Fellini Satyricon
FELLINI SATYRICON. It is rather odd returning to FELLINI 
SATYRICON after 40 or so years, as I had not seen it since 1970. It 
plays like a dream – or a nightmare, with some of the most vivid images 
one can imagine, as we wander through that pansexual vision of Ancient 
Rome with Encolpio (blond Martin Potter) and Ascilto (dark Hiram Keller,
 1944-1997), friends who were enemies over their infatuation with Giton 
(Max Born) a coquette who preferred Ascilto.  
The boys have their comic 
adventures as they take in that decadent feast filled with grotesques presided over by a
former slave, Trimalcione, now filthy rich; then are kidnapped by pirates on that very odd ship where Encolpio 
has to “marry” pirate leader Alain Cuny (who is soon decapitated as a new regime takes over) …. A silent Capucine presides over the 
ceremony. Later the boys encounter that hermaphrodite god whom they 
kidnap, witness the wealthy couple freeing their servants before 
committing suicide, frolic with each other and that slave girl ….  
On and
 on it goes until Enclopio is left alone, after the death of Ascilto, and after fighting that Minotaur,
as he goes off with another band of sailors to have more adventures. All 
one can say is that it looks staggering, Fellini fills the screen with 
the oddest oddballs (mysterious whores, hedonists, gluttons) and amazing sets (Danilo Donati) conjuring up frightful visions of a
 corrupt ancient world.  Martin Potter looks perfect here and had some other 
roles, but nothing to equal this (see review of GOODBYE GEMINI at Potter, Trash labels, and we will be seeing his ALL COPPERS ARE... from 1972 shortly). 
 
Federico described it as "Science fiction of the past" - and its certainly one of the more vivid views of the ancient world.
 
Others involved are Lucia Bose, 
fashion model Donyale Luna, Magali Noel, Salvo Randone. It is all very 
fragmented, in the style of Petronius, but it certainly one to keep and 
return to, from that great 1969-70 era when cinema was getting very 
adventurous. In that pre-internet world (and only 3 tv channels here in the UK) movies were very important to 
us, as we (in our early 20s) rushed to see Visconti’s THE DAMNED, this Fellini, Antonioni 
blowing up America in ZABRISKIE POINT, Ken Russell sexing up D H 
Lawrence and Tchaikovsky and that version of Gore Vidal’s MYRA 
BRECKINRIDGE ….no wonder it was a time of experiemental oddball movies and great music as young people forged their own entertainments without being derailed by social networks, cellphones, computer games and all the rest of today's distractions ...
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Those who will be in the San Francisco Bay Area during mid-October (2014) can see 'Fellini Satyricon' as part of an 'Altered Realities' film series being shown Friday evenings in October at the Mechanics Institute Library:
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It's a great film. Full of visual splendour
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