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Bertolucci - When Sex Still Shocked
Course: Italian Cinema (ITA1113)
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University: University of Ottawa
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Bertolucci: When sex and politics still shocked
LIAM LACEY
The Globe and Mail
Published Tuesday, Jan. 11 2011, 4:30 PM EST
Last updated Friday, Aug. 24 2012, 3:37 PM EDT
Bernardo Bertolucci was still in his early 30s when he reached the peak of
his international fame with Last Tango in Paris, a film that has as much to do
with the sexual revolution as it does with cinema. The 1972 movie, starring
Marlon Brando as a recent widower who takes up an anonymous sexual
relationship with a soon-to-be-married young woman (Maria Schneider),
created an international furor, prompted cover stories in Time and
Newsweek, and elicited the most laudatory review of Pauline Kael's career,
when she declared it had "altered the face of an art form."
In the last three decades, Bertolucci has made a number of films that, in the
main, have been much weaker than the precocious brilliance he showed pre-
Tango. The exceptions are the sumptuous The Last Emperor (1987) which
took nine Oscars, and The Siege (1998) about an African woman in exile
(Thandie Newton) and her composer landlord (David Thewlis), who is in her
thrall.
For a real sense of what Bertolucci meant to cinema history, check out the
new retrospective showing at the TIFF Bell Lightbox this month, under the
dopey title, Fashion, Fascism and F***ing: The Films of Bernardo Bertolucci.
Of particular interest are three films Bertolucci made when he was in his 20s
- Before the Revolution, The Spider's Stratagem and The Conformist. The
son of a well-known poet and film critic, Bertolucci apprenticed with one of
his father's friends, Pier Paolo Pasolini. By his second feature, Before the
Revolution (1964), Bertolucci had clearly fallen hard for the French New
Wave.
A loose adulteration of Stendhal's The Charterhouse of Parma, Before the
Revolution follows an earnest young bourgeois man (Francesco Barilli), who
wants to be a Marxist but has a life-changing affair with his mercurial,
beautiful aunt (Adriana Asti, who was then Bertolucci's wife). It is an
intoxicating immersion in the constantly inventive, disruptive cinema of the
early sixties, and it's Bertolucci's opening statement on his lifelong struggle
to reconcile sex and politics, Freud and Marx. The influence of Jean-Luc
Godard, whose film A Woman is a Woman is the subject of a conversation in
the film, is all over Revolution. Bertolucci says he saw Godard as a father
figure. The apprenticeship abruptly ended when Godard rejected what he
saw as the ideologically suspect "individualism" of The Conformist.
More interesting as an aesthete than an ideologue, Bertolucci gets great
strength from his cultural depth, his ability to synthesize literature, music
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