La donna invisibile (1969) Poster

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5/10
THE FANTASIES OF A SENSUOUS WOMAN (Paolo Spinola, 1969) **1/2
Bunuel197622 August 2008
I followed Salvatore Samperi's MOTHER'S HEART (1969) with this equally unknown item, which has more in common with it than would at first appear (i.e. the presence of the same actress, Carla Gravina – even if it's actually one she seems to hate and would rather forget about!); the film is more of a bourgeois melodrama though still featuring the 'obligatory' political statements of the time. It's based on a novel by one of Italy's major literary figures, Alberto Moravia: his existentialist work was fashionable during this particular era in cinema in view of such adaptations as CONTEMPT (1963) and THE EMPTY CANVAS (1964); I own both of these but, while I love the former, have yet to check out the latter.

Incidentally, the movie is perhaps best ranked as "Arthouse" but it's still listed in the indispensable "Stracult" book – on which author Marco Giusti (whom I saw numerous times at the 2004 Venice Film Festival) is particularly hard on, calling it "terrible" and citing "extreme boredom" as its main offense! The narrative details the fading relationship between a husband (Silvano Tranquilli) and wife (Giovanna Ralli); by the way, the original title (of book and film) translates to THE INVISIBLE WOMAN – obviously, it has nothing at all to do with the 1940 spoof on the Universal horror series! – a fact which is treated more than figuratively here, so that we get the man literally looking through his spouse (at one point, even describing in detail a stain on the wall which her body is actually blocking!) and virtually ignoring her at every turn (foreshadowing in a way the would-be missing child episode from Luis Bunuel's THE PHANTOM OF LIBERTY [1974]]. One aspect that is confusing until the final revelation (but more on this later) is the ambiguous presence of Carla Gravina in the couple's household: she seems to be a glorified maid, yet is never really considered an inferior – she may not be invited to the Opera with them, but does make it to society parties and private gatherings (which often descend into displays of hedonism); this was, after all, a time in which liberal attitudes were gaining the upper hand everywhere!

The film tends to wander and can, therefore, lead to stretches of tedium – but it's handled with some style (which probably has more to do with the period in which it came out rather than the director's individual skill, whom I wasn't familiar with in the first place) and the performances are pretty good (though Giusti had personally found Ralli's studied approach to the role risible). Besides, the two leading ladies – both of whom appear in the nude – look divine throughout (their scenes together, then, emanate a distinct erotic charge)…and, once again, we get a fine score courtesy of the ubiquitous Ennio Morricone! Which brings us to the climax: there had already been traces of surrealism in the film – blurring fact and fiction a' la Bunuel's BELLE DE JOUR (1967; whose influence on this one is palpable) in the incidents where Ralli spies on Tranquilli in bed with Gravina only to wake up and find he's always been there beside her and, later, Ralli shooting Gravina out of jealousy during a hunting party (a sequence which is a clear nod to Jean Renoir's THE RULES OF THE GAME [1939] down to the 'accidental' victim) before we realize that they're still on their way to the appointed meeting place – but the ending (so as not to blatantly spell out the nature of this incredible twist, I'll just say that it anticipates FIGHT CLUB [1999] by 30 years!) must have seemed highly preposterous at the time.

In the end, neither MOTHER'S HEART nor THE FANTASIES OF A SENSUOUS WOMAN (a suggestively lurid title it doesn't really live up to) – incidentally, apart from co-star and composer, both also share scriptwriter Dacia Maraini – can be considered exactly good films (hence the "Average" rating for both), but each emerges a definite curio for a variety of reasons.
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If Harold Pinter wrote a RED SHOE DIARIES episode
The Hoyk23 October 2003
This film had long been a subject of curiosity for me due to the very good score by Ennio Morricone which is available on CD. That music is basically the best thing the movie has to offer. Like many would-be "adult" dramas from overseas made in the late '60's to early '80's, it's very slow and static, especially in the dubbed version which I saw.

The slim plot involves Laura, a woman married to a respected college professor, who feels herself becoming so marginalized in her marriage as to be, as the Italian title states, invisible. Of course, it isn't helped that there's a quasi-predatory redhead with a pixie living in their stately home, ostensibly a cousin, but really just trying to have her way with the husband and wife. Or that's what she thinks anyway; the underlying theme is that her perceptions are often at odds with the reality of the situation. (Hence the alternate U.S. title of THE FANTASIES OF A SENSUOUS WOMAN)

As implied by the above summary, there are lots and LOTS of silences that I suppose are for dramatic tension, but just play badly. All of the characters are appropriately affluent, elegant, and bored; there is an even slimmer subplot about student rioting against the bourgeouisie, represented by Laura's professor husband, and how intrigued by the rebellion, she has an afternoon quickie with one such rebel. Maybe there was more to this that got cut by the American distributor, but ultimately, it gets abandoned. You could say this movie dramatizes the lives of the people who were at the EYES WIDE SHUT orgy outside of that castle. Unfortunately, those lives are not terribly interesting.

But do buy the soundtrack. You can't go wrong with the great Morricone.
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