Les Heroines Du Mal 1979
Comments:: Returning to the anthology format of Immoral Tales (1974), Walerian Borowczyk used three separate stories to explore tales of provocative women who exact revenge on men for sexist idolatry, animal cruelty, and for being victimized by unknown and trusted men. Foggy lenses, gilded Renaissance music, and silly behaviour in puffy costumes are familiar elements in the.
Immoral Women | |
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Directed by | Walerian Borowczyk |
Produced by | Pierre Braunberger |
Written by | Walerian Borowczyk André Pieyre de Mandiargues |
Starring | Françoise Quéré Marina Pierro Jean-Claude Dreyfus |
Music by | Philippe d'Aram Olivier Dassault |
Cinematography | Bernard Daillencourt |
Edited by | Walerian Borowczyk |
Production company | |
Distributed by | Argos Films |
Release date | |
Running time | 114 minutes |
Country | France |
Language | French Italian |
Immoral Women (French: Les héroïnes du mal) is a 1979 Frencheroticdrama directed by Walerian Borowczyk,[1] written by Borowczyk and André Pieyre de Mandiargues[2] and starring Jean-Claude Dreyfus, Marina Pierro and Françoise Quéré.[3]
Synopsis[edit]
The film is divided into three self-contained episodes, set in different time periods and featuring female protagonists whose names all start with letter M as in the word mal (evil) and who commit crimes of passion.
- 'Margherita', the ambitious mistress of the painter Raphael. Rome, 1520. This episode contains unsimulated sex between Margherita and Tomaso.[4]
- 'Marceline', the desirous adolescent daughter of a bourgeois family. Fin de siècleFrance.
- 'Marie', the clever wife of a wealthy gallery owner. Modern day Paris.
Cast[edit]
- Marina Pierro as Margherita Luti
- Gaëlle Legrand as Marceline Caïn
- Pascale Christophe as Marie
- François Guétary as Raphael Sanzio
- Jean-Claude Dreyfus as Bini
- Jean Martinelli as Pope
- Pierre Benedetti as Mad Painter
- Philippe Desboeuf as Doctor
- Noël Simsolo as Julio Romano
- Roger Lefrere as Michelangelo
- Gérard Falconetti as Tomaso
- Hassane Fall as Petrus
- France Rumilly as Madame Cain
- Yves Gourvil as Cain
- Lisbeth Arno as Floka
- Gérard Ismaël as Antoine
- Henri Piégay as Husband
- Mathieu Rivollier
- Robert Capia
- Daniel Marty
- Jacky Baudet
- Sylvain Ramsamy
- Jean Boullu
- Mazouz Ould-Abderrahmane
- Bernard Hiard
Soundtrack[edit]
The score was composed by Philippe d'Aram and Olivier Dassault.[5]
Release[edit]
The film premiered on 7 March 1979 in a cinema release.[6]
References[edit]
- ^'Immoral Women (Les Heroines Du Mal) by Walerian Borowczyk on DVD'. Archived from the original on 25 July 2011. Retrieved 12 February 2010.
- ^Buy Immoral Women (Les Heroines Du Mal) DVD – Turner Classic Movies Unlimited
- ^KQEK.com - DVD Review: Immoral Women/Les Héroïnes du mal (1979)
- ^Walerian Borowczyk’s Heroines of Desire. sensesofcinema.com
- ^SoundtrackCollector: Soundtrack details: Héroïnes Du Mal, Les
- ^Walerian Borowczyk (1923 - 2006) @ EOFFTV
External links[edit]
- Immoral Women on IMDb
- Immoral Women at AllMovie
Born | 9 October 1956 (age 63) Boscotrecase, Italy |
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Occupation | Actress |
Years active | 1976–1990 |
Website | http://www.marinapierro.com |
Marina Pierro (born 9 October 1956) is an Italianactress and film director who is best known for her artistic relationship with Polish filmmaker Walerian Borowczyk. Attila what to build. Pierro and Borowczyk's collaboration lasted approximately ten years and comprised five completed films (four of which were made when Pierro was in her twenties) and one foray into episodic television.
Pierro began her screen career with minor roles in several Italian films in 1976, including Luchino Visconti's final film, L'innocente (The Innocent), and an uncredited appearance as an extra in Dario Argento's Suspiria (1977). Pierro's first prominent role was as the self-styled stigmatic nun Sister Veronica in Walerian Borowczyk's 1978 film Interno di un Convento (Behind Convent Walls). Borowczyk discovered Pierro in an actors' yearbook whilst casting the film. Pierro admired Borowczyk's famous 1975 film La Bête (The Beast) and upon meeting the director she discovered they shared an interest in art, particularly painting. Pierro perceived Borowczyk to be a non-conformist by nature but also a sensitive man.[1] Borowczyk told Pierro that, as a fan of Italian Renaissance painters, he found in her 'the classic Italian figure.'[2]
Pierro went on to play the Renaissance artist Raphael's treacherous mistress Margherita Luti in the first episode of Borowczyk's 1979 anthology film Héroïnes du Mal (Immoral Women), a quasi-sequel to the director's 1973 erotic anthology film Contes immoraux (Immoral Tales).
Borowczyk intended to make a film about the life of the Egyptian queen Nefertiti starring Pierro, but this film was aborted in the preparation stage. Instead, Pierro's third film with Borowczyk was the 1981 horror filmDocteur Jekyll et les femmes (a.k.a. Dr Jekyll and his Women and Blood of Dr Jekyll). In Borowczyk's adaptation of Robert Louis Stevenson's Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde, Pierro plays Fanny Osbourne (named after Stevenson's real-life wife), the fiancée of Dr Henry Jekyll (Udo Kier) and essentially an original character on the part of Borowczyk and Pierro. Relatively obscure at the time of its release, Docteur Jekyll et les femmes has enjoyed increasing critical esteem decades later. A restored version of the film was released by Arrow Films in 2015 as The Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Miss Osbourne, reflecting Borowczyk's preferred original title and the importance of Pierro's character in the narrative. (Pierro has remarked that the title Docteur Jekyll et les femmes is psychologically peurile and misinterprets the whole idea of the film.)[3]
Pierro's fourth film with Borowczyk was the 1983 Italian/French co-production Ars Amandi (Art of Love). In this film - based upon the writings of Ovid - Pierro plays Claudia, the wife of the Roman commander Macarius (Michele Placido) in Augustan Rome. Claudia takes as her lover Ovid's young student Cornelius (Philippe Taccini) while her husband is in Gaul. The film's coda takes place in the present day, with Pierro playing a young archaeologist, Claudine Cartier, who is en route from Rome to Paris.
Pierro also starred in Borowczyk's final feature-length film, 1987's love poem Ceremonie d'amour (Love Rites) as Myriam, a mysterious and philosophical prostitute who meets and seduces the vain, naive clothes buyer Hugo (Mathieu Carrière) in the Paris Métro. The film is based on the novel Tout disparaîtra by André Pieyre de Mandiargues. This was the only time Pierro played a modern-day character for the entirety of a Borowczyk film; her previous roles for the director were all set in historical periods of the past, excepting the conclusion of Art of Love.
However, Borowczyk and Pierro returned to a period setting for their final collaboration: “Un traitement justifié”, an episode of the French erotic television seriesSoftly from Paris (a.k.a Série rose). Filmed in 1989 and first broadcast on 3 February 1990, Pierro plays an adulterous wife in an episode adapted from the fifth tale of the seventh night in Giovanni Boccaccio’s 14th century collection The Decameron. A jealous, middle-aged husband (Witold Heretynski) disguises himself as a priest, and hears his wife Bianca's confession: she tells him she loves a priest who comes to her every night. The husband posts himself at the door to watch for the priest; meanwhile, Bianca takes advantage of a gap in the wall to bring her young lover - the next-door neighbor, who is not a priest - into her house for erotic encounters.
Besides her work with Borowczyk, Pierro's most notable role was in Jean Rollin's 1982 French horror film La Morte Vivante (The Living Dead Girl) as Hélène, the friend of the titular character (played by Françoise Blanchard).[4]
Pierro's appearances on screen have been fleeting since the 1980s, but she has directed three short films since - In Versi (2008, also starring), Himorogi (2012, also writer/producer), and Floaters (2016, also writer/producer). Himorogi is a homage to Walerian Borowczyk that features electroacoustic music by Bernard Parmegiani (who had provided music for Docteur Jekyll at les femmes three decades before) and is co-directed by Pierro's son Alessio Pierro (the cinematographer of Pierro's three short films). Himorogi is included as an extra feature in Arrow Films' Blu-ray release of The Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Miss Osbourne; another feature is a video interview Pierro recorded in 2015, recounting her decade-long collaboration with Borowczyk.
Filmography[edit]
Film | |||
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Year | Title | Role | Notes |
1976 | Taxi Love, Servizio per Signora | ||
1976 | Sorbole.. Che Romagnola! | Assistant physiotherapist | |
1976 | I Prosseneti | Maid | |
1976 | L'Innocente | English title - The Innocent | |
1977 | Suspiria | Figurant (uncredited) | |
1978 | Interno di un Convento | Sister Veronica | English title - Behind Convent Walls |
1979 | Les Héroïnes du Mal | Margherita Luti | English title - Immoral Women |
1981 | Docteur Jekyll et les femmes | Miss Fanny Osbourne | English titles - Dr Jekyll and his Women, Blood of Dr Jekyll, The Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Miss Osbourne |
1982 | La Morte Vivante | Hélène | English title - The Living Dead Girl |
1983 | Ars Amandi | Claudia | English title - Art of Love |
1987 | Cérémonie D'Amour | Myriam | English title - Love Rites |
1990 | La Scommessa | short | |
2008 | In Versi | director | short |
2012 | Himorogi | writer, producer, director | short |
2016 | Floaters | writer, producer, director | short |
Television | |||
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
1982 | La quinta donna | Anna Toth | TV mini-series |
1987 | Cinque Storie Inquietanti | Sara | TV mini-series |
1990 | Série Rose | Bianca | TV series episode directed by Walerian Borowczyk |
References[edit]
- ^Dr. Jekyll and Miss Osbourne: An Interview with Marina Pierro. (2015, Arrow Films)
- ^'A Recent Interview with Marina Pierro'. The Moon is in the Gutter. 15 May 2009.
- ^Dr. Jekyll and Miss Osbourne: An Interview with Marina Pierro. (2015, Arrow Films)
- ^Stine, Scott Allen. The Gorehound's guide to splatter films of the 1980s p.192 (2003) (ISBN978-0786409242)('Also of interest in La Morte Vivante is the captivating beauty of actress Marina Pierro; no stranger to French genre films she also starred in Walerian Borowczyk's exemplary Dr. Jekyll et les femmes.')
External links[edit]
- Marina Pierro on IMDb
- Marina Pierro[permanent dead link] at Flixter
- Marina Pierro at LoveFilm.com