DVD
Pasolini Box Set - Vol 2
Hawks and Sparrows, Oedipus Rex & Pigsty

Starring: Toto, Franco Citti, Silvana Mangano, Pierre Clementi and Jean-Pierre Leaud
Tartan Video
RRP: £39.99
TVD3734
Certificate: 15
Available 14 May 2007


It is easy today to underestimate the contribution that Pasolini and the post war neo-realists made to modern cinema. When film started as a mostly personal, experimental experience most of the subjects were ordinary events and people but, with the dominance of Hollywood, films became more about idealised and distorted realities. It wasn't until the emergence of the neo-realists that film once again started to show the experience of everyday life. One of its greatest proponents was Pier Paolo Pasolini. Pasolini died, in what could so easily have been a shot from one of his films, after he was bludgeoned to death by a youth who accused him of making homosexual advances towards him.

This is the second box set of Pasolini's work and shows his move away from his previous neo-realist roots. The set contains Hawks and Sparrows, Oedipus Rex and the previously unavailable Pigsty. All the prints have been restored for this DVD release with a stereo track.

Hawks and Sparrows (1966 - black and white) was adapted by Pasolini from his own original story. We find Pasolini in a humorous mood, even the titles are sung in a faux operatic manner for comic effect. Staring Toto - no, not the one from the Wizard of Oz - one of Italy's most successful comic actors, who utilised many of the visual motifs of Buster Keaton and Charlie Chaplin - most notably the propensity of his character to wear ill fitting clothes - and adapted them for a modern audience. Such is the strength of the motif that he looks positively anachronistic in a contemporary Italian setting adding to the comic effect.

The films basic narrative revolves around a father (Toto) and his son who, whilst walking down a road, come across a crow who decides to join them and proceeds to bombard them with Marxist questions regarding Christianity. Not content with harassing the men, the crow takes them seven hundred and fifty years into the past to St Francis - the one that could talk to the animals like Dr Doolittle, but without the outrageous pants - who teaches them to talk to the birds. Full of the Holy Spirit, Toto teaches the sparrows and the hawks to love and becomes a holy man, which works well until one of the Hawks eats one of the sparrows... Bugger.

The film is actually quite funny even with the slight heavy handedness of the underlying political/religious debate. Toto shows why he deserved his comedic success and Ninetto Davoli is the perfect foil.

Extras on the disc consist of the original theatrical trailer and Notes for a Film on India (1968), a documentary which reflects Pasolini's love of the culture and country, though you can't help but feel that he was looking at the orient through occidental eyes.

Oedipus Rex (1967 - colour), which gleefully proclaims itself to be directed and written by Pasolini, is, in truth, based on a very old Greek tragedy, which has been filmed numerous times and kept Freud in cigars and cocaine for years. Combining both a historical narrative, with a smattering of modernity, which bookends the movie, it was filmed on Morocco. For those who do not know, the story tells of one unfortunate child, rescued during war, who, when he grows to manhood, by a set of unfortunate circumstances ends up killing his father and bedding his mother. For all its faults, of which there are few, this remains a powerful film.

The only extra on this disc is the original theatrical trailer.

Pigsty (1969 - colour) was directed and written by Pasolini and owes more to the short lived surrealistic tradition of cinema than Pasolini's own neo-realist roots. The film contains two interrelated stories which examine the idea of consumption through the acts of cannibalism and bestiality. Pasolini would not return to his hatred of the middle-classes or the extremes of experience until Salo (1975).

The most modern story in this collection, tells of a young post war German, son of an ex-industrialist, who like his contemporaries is self obsessed to the point of narcissism. This lack of perspective leads him to commune with a pig, rather than have sex with his girlfriend. The second section deals with an almost mute, nameless soldier caught on a barren wasteland whose desperation leads him to cannibalism.

Modern audiences will find the German sequences long and a little dull. The personal rage that Pasolini felt, unfortunately, for once, overcame his cinematic sensibility to create one of his more flawed creations. Moreover, the film is a little disconcerting to watch. Seemingly shot on a hand held camera the picture has a noticeable judder at times and the two main actors, Jean-Pierre Leaud and Anne Wiazemsky, have both been dubbed into Italian.

Extra features on the disc include the original trailer and The Walls of Sana'a (1964) which is a documentary which Pasolini made to send to UNESCO in the hope that international aid could be sought to save the city.

So, a nice mix of the profound and the profane for lovers of Pasolini's work and if that wasn't enough the PR blurb reliably informs me that the box set also comes with a copy of Ragazzo, Pasolini's novel, published in English for the first time.

Charles Packer

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