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And a very happy “Salò” Day to you, my fellow feces feasters! We’re in the steaming, hot, thick of summer here at IndieWire, where we’re celebrating the 1970s for our annual decade week. Yes, it’s ...
Pier Paolo Pasolini’s fascist parable retools the Marquis de Sade’s extreme avant-garde text and relocates the horror to Nazi-occupied Italy in 1944. Few films have generated the kind of controversy ...
Pier Paolo Pasolini in 1964. “Salò, or The 120 Days of Sodom,” was the last movie Pasolini filmed before his murder. (Wikimedia Commons) There are 13 directors whose films are recommended by the ...
'70s Week: When the controversial film arrived as part of the beloved boutique distributor's storied collection, its odd lack of availability turned it into a curiosity for film freaks of all kinds.
Given that juggernaut American films continue to dominate the world's screens, so squeezing out more specialist fare, it is perfectly understandable why small distributors shy away from new films by ...
Add articles to your saved list and come back to them any time. THE controversial film Salo has been outlawed in Australia yet again, with the Office of Film and Literature Classification voting to ...
'70s Week: From "Pink Flamingos" and "Jackass" to "The Help" and "The Human Centipede," IndieWire gets neck-deep in cinematic coprophagia. Anyway, it’s “Salò” Day! Have you put out your Blu-ray case ...