Dolce e selvaggio

Dolce e selvaggio

Theatrical poster
Directed by Antonio Climati
Mario Morra
Produced by Franco Prosperi
Written by Antonio Climati
Mario Morra
Narrated by Franco Prosperi
Music by Daniele Patucchi
Cinematography Antonio Climati
Edited by Mario Morra
Distributed by Titanus Distribuzione
Release dates
  • 2 September 1983 (1983-09-02)
Running time
93 minutes
Country Italy
Language Italian

Dolce e selvaggio (1983) (English: Sweet and Savage) is a Mondo film directed by Antonio Climati and Mario Morra. The title "Sweet and Savage" refers to the juxtaposition of pleasant ("sweet") and violent ("savage") imagery within the film.[1][2] It is narrated by the producer and long-time Mondo film director Franco Prosperi.

The film is the third and final entry in Climati and Morra's Savage Trilogy and is also the last collaborative feature between the two directors. Footage in the film was supplemented by scenes that originally appeared in their previous two films, Ultime grida dalla savana and Savana violenta.[1][2] Morra went on to direct one final Mondo film, The Savage Zone, while Climati later made the cannibal film Natura contro in 1988.

The film has gained notoriety for the inclusion of several scenes of human death. One of the scenes, in which a man is tied to two trucks that tear off his arm, is staged.[3] The other scenes, which are genuine,[2][4] include a corpse in Tibet that is hacked apart by monks and fed to vultures and the accidental deaths of tightrope walker Karl Wallenda and stuntman A.J. Bakunas.

Release history

Dolce e selvaggio was originally released on 2 September 1985 in Italy and was later released internationally the following year. The film was released as Caramba! in Japan and focused heavily on the staged death scene in its advertisements.[3]

In Australia, the film was released uncut theatrically in 1984, but an edited video release submitted to the Australian censors was banned for excessive violence. Although the film was rated M and R18+ for three different submissions in 1986, it was only ever released once on video by Roadshow's Premiere video label in 1987.[5]

References

  1. 1 2 Goodall p. 120
  2. 1 2 3 Kerekes p. 147
  3. 1 2 Kerekes p. 149
  4. Goodall p. 122
  5. "Films S". Refused-Classification.com. Retrieved 2009-04-05.

Bibliography

External links

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