A young Sicilian is swindled and turns to grave-robbing; a laborer poses as a deaf-mute to enter a convent of curious nuns; teenaged lovers are caught post-flagrante by the girl’s parents;
a crafty priest tries to seduce his friend’s wife; a con and cheat on his deathbed fools the church with tales of his saintly life.
All tales from Boccaccio’s renaissance classic, in the first of Pasolini’s bawdy, vibrant “trilogy of life” (originally rated X!.
It would probably still rate an NC-17) — each one lensed in color by Sergio Leone cinematographer Tonino delli Colli (The Good, the Bad and the Ugly, Once Upon a Time in the West, etc.).
With Pasolini regulars Franco Citti and Ninetto Davola, Silvana Mangano in a cameo as the Madonna, and the director himself as a student of Giotto, commissioned to paint a new 3-paneled church fresco — one of the screen’s greatest depictions of the creation of art. Winner, Special Jury Prize, Berlin Film Festival.
Cast: Franco Citti, Ninetto Davoli, Jovan Jovanović, Vincenzo Amato, Angela Luce, Silvana Mangano, Giuseppe Zigaina, Gabriella Frankel, Vincenzo Cristo, Pier Paolo Pasolini, Vittorio Vittori, Monique Van Vooren, Giorgio Iovine, Salvatore Bilardo, Vincenzo Ferrigno, Luigi Seraponte, Antonio Diddio, Mirella Catanesi, Vincenzo De Luca
Berlinale (Competition): Special Jury Prize
Read about this film
Title: The Decameron | Il Decameron (1971)
Directed by: Pier Paolo Pasolini
Date of birth: 5 March 1922, Bologna, Emilia-Romagna, Italy
Date of death: 2 November 1975, Ostia, Latium, Italy
Writing credits:
Giovanni Boccaccio (novel), Pier Paolo Pasolini
Music by: Ennio Morricone
Country: Italy | France | West Germany
Language: Italian
Color: Color
Runtime: 112 min.