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Salò, or the 120 Days of Sodom

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Salò, or the 120 Days of Sodom
Original Italian theatrical release poster
ItalianSalò o le 120 giornate di Sodoma
Directed byPier Paolo Pasolini
Screenplay by
Based onThe 120 Days of Sodom
by Marquis de Sade
Produced byAlberto Grimaldi
Starring
CinematographyTonino Delli Colli
Edited byNino Baragli
Music byEnnio Morricone
Production
companies
Distributed byUnited Artists
Release dates
  • 23 November 1975 (1975-11-23) (Paris)
  • 10 January 1976 (1976-01-10) (Italy)
  • 19 May 1976 (1976-05-19) (France)
Running time
116 minutes[1]
Countries
Languages
  • Italian
  • French
  • German
  • English

Salò, or the 120 Days of Sodom (Italian: Salò o le 120 giornate di Sodoma), billed on-screen as Pasolini's 120 Days of Sodom on English-language prints[3] and commonly referred to as simply Salò (Italian: [saˈlɔ]), is a 1975 political art horror film directed and co-written by Pier Paolo Pasolini. The film is a loose adaptation of the 1785 novel (first published in 1904) The 120 Days of Sodom by Marquis de Sade, updating the story's setting to the World War II era. It was Pasolini's final film, released three weeks after his murder.

The film focuses on four wealthy, corrupt Italian libertines in the time of the fascist Republic of Salò (1943–1945). The libertines kidnap 18 teenagers and subject them to four months of extreme violence, sadism, genital torture and psychological torture. The film explores themes of political corruption, consumerism, authoritarianism, nihilism, morality, capitalism, totalitarianism, sadism, sexuality, and fascism. The story is in four segments, inspired by Dante's Divine Comedy: the Anteinferno, the Circle of Manias, the Circle of Shit, and the Circle of Blood. The film also contains frequent references to and several discussions of Friedrich Nietzsche's 1887 book On the Genealogy of Morality, Ezra Pound's poem The Cantos, and Marcel Proust's novel sequence In Search of Lost Time.

Premiering at the Paris Film Festival on 23 November 1975, the film had a brief theatrical run in Italy before being banned in January 1976, and was released in the United States the following year on 3 October 1977. Because it depicts youths subjected to graphic violence, torture, sexual abuse, and murder, the film was controversial upon its release and has remained banned in many countries.

The confluence of thematic content in the film—ranging from the political and socio-historical, to psychological and sexual—has led to much critical discussion. It has been both praised and decried by various film historians and critics and was named the 65th-scariest film ever made by the Chicago Film Critics Association in 2006.[4]

Plot

[edit]

The film is separated into four segments with intertitles, inspired by Dante's Divine Comedy:[5]

Ante Inferno / Antinferno

[edit]

In 1944, in the Republic of Salò, the fascist and Nazi-controlled portion of Italy, four wealthy men of power – the Duke, the Bishop, the Magistrate, and the President – agree to marry each other's daughters as the first step in a debauched ritual. They rule that when they get to the mansion, their daughters must be completely naked at all times. They recruit four teenage boys as collaborators (guards) in the Decima Flottiglia MAS and four young men (blackshirt soldiers), called "studs", who are chosen because of their large penises. The SS and fascist secret police (OVRA) are sent out to round up young victims, of whom nine teenage boys and nine teenage girls are picked and brought to a palace near Marzabotto. One of the boys tries to escape on the way, but is shot dead.

Circle of Manias / Girone delle Manie

[edit]

Accompanying the libertines at the palace are four middle-aged prostitutes, also collaborators, whose job it is to orchestrate debauched interludes for the men, who sadistically exploit their victims. During the many days at the palace, the four men devise increasingly abhorrent tortures and humiliations for their own pleasure. During breakfast, the daughters enter the dining hall naked to serve food. One of the studs, Efisio, trips and rapes Liana, the Duke's elder daughter, in front of the crowd, who laugh at her cries of pain. Intrigued, the President moons several slaves before prompting Efisio to perform anal sex on him while the Duke sings "Sul Ponte di perati". Signora Vaccari uses a mannequin to demonstrate to the young men and women how to properly manually stimulate a penis and one of the girls tries to escape, only to have her throat cut. Signora Vaccari continues with her story. Two victims named Sergio and Renata are forced to get married. The ceremony is interrupted when the Duke fondles several victims and prostitutes. At the end, Sergio and Renata are forced to fondle each other and the men rape them to stop them from having sex with each other. During this, the Magistrate engages with the Duke in three-way intercourse.

On another day, the victims are forced to get naked and act like dogs. When one of the victims, Lamberto, refuses, the Magistrate whips him and tortures Susanna, the President's daughter, by tricking her into eating a slice of polenta containing nails.

Circle of Shit / Girone della Merda

[edit]

Signora Maggi relates her troubled childhood and her coprophilia. As she tells her story, the President notices that one of the studs, Rinaldo has an erection and fondles him; another stud, Guido uses a female victim's hand to masturbate. She also explains how she killed her mother over a dispute about her prostitution and Renata cries, remembering the murder of her own mother. The Duke, sexually excited at the sound of her cries, begins verbally abusing her. The Duke orders the guards and studs to undress her. During this, she begs God for death and the Duke punishes her by defecating on the floor and forcing her to eat his feces with a spoon. The President leaves to masturbate. Later, at a mock wedding reception for the Magistrate and Sergio, the victims are presented with a meal of human feces. During a search for the victim with the most beautiful buttocks, Franco is picked and promised instant death. This is quickly revealed to be a cruel form of psychological abuse by the Bishop, who spares him on the promise of a far more painful death in the near future.

Circle of Blood / Girone del Sangue

[edit]

Later, there is a Black Mass-like wedding between the studs and the men of power while the latter are dressed in drag. The men angrily order the victims to laugh, but they are too grief-stricken to do so. The Pianist and Signora Vaccari tell dark jokes to make the victims laugh. The wedding ceremony ensues with each man of power exchanging rings with a stud. After the wedding, the Bishop consummates the marriage and receives intense and passionate anal sex from Guido. The Bishop then leaves to examine the captives in their rooms, where they start systematically betraying each other: Claudio reveals that Graziella is hiding a photograph, Graziella reveals that Eva and Antiniska are having a secret sexual affair. Victim Umberto is appointed to replace Ezio, who is shot to death for having sex with one of the staff and revealing himself to be a communist.

Toward the end, the remaining victims are called out to determine which of them will be punished. Graziella is spared due to her betrayal of Eva, and Rino is spared due to his submissive relationship with the Duke. Those who are called are given a blue ribbon and sentenced to a painful death, while those who have not been called, as long as they keep collaborating with the libertines, can hope to return home. The victims huddle together and cry and pray in the bathroom. They are then taken outside and raped, tortured and murdered through methods such as branding, hanging, scalping, burning and having their tongues and eyes cut out, as each libertine takes his turn to watch as a voyeur. The soldiers shake hands and bid each other farewell. The Pianist, looking out an open window, suddenly realises with horror what atrocities are being committed and, climbing out, throws herself to her death.

Two young soldiers, Bruno and Claudio, who had witnessed and collaborated in all the atrocities, dance a simple waltz together; Claudio asks the name of Bruno's girlfriend back at home, to which he replies "Marguerita".

Cast and characters

[edit]

Character names

[edit]

The Masters are known only by their respective titles (Duke, Bishop, Magistrate, President), while the various youths are either unnamed or are referred to by their actors' real names. The exceptions are Maurizio Valaguzza (Bruno), Bruno Musso (Carlo Porro), Lamberto Book (Lamberto Gobbi), Gaspare di Jenno (Rino), Marco Lucantoni (Ferruccio Tonna), Faridah Malik (Fatimah), Olga Andreis (Eva), and Dorit Henke (Doris).

Production

[edit]

Conception

[edit]

"I also realized that Sade, writing, was certainly thinking of Dante. So I began to restructure the film into three Dantesque ditches."

—Pier Paolo Pasolini about the film[6]

Pasolini's writing collaborator Sergio Citti had originally been attached to direct the intended adaptation of the Marquis de Sade's The 120 Days of Sodom.[7] During the creation of the first drafts of the script, Pasolini appealed to several of his usual collaborators, among them Citti, Claudio Masenza, Antonio Troisi and specially Pupi Avati.[8]

While collaborating with Citti on the script, Pasolini was compelled to transpose the setting of Salò from 18th-century France (as depicted in de Sade's original book) to the last days of Benito Mussolini's regime in the Republic of Salò in the spring of 1944.[9] Salò is a toponymical metonymy for the Italian Social Republic (RSI) (because Mussolini ruled from this northern town rather than from Rome), which was a puppet state of Nazi Germany.[10] While writing the script, it was decided between Citti and Pasolini that the latter would direct the project, as Citti had planned to write a separate project after completing Salò.[11] Pasolini noted his main contribution to Citti's original screenplay as being its "Dante-esque structure",[12] which Pasolini felt had been de Sade's original intention with the source material.[13]

In the film, almost no background is given on the tortured subjects and, for the most part, they almost never speak.[14] Pasolini's depiction of the victims in such a manner was intended to demonstrate the physical body "as a commodity... the annulment of the personality of the Other."[15] Specifically, Pasolini intended to depict what he described as an "anarchy of power",[16] in which sexual acts and physical abuse functioned as metaphor for the relationship between power and its subjects.[17] Aside from this theme, Pasolini also described the film as being about the "nonexistence of history" as it is seen from Western culture and Marxism.[18]

Interior design was chosen to feature paintings and art by artists such as Severini, Duchamp and Feininger. Pasolini also stated that the four fascist libertines were written as highly educated characters and were to refer to themes brought up by, among others, Blanchot, Nietzsche and Klossowski.[19]

Trilogy of death

[edit]

In contrast to his "Trilogy of Life" (Il Decameron, I racconti di Canterbury and Il fiore delle Mille e una notte), Pasolini initially planned The 120 days of Sodom and Salò as separate stories, but noting similarity between both concepts – and based on their experiences in the Republic of Salò – conceived the idea of Salò or the 120 Days of Sodom. Pasolini established that the violent scenes in Salò were symbolic and reduced the romanticism of his previous films, although knowing that once the film was premiered would be considered as damned.[citation needed] As a continuation, Pasolini planned to make a biographical film about the life of child murderer Gilles de Rais, but was murdered himself before Salò's release.

Casting

[edit]

Initially, Ninetto Davoli was chosen to play Claudio, a young collaborationist, but due to legal problems he had to decline, the role being replaced by Claudio Troccoli, a young man who had a similarity to Davoli in his first films. Pupi Avati, being the writer, is not officially accredited also due to legal problems. Most of the actors of the cast, although they were natural performers, were non-professionals with minimal or no prior on-camera acting experience. Many of them were models, cast for their willingness to appear naked on-screen.

Franco Merli was considered like a prototype of the Pasolinian boy. Ezio Manni remembers during filming: "The same with Franco Merli, the guy chosen for having the most beautiful butt. When they reward him by holding the gun to his head, he suddenly protested, he couldn’t handle that scene. And the assistant director had to go and give him a hug."[20] [clarification needed]

Pasolini regular Franco Citti was to play one of the soldiers' studs, but he did not appear. Laura Betti was also going to play Signora Vaccari, but also because of legal problems and prior commitments to Novecento declined the role, though she doubled the voice of Hélène Surgère in post-production.[citation needed]

Uberto Paolo Quintavalle (the Magistrate) was a writer; he knew Pasolini working on the newspaper Corriere della Sera. He was chosen for the role because he had all "the characteristics of a decadent intellectual".[21]

Aldo Valletti (the President) was a friend of Pasolini from the time of Accattone. Giorgio Cataldi (the bishop), another friend of Pasolini, was a clothes seller in Rome.[20]

Filming

[edit]

Several outdoor scenes were filmed in Villa Aldini,[22] a neoclassical building on the hills of Bologna. The interiors were shot in Villa Sorra near Castelfranco Emilia.[23] The noble hall of the building and the courtyard were filmed in the Cinecittà studios. The town on the Reno replaces the fictional location in Marzabotto.

Villa Sorra

The shooting, carried out mainly in the 16th-century Villa Gonzaga-Zani in Villimpenta in the spring of 1975, was difficult and involved scenes of homophilia, coprophagia and sadomasochism. The acts of torture in the courtyard caused some of the actors to suffer abrasions and burns.[24] Actress Hélène Surgère described the film shoot as "unusual", with nearly 40 actors being on set at any given time, and Pasolini shooting "enormous" amounts of footage.[25] She also noted the mood on the set as "paradoxically jovial and immature" in spite of the content.[26] In-between working, the cast shared large meals of risotto and also had football games played against the crew of Bernardo Bertolucci's Novecento, which was being filmed nearby.[27] It also marked the reconciliation between the then 34-year-old Bertolucci and his old mentor after several disagreements following Pasolini's criticism of Last Tango in Paris (1972) and his failure to defend it from drastic censorship measures.[28]

During production, some reels were stolen and the thieves demanded a ransom for their return. Using doubles, the same scenes were reshot but from a different angle. At the trial for Pasolini's murder, it was hypothesized that Pasolini was told the film reels were discovered in Ostia Lido. He was led there by Pelosi, the accused, and fell victim to an ambush, where he was murdered.[29]

Post-production

[edit]

Musical score

[edit]

The original music corresponds to Ennio Morricone interpreted at the piano by Arnaldo Graziosi. Other non-original music was Carl Orff's Carmina Burana in Veris leta facies at the nearly end of the film during Circle of Blood. Other music was several Frédéric Chopin's pieces Preludes Op.28 nº 17 and nº4 and Valses Op. 34 nº 2 in La minor.[citation needed]

Dubbing

[edit]

Like most Italian films of the time, Salò was shot MOS (without direct sound), with all dialogue and foley effects dubbed in post-production. The controversy surrounding the production dissuaded the actors playing the Masters to return to loop their lines, so they were all re-dubbed by other (uncredited) actors. French actress Hélène Surgère (Vaccari) had her dialogue dubbed by Laura Betti.

Alternative endings

[edit]

Pasolini was undecided on what type of conclusion the film should have, to the point of having conceived and shot four different endings: the first was a shot of a red flag in the wind with the words "Love You", but it was abandoned by the director because he thought it "too pompous" and "prone to the ethics of psychedelic youth", which he detested.[30] The second showed all the actors, other than the four gentlemen, the director and his troupe perform a wild dance in a room of the villa furnished with red flags and the scene was filmed with the purpose of using it as a background scene during the credits, but was discarded because it appeared, in the eyes of Pasolini, chaotic and unsatisfactory.[30] Another final scene, discovered years later and which was only in the initial draft of the script, showed, after the torture's end, the four gentlemen walk out of the house and drawing conclusions about the morality of the whole affair.[31] Finally, keeping the idea of dance as the summation of carnage, Pasolini chose to mount the so-called final "Margherita", with the two young blackshirts dancing.[30]

Release

[edit]

Salò premiered at the Paris Film Festival on 23 November 1975, three weeks following Pasolini's death.[32] In Italy, the film was initially rejected for screening by the Italian censorship, but received approval on 23 December 1975.[33] The approval, however, was withdrawn three weeks after the film's Italian release in January 1976 and it was formally banned.[33][34] Worldwide distribution for the film was supplied by United Artists.[35] In the United States, however, the film was given a limited release via Zebra Releasing Corporation on 3 October 1977.[36]

Censorship

[edit]

"Sadomasochism is an eternal characteristic of man. It existed during de Sade's time, and it exists now. But that's not what matters most...The real meaning of the sex in my film is as a metaphor for the relationship between power and its subjects."

Pasolini on the film's depiction of sex, 1975.[17]

Salò has been banned in several countries, because of its graphic portrayals of rape, torture and murder—mainly of people thought to be younger than eighteen years of age. The film remains banned in several countries and sparked numerous debates among critics and censors about whether or not it constituted pornography due to its nudity and graphic depiction of sexual acts.[37]

The film was rejected by the British Board of Film Censors (BBFC) in January 1976. It was first screened at the Old Compton Street Cinema Club in Soho, London in 1977, in an uncut form and without certification from BBFC secretary James Ferman; the premises were raided by the Metropolitan Police after a few days. A cut version prepared under Ferman's supervision, again without formal certification, was subsequently screened under cinema club conditions for some years. In 2000, in an uncut form, the film was finally passed for theatrical and video distribution in the United Kingdom.[38]

The film was not banned in the United States and received a limited release in October 1977; it was, however, banned in Ontario, Canada.[39] In 1994, an undercover policeman in Cincinnati, Ohio, rented the film from a local gay bookstore and then arrested the owners for "pandering". A large group of artists, including Martin Scorsese and Alec Baldwin, and scholars signed a legal brief arguing the film's artistic merit; the Ohio state court dismissed the case because the police violated the owners' Fourth Amendment rights, without reaching the question of whether the film was obscene.[40]

It was banned in Australia in 1976 for reasons of indecency.[41] After a 17-year-long ban, the Australian Classification Board passed the film with an R-18+ (for 18 and older only) uncut for theatrical release in July 1993. However, the Australian Classification Review Board overturned this decision in February 1998 and banned the film outright, for "offensive cruelty with high impact, sexual violence and depictions of offensive and revolting fetishes". The film was then pulled from all Australian cinemas. Salò was resubmitted for classification in Australia in 2008, only to be rejected once again.[42] The DVD print was apparently a modified version, causing outrage in the media over censorship and freedom of speech. In 2010, the film was submitted again and passed with an R18+ rating. According to the Australian Classification Board media release, the DVD was passed due to "the inclusion of 176 minutes of additional material which provided a context to the feature film." The media release also stated that "The Classification Board wishes to emphasise that this film is classified R18+ based on the fact that it contains additional material. Screening this film in a cinema without the additional material would constitute a breach of classification laws."[43] The majority opinion of the board stated that the inclusion of additional material on the DVD "facilitates wider consideration of the context of the film which results in the impact being no more than high."[44] This decision came under attack by FamilyVoice Australia (formerly the Festival of Light Australia), the Australian Christian Lobby and Liberal Party of Australia Senator Julian McGauran,[45] who tried to have the ban reinstated, but the Board refused, stating "The film has aged plus there is bonus material that clearly shows it is fiction."[46][47] The film was released on Blu-ray Disc and DVD on 8 September 2010.[48][49]

In New Zealand, the film was originally banned in 1976. The ban was upheld in 1993. In 1997, special permission was granted for the film to be screened uncut at a film festival. In 2001, the DVD was finally passed uncut with an 'R18' rating.[50]

Reception

[edit]

The review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes reports a 70% approval rating based on 40 reviews, with an average rating of 6.70/10. The site's consensus reads, "Salò, or the 120 Days of Sodom will strike some viewers as irredeemably depraved, but its unflinching view of human cruelty makes it impossible to ignore."[51]

Director Michael Haneke named the film his fourth-favorite film when he voted for the 2002 Sight and Sound poll. Director Catherine Breillat and critic Joel David also voted for the film.[52] David Cross, Gaspar Noé, and Korn frontman Jonathan Davis have named it one of their favorite films.[53][54][55] Rainer Werner Fassbinder also cited it as one of his 10 favorite films.[56] A 2000 poll of critics conducted by The Village Voice named it the 89th-greatest film of the 20th century.[57] Director John Waters said, "Salo is a beautiful film...it uses obscenity in an intelligent way...and it's about the pornography of power."[58]

The film's reputation for pushing boundaries has led some critics to criticize or avoid it; the Time Out film guide, for example, deemed the film a "thoroughly objectionable piece of work", adding that it "offers no insights whatsoever into power, politics, history or sexuality."[59] TV Guide gave the film a mixed review awarding it a score of 2.5/4, stating, "despite moments of undeniably brilliant insight, is nearly unwatchable, extremely disturbing, and often literally nauseous".[60]

Upon the film's United States release, Vincent Canby of The New York Times wrote, "Salo is, I think, a perfect example of the kind of material that, theoretically, anyway, can be acceptable on paper but becomes so repugnant when visualized on the screen that it further dehumanizes the human spirit, which is supposed to be the artist's concern."[36] In 2011 Roger Ebert wrote that he owned the film since its release on LaserDisc but had not watched it, citing the film's transgressive reputation.[61] In 2011, David Haglund of Slate surveyed five film critics and three of them said that it was required viewing for any serious critic or cinephile. Haglund concluded that he still would not watch the film.[62]

Jonathan Rosenbaum of the Chicago Reader wrote of the film: "Roland Barthes noted that in spite of all its objectionable elements (he pointed out that any film that renders Sade real and fascism unreal is doubly wrong), this film should be defended because it 'refuses to allow us to redeem ourselves.' It's certainly the film in which Pasolini's protest against the modern world finds its most extreme and anguished expression. Very hard to take, but in its own way an essential work."[63]

Home media

[edit]

The Criterion Collection first released the film in 1993 on LaserDisc, following with a DVD release in 1998.[64] In 2011, The Criterion Collection released a newly restored version on Blu-ray and DVD in conjunction with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer as a two-disc release with multiple interviews collected on the accompanying second disc.[65]

Critical analysis

[edit]

Salò has received critical analysis from film scholars, critics and others for its converging depictions of sexual violence and cross-referencing of historical and sociopolitical themes. Commenting on the film's prevalent sexual themes, horror film scholar Stephen Barber writes: "The core of Salò is the anus, and its narrative drive pivots around the act of sodomy. No scene of a sex act has been confirmed in the film until one of the libertines has approached its participants and sodomized the figure committing the act. The filmic material of Salò is one that compacts celluloid and feces, in Pasolini's desire to burst the limits of cinema, via the anally resonant eye of the film lens."[33] Barber also notes that Pasolini's film reduces the extent of the storytelling sequences present in de Sade's The 120 Days of Sodom so that they "possess equal status" with the sadistic acts committed by the libertines.[66]

Pasolini scholar Gian Annovi notes in the book Pier Paolo Pasolini: Performing Authorship (2007) that Salò is stylistically and thematically marked by a "link between Duchamp's Dada aesthetics and the perverse dynamics of desire", which, according to Annovi, became artistic points of interest for Pasolini in the early developments of Salò.[67]

Dallas Marshall for Film Inquiry wrote in an article from 2021 that "Salò is his [Pasolini's] strongest diatribe against consumerism",[68] and other critics [69] have brought up that the film is to be seen as symbolism; a metaphor for the modern society, capitalism, and especially consumerism, i.e how "those in power can make people consume crap (ads, commercials, etc) and those of the people who resist die, and the majority passively obeys and goes along with the system, and a few will collaborate with the rulers". The Film Inquiry article also mentions this metaphor: "Much like the citizens of fascist Italy and Nazi Germany, the prisoners were eating up the bullshit of dictators. But it goes deeper than that because one of the aspects of modern society that Pasolini had a great disdain for was mass consumerism. The man viewed consumerism, especially that of processed foods, to be pesticide on the human soul and eating literal excrement. He yearned for the days of classical beauty and good food that nourished the body. He viewed the modern world as a perversion and was thoroughly disgusted with its trajectory."[68] The BBFC notes that the film "is intended as a critique of both fascism and consumerism".[70]

Legacy

[edit]

Salò has earned a reputation among some film scholars for being the "sickest film of all time",[71][72] with some citing it as an early progenitor of the extreme cinema subgenre, alongside the American film The Last House on the Left (1972).[73]

Film scholar Matthias Frey notes that the cross-section between the film's thematic content and graphic visuals has resulted in it being considered both a horror film as well as an art film:

[Films like Salò], which are usually considered by critics as 'works' by the 'artists' ... might be received in practice also by individuals who watch Saw or Hostel or any 'popular' or cult horror film.[74]

In 1979, Akiyoshi Umekawa attempted to reenact scenes from the film during a combination bank robbery and mass murder.

In 2006, the Chicago Film Critics Association named it the 65th-scariest film ever made.[4]

In 2010, the Toronto International Film Festival placed it at no. 47 on its list of "The Essential 100 films".[75]

In 2008, British opera director David McVicar and Swiss conductor Philippe Jordan produced a performance of the Richard Strauss opera Salome (1905) based on the film, setting it in a debauched palace in Nazi Germany, for the Royal Opera House in London, with Nadja Michael as Salome, Michaela Schuster as Herodias, Thomas Moser as Herod, Joseph Kaiser as Narraboth, and Michael Volle as Jokanaan. This performance was recorded by Jonathan Haswell and later that year was released on DVD by Opus Arte.[76]

The Nikos Nikolaidis film The Zero Years (2005) has been compared to Salò.[77]

The film is the subject of the documentary Salò: Fade to Black (2001) written by Mark Kermode and directed by Nigel Algar.[78]

An exhibition of photographs by Fabian Cevallos depicting scenes which were edited out of the film was displayed in 2005 in Rome.[citation needed]

The film's performances by its teenage victims is the subject of Reunion; Salò[79] (1998), an art installation by British artist Adam Chodzko.

Radu Jude's 2021 film Bad Luck Banging or Loony Porn references Pasolini's process of casting actors for Saló in one of its segments.[80][81]

Italian filmmaker Giuseppe Bertolucci released the documentary Pasolini prossimo nostro (2006) based on an interview with Pasolini done on the set of Salò in 1975. The documentary also included photographs taken on the set of the film.[citation needed]

The buttock inspection scene was referenced by Yves Tumor on their music video for "God Is a Circle".[82]

References

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  1. ^ "Salò, or the 120 Days of Sodom (18)". British Board of Film Classification. Retrieved 27 March 2018.
  2. ^ a b "Salò o le centoventi giornate di sodoma (1975)". British Film Institute. Archived from the original on 30 March 2016. Retrieved 4 April 2016.
  3. ^ "Salò, or the 120 Days of Sodom Blu-ray". DVDBeaver. Retrieved 22 May 2016.
  4. ^ a b Chicago Film Critics Association (October 2006). "Top 100 Scariest Movies". Filmspotting. Archived from the original on 17 January 2008. Retrieved 21 February 2009.
  5. ^ Taskale, Ali Raza (2016). Post-Politics in Context. Routledge. p. 59. ISBN 978-1-317-28249-5.
  6. ^ Maurizio Massa. Saggio sul cinema italiano del dopoguerra (in Italian). Lulu Press. Retrieved 7 February 2016. {{cite book}}: |archive-url= requires |archive-date= (help)
  7. ^ Pasolini, Biett & Davoli 2002, (05:25).
  8. ^ Giubilei, Franco (11 February 2015). "Pupi Avati: io che scrissi 'Salò', non-l'ho mai visto fino in condo". La Stampa Spettacoli (in Italian). Retrieved 4 October 2017.
  9. ^ Wells 2008, p. 127.
  10. ^ Annovi 2017, p. 41.
  11. ^ Pasolini, Biett & Davoli 2002, (05:22).
  12. ^ Pasolini, Biett & Davoli 2002, (05:29).
  13. ^ Pasolini, Biett & Davoli 2002, (05:38).
  14. ^ Kerner, Aaron (5 May 2011). Film and the Holocaust: New Perspectives on Dramas, Documentaries, and Experimental Films. Bloomsbury Publishing. pp. 61–. ISBN 978-1-4411-0893-7.
  15. ^ Pasolini, Biett & Davoli 2002, (07:38).
  16. ^ Pasolini, Biett & Davoli 2002, (07:47).
  17. ^ a b Pasolini, Biett & Davoli 2002, (07:08).
  18. ^ Pasolini, Biett & Davoli 2002, (08:12).
  19. ^ Bachmann, Gideon; Pasolini, Pasolini (December 1975). "Pasolini on de Sade: An Interview during the Filming of the 120 Days of Sodom". Film Quarterly. 29 (2): 39–45. doi:10.2307/1211747. JSTOR 1211747.
  20. ^ a b Sciarra, Sergio (28 February 2007). "Pasolini e gli altri, dall'anti-inferno privato ai gironi di Salò" (PDF). il Riformista. Archived from the original (PDF) on 24 October 2016.
  21. ^ Hart, Kylo-Patrick R., ed. (2009). "Homosexuality and/as Fascism in Italian Cinema". Mediated Deviance and Social Otherness: Interrogating Influential Representations. Cambridge Scholars Publishing. p. 246. ISBN 978-1-443-80371-7.
  22. ^ Guidi, Alessandro; Sassetti, Pierluigi, eds. (2009). L'eredità di Pier Paolo Pasolini (in Italian). Mimesis Edizioni. p. 54. ISBN 978-88-8483-838-4. Archived from the original on 12 December 2017. Retrieved 5 December 2017.
  23. ^ "Location verificate: Salò o le 120 giornate di Sodoma (1975)". Davinotti (in Italian). 4 October 2008. Archived from the original on 5 October 2017. Retrieved 6 October 2017.
  24. ^ Pasolini, Biett & Davoli 2002, (01:49).
  25. ^ Pasolini, Biett & Davoli 2002, (07:14).
  26. ^ Pasolini, Biett & Davoli 2002, (18:14).
  27. ^ Gundle & Rinaldi 2007, p. 161.
  28. ^ Barber 2010, p. 99.
  29. ^ Borgna, Gianni; Veltroni, Walter (18 February 2011). "Chi ha ucciso Pasolini". L'Espresso. Archived from the original on 6 May 2011. Retrieved 24 May 2014.
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Works cited
  • Annovi, Gian Maria (2017). Pier Paolo Pasolini: Performing Authorship. Columbia University Press. ISBN 978-0-231-54270-8.
  • Barber, Stephen (2010). "The Last Film, the Last Book". In Cline, John; Weiner, Robert G. (eds.). From the Arthouse to the Grindhouse: Highbrow and Lowbrow Transgression in Cinema's First Century. Scarecrow Press. ISBN 978-0-810-87655-2.
  • Gundle, S.; Rinaldi, Lucia (2007). Assassinations and Murder in Modern Italy: Transformations in Society and Culture. Springer. ISBN 978-0-230-60691-3.
  • Mathjis, Ernest; Sexton, Jamie (2011). Cult Cinema. Wiley-Blackwell. ISBN 978-1-405-17373-5.
  • Moliterno, Gino (2009). The A to Z of Italian Cinema. Scarecrow Press. ISBN 978-0-810-87059-8.
  • Pasolini, Pier Paolo; Biette, Jean-Claude; Davoli, Ninetto; et al. (2002). "Salò": Yesterday and Today (Blu-ray) (in Italian and English). The Criterion Collection.
  • Wells, Jeff (2008). Rigorous Intuition: What You Don't Know Can't Hurt Them. Trine Day. ISBN 978-1-937-58470-2.

Further reading

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Essential bibliography
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