Theorem
Teorema
In cinemas 12 April
Pier Paolo Pasolini’s playful satire, starring Terence Stamp at the peak of his beauty.
| Italy 1968 Directed by Pier Paolo Pasolini With Terence Stamp, Silvana Mangano, Massimo Girotti, Laura Betti Running time 98 min 18 |
Nobody had ever seen a film like Theorem when it arrived on European screens in 1968, and its huge success took Pasolini’s cultural standing to a new level.
From its fake-newsreel opening to a narrative which ‘innocently’ echoes the form of the Catholic mass, this is the film in which Pasolini let it all hang out: his scepticism about religious faith, his homosexuality, his hatred of ‘bourgeois values’ and his declining confidence in political solutions. Terence Stamp (at the peak of his beauty, fresh from facing the devil in Fellini’s Toby Dammit) plays a mysterious visitor to an upper-middle-class family in Milan. What if, Pasolini asks, each member of the household – father, mother, son and daughter, not forgetting the maid – were to be seduced and then abandoned by the visitor?
How would each of them react, and what would become of their lives? The title suggests something quasi-scientific, but the fuel in Pasolini’s tank is satire, not algebra. Existential anguish was never more playful.
Tony Rayns
Venues
From 12 April
BFI Southbank, London
Curzon Soho, London
2 May
Ipswich Film Theatre, Ipswich
13-15 May
Derby QUAD, Derby
19-20 May
Ultimate Picture Palace, Oxford
19 and 23 May
Exeter Picturehouse, Exeter
26-27 May
Glasgow Film Theatre, Glasgow
27 May
Broadway Nottingham, Nottingham
29-30 May
MAC, Birmingham
30 June
Savoy, Penzance
14 and 16 July
Chapter, Cardiff