The Key (1983)
DVD9 | VIDEO_TS | PAL 16:9 | Cover | 01:50:38 | 6,59 Gb
Audio: Italiano AC3 2.0 @ 224 Kbps | Subtitles: English
Genre: Drama, Romance, Erotic
DVD9 | VIDEO_TS | PAL 16:9 | Cover | 01:50:38 | 6,59 Gb
Audio: Italiano AC3 2.0 @ 224 Kbps | Subtitles: English
Genre: Drama, Romance, Erotic
Director: Tinto Brass
Writers: Jun'ichirô Tanizaki (novel), Tinto Brass
Stars: Frank Finlay, Stefania Sandrelli, Franco Branciaroli
After twenty years of marriage, art professor Nino (Frank Finlay) decides to manipulate his modest Teresa (Stefania Sandrelli) into an affair with their daughter's fiancée Laszlo (Brass regular Franco Branciaroli) by piquing her interest in his private diary. Onto the game, she in turn manipulates him into discovering her own diary to read of the affair. While Nino finds himself aroused by his own jealousy (which will come as no surprise to any one who has ever seen a Tinto Brass film), his fascist daughter Lisa (Barbara Cupisti) reactions are equally unconventional.
Even though the gig on the ill-fated "Caligula" was a catastrophe waiting to happen, at least in the end Il Maestro Tinto Brass acquired the funding for his dream project, a cinematic adaptation of Junichiro Tanizaki's "The Key." Now, I've read the book after seeing the film, which really made me appreciate the hard work Brass put into the script, since the novel was virtually impossible to turn into a movie. After all, let's face it. There is no plot. Tanizaki's "The Key" is a clever, satirical insight on what it is like to be stuck in an awkward, fading marriage and divorce is impossible due to tradition. The book takes two different points of view, from the husband and the wife in form of several diary entries. It basically reveals their thoughts as the marriage slowly disintegrates with the husband's declining health and the wife's growing repulsion of having sexual relations with him. Nothing more, nothing less.
Now, don't get me wrong, the material is perfect for a satirical novella, but as far as movie material goes, it's rather dull and there's not much to adapt, but this is where Brass' genius comes in.
First, the story is shifted from fifties Tokyo to a pre-war Venice, which turns the story in to a sort of a mirror of current event, where the characters are slowly overwhelmed with decadence, just as their country and government. It should also be worthy of note if this film was done by any other director, the pre-war Italian politics would eventually overshadow the main plot, but Brass keeps it skillfully in the background. The political agenda is ever present, but does not disrupt the general storyline.
Another great change Brass did with the script is slightly altering the characters. In the book, the husband is dirty old man with a foot fetish, while the wife is a whiny hypochondriac. It was fun to read the "diaries" of such characters, but I'd rather not watch them bicker on the screen for two hours. Here, the husband is a somewhat eccentric gentlemen, filled with joie de vivre and with only one fetish; his wife's gorgeous body, which he hardly ever seen throughout their lengthy marriage. The wife is now a strong, intelligent woman, somewhat confused and caught off guard when her repressed sexuality begins to break free of its confines.
All these changes make the story great for a cinematic treatment, yet it retains the general storyline of Tanizaki's novella quite faithfully.
After many years of a typical, old fashioned marriage, Professor Nino Rolfe tries to break his wife Teresa free of her sexual modesty by writing his intimate desires in diary, which he then secretly plants in various locations for her to "accidently" stumble upon. She does the same, and a sexual game of cat-and-mouse ensues.
Once again, Tinto Brass out-does himself with the erotic content. All the sex scenes are touching, affectionate and somewhat melancholy, perfectly capturing the mood and tone of the film. They never feel forced, on the contrary, most of the time they drive the story foreword and reveal many details about the characters.
Not much can be said about the acting, all of the actors give a superb job. Stefania Sandrelli's cynical, subtle portrayal of Teresa might seem as "wooden" to some people, but they are just not looking too deeply. Frank Finlay gives an awesome over-the-top performance as an older man, still desiring the carnal pleasures of life, but is is unable to due to his declining health, therefore he is stuck living out his fantasies by constructing his wife's sexual odyssey with their fanatical Fascist sympathizing daughter's naive fiancée, played with great wit by Brass regular, Franco Branciarolli.
With "The Key," Tinto Brass directs with such restrained skill and precision that was missing from most of his previous films. The "free flow" and improvisation of his previous works is all but vanished. Now we have a carefully constructed film filled with exhaustively planned out camera work, editing techniques and color palettes. Speaking of which, this film's brownish tint has to be seen to be believed, no other film has ever achieved such a great effect. Silvano Ippoliti is truly one of the best cinematographers of our times, he will be sorely missed.
"The Key" is a masterpiece of eroticism and should go down in history as one of the best novel-to-film adaptations ever made.IMDB Reviewer
Special Features:
- Interview with Tinto Brass (in Italian with English subs, 31:43).
Many Thanks to Original uploader.
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