois film "language" of contemporary cinema as he saw it.
This is getting a bit ahead of the game, but if you're interested in reading an essay that I wrote on Pasolini's semiotic film theory (in a context similar to your own), feel free to PM me.
- devlinnn
- Joined: Wed Nov 03, 2004 3:23 am
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The Gospel According to St. Matthew - in color
The Gospel According to St. Matthew - in color
Pasolini was right - there is no God. Released March 27th from Legend (never heard of these guys), it claims to be restored - black and white or color version I've no idea. (Move if need be to the worst covers ever thread).
- domino harvey
- Dot Com Dom
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- Ashirg
- Joined: Wed Nov 03, 2004 9:10 am
- Location: Atlanta
The Gospel According to St. Matthew - in color
I wonder if it will go under Family Classics, Cult/Horror Classics or Shirley Temple.The Gospel According to St. Matthew - in color
Legends Films, Inc.
- sevenarts
- Joined: Tue May 09, 2006 7:22 pm
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It says right at the top of the cover that it includes both versions.devlinnn wrote:Pasolini was right - there is no God. Released March 27th from Legend (never heard of these guys), it claims to be restored - black and white or color version I've no idea. (Move if need be to the worst covers ever thread).
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- Joined: Wed Feb 02, 2005 9:49 am
if the b&w version is in fact restored (in other words, if it looks better than the Waterbearer version), I'll be pleasantly surprised. I'm not holding my breath, though.sevenarts wrote:It says right at the top of the cover that it includes both versions.
EDIT: nevermind, after poking around on their Web site, my fears have been erased. Anyone who considers Shirley Temple a "significant artist" obviously has their priorities in the right place.
- MichaelB
- Joined: Fri Aug 11, 2006 6:20 pm
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Will it be anamorphic this time? They keep dropping the ball on that one!Barmy wrote:I hear the restored color version of Citizen Kane is next.
(In all seriousness, I once saw a "critic" on a DVD mag get so incensed that Pinocchio - yes, the 1940 Disney film - wasn't in widescreen that he mentioned it twice, along with marking down the video as being unacceptably poor!)
- colinr0380
- Joined: Mon Nov 08, 2004 4:30 pm
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Will this be like that colorized Reefer Madness DVD and include a commentary from Mike Nelson, the guy from Mystery Science Theater?sevenarts wrote:It says right at the top of the cover that it includes both versions.
EDIT: That reminds me of the announcement over the tannoy in Gremlins 2 - "showing soon: Casablanca in colour - and with a happier ending!"
Last edited by colinr0380 on Fri Jan 19, 2007 8:05 am, edited 1 time in total.
- tryavna
- Joined: Wed Mar 30, 2005 4:38 pm
- Location: North Carolina
I hate to pay any compliments to a company that makes money off of revising other directors' visions, but Legend does indeed restore the films that they colorize. And the B&W versions look pretty darn good when they're done with them. (Apparently, they restore the original B&W first before they apply the color.) The only title I've seen was their recent release of the 1935 Cooper/Schoedsack She, and it was a vast improvement over the earlier Kino release (now OOP).The Gospel According to St. Matthew - in color
Of course, it's worth pointing out that, so far, Legend only pursues PD films. (I didn't know that the Pasolini was PD, though.)
For a rather amusing read -- or a mindf--k if you never knew just how many people actually love colorized movies -- take a look at the thread for Legend over at DVD Talk! Just trawling through that tripe makes you realize how good this forum is.
- MichaelB
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I guess their disc of "She" is better than the "Things to Come" release, which many had high hopes for. I was going to give it a whirl, but (according to comments on the Amazon page for the DVD) not only is it NOT the anticipated longer cut of the film (and shorter than the listed running time by 8 minutes), but apparently it looks substantially worse than the Image disc, which is the ONLY watchable version I've seen to date.
- tryavna
- Joined: Wed Mar 30, 2005 4:38 pm
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I'm in the same boat as you, Unclehulot. I'd read the same reviews, and to play it safe, I only rented She. I'm wondering if Network, who are scheduled to release Things to Come in the UK in March, is going to do any better.unclehulot wrote:I guess their disc of "She" is better than the "Things to Come" release, which many had high hopes for. I was going to give it a whirl, but (according to comments on the Amazon page for the DVD) not only is it NOT the anticipated longer cut of the film (and shorter than the listed running time by 8 minutes), but apparently it looks substantially worse than the Image disc, which is the ONLY watchable version I've seen to date.
- Barmy
- Joined: Mon May 16, 2005 3:59 pm
3 Oscarâ„¢ nominations? Imdb just lists a nom for best costumes. God knows today this would never get a costume nomination--there aren't any sequins.
Edited: it got nominated for music and art direction as well.
Edited: it got nominated for music and art direction as well.
Last edited by Barmy on Thu Jan 18, 2007 7:26 pm, edited 1 time in total.
- colinr0380
- Joined: Mon Nov 08, 2004 4:30 pm
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I had never realised Clouzot's daughter had allowed The Wages of Fear to be colorizedtryavna wrote:For a rather amusing read -- or a mindf--k if you never knew just how many people actually love colorized movies -- take a look at the thread for Legend over at DVD Talk!
- Kinsayder
- Joined: Mon Oct 10, 2005 6:22 pm
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- Darth Lavender
- Joined: Sun Aug 13, 2006 2:24 pm
They are doing the right thing, I think, by finally releasing this film in a (hopefully) high-quality, remastered presentation (I'll be waiting to hear the reviews, but it seems entirely possible that this will be worth getting.)i think they are doing the right thing. anyway, the original black and white version is also in the disc/set. there is no need for this issue. much ado about nothin.
As for the colorised version; speaking for myself, I'm not the least bit 'offended' by the concept, but I am immensely *amused* by the concept of someone colorising such a classic "art-house" film. It really does sound like a joke, and I think it's quite normal to mock the decision.
- Ashirg
- Joined: Wed Nov 03, 2004 9:10 am
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So how come they had money to colorize it, but no money to dub it as well? If they wanted to market this to the lowest common denominator, shouldn't it also be in English so we don't have to read those awful subtitles.Darth Lavender wrote:They are doing the right thing, I think, by finally releasing this film in a (hopefully) high-quality, remastered presentation (I'll be waiting to hear the reviews, but it seems entirely possible that this will be worth getting.)i think they are doing the right thing. anyway, the original black and white version is also in the disc/set. there is no need for this issue. much ado about nothin.
As for the colorised version; speaking for myself, I'm not the least bit 'offended' by the concept, but I am immensely *amused* by the concept of someone colorising such a classic "art-house" film. It really does sound like a joke, and I think it's quite normal to mock the decision.
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I would also recommend Heretical Empericism and Lutheran Letters. His unfinished novel Petrolio is very much worth reading too.
I guess I'm lucky cause I have a lot of Pasolini: Oedipo Re and Porcile on laserdisc, and goods DVD of Accatone, Gospel, Decameron and Cantebury Tales, plus tapes of [iMama Roma and Arabian Nights and Salo on DVD.
Love and Anger recently came out on DVD and it has The Paper Flower Sequence - one of his most beautiful expressions of his love for Ninetto. A friend also burned me a copy of Cappricio Italiano which has Che Cosa Sono Nuovole? -- my all-time favorite Pasolini film.
Looking for a good Teorema.
It was my exceedingly good fortune to have met Pasolin when he visited New York in 1966 and again in 1968. Remarkably sweet, and elegant man. Utterly without fear.
It's no surprise that they had to run over him repeatedly with the car.
I guess I'm lucky cause I have a lot of Pasolini: Oedipo Re and Porcile on laserdisc, and goods DVD of Accatone, Gospel, Decameron and Cantebury Tales, plus tapes of [iMama Roma and Arabian Nights and Salo on DVD.
Love and Anger recently came out on DVD and it has The Paper Flower Sequence - one of his most beautiful expressions of his love for Ninetto. A friend also burned me a copy of Cappricio Italiano which has Che Cosa Sono Nuovole? -- my all-time favorite Pasolini film.
Looking for a good Teorema.
It was my exceedingly good fortune to have met Pasolin when he visited New York in 1966 and again in 1968. Remarkably sweet, and elegant man. Utterly without fear.
It's no surprise that they had to run over him repeatedly with the car.
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- jesus the mexican boi
- Joined: Fri Nov 05, 2004 5:09 am
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Actually, I can add a bit more... If anyone hasn't checked it out yet, Facets put out a documentary (R1) called Whoever Says the Truth Shall Die. Old Dutch (I believe?) documentary on Pasolini's life and work, but focuses more specifically on his murder/cover-up.
I never realized Laura Betti (she plays the maid in Teorema) was so active in trying to find the truth in relation to Pasolini's death!
Long story short, I definitely recommend this documentary, you even get to hear his poem about Godard read (although not by Pasolini:( )
I never realized Laura Betti (she plays the maid in Teorema) was so active in trying to find the truth in relation to Pasolini's death!
Long story short, I definitely recommend this documentary, you even get to hear his poem about Godard read (although not by Pasolini:( )