One of the most original and controversial thinkers of the twentieth century, Italian polymath Pier Paolo Pasolini embodied a multitude of often seemingly contradictory ideologies and identities—and he expressed them all in his provocative, lyrical, and indelible films. Relentlessly concerned with society’s downtrodden and marginalized, he elevated pimps, hustlers, sex workers, and vagabonds to the realm of saints, while depicting actual saints with a radical earthiness. Traversing the sacred and the profane, the ancient and the modern, the mythic and the personal, the nine uncompromising, often scandal-inciting features he made in the 1960s still stand—on this, the 101st anniversary of his birth—as a monument to his daring vision of cinema as a form of resistance.
SPECIAL FEATURES
- New 2K digital restoration, with uncompressed monaural soundtrack on the Blu-ray
- Alternate English-dubbed soundtrack featuring the voices of actor Terence Stamp and others
- Audio commentary from 2007 featuring Robert S. C. Gordon, author of Pasolini: Forms of Subjectivity
- Introduction by director Pier Paolo Pasolini from 1969
- Interview from 2007 with Stamp
- New interview with John David Rhodes, author of Stupendous, Miserable City: Pasolini’s Rome
- New English subtitle translation
- PLUS: An essay by film scholar James Quandt
New cover by Nessim Higson