Después de una reunión casual en un hotel en 1957, la sobreviviente del Holocausto Lucia y el oficial nazi Max, que la torturó, reanudan su relación sadomasoquista.Después de una reunión casual en un hotel en 1957, la sobreviviente del Holocausto Lucia y el oficial nazi Max, que la torturó, reanudan su relación sadomasoquista.Después de una reunión casual en un hotel en 1957, la sobreviviente del Holocausto Lucia y el oficial nazi Max, que la torturó, reanudan su relación sadomasoquista.
- Premios
- 2 nominaciones en total
- Atherton
- (as Marino Mase')
- Dobson
- (as Manfred Freiberger)
- Jacob
- (as Kai S. Seefeld)
- Opera Audience
- (sin créditos)
Argumento
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaSir Dirk Bogarde considered retiring from acting after making this movie, which he found to be a draining experience.
- ErroresIn the flashbacks, Max is wearing the War Merit Cross First Class with Swords upside down on his SS uniform.
- Citas
Hans: I'm only here to ask you some questions on behalf of myself and the others, and to have a look at you. Look, I could have come at another time to see him too, but, I don't need to speak to him. I don't need to speak to him... in front of you. Useless. With this business of the trial, he's... become too diffident.
Lucia: He's right.
Hans: What do you mean?
Lucia: Because then for the first time he saw you all clearly. Nothing's changed, has it?
Hans: You're wrong. We've all had our trials. Now we are cured and live in peace with ourselves.
Lucia: There's no cure.
Hans: It is you who are ill. Otherwise, you wouldn't be with somebody who made you...
Lucia: That's my affair.
Hans: Very well. But nevertheless, your mind is disturbed. That's why you're here, fishing up the past.
Lucia: Max is more than just the past.
[Lucia crawls under a table]
Hans: Listen. Why don't you go to the police? If you want to, I'll take you. Hm?
Lucia: Dr. Fogler, I remember you so well. You gave a lot of orders.
Hans: Then you can't have forgotten that your Max was an obedient Sturmscharführer. Remember?
Lucia: I don't remember.
Hans: I certainly can't oblige you to remember if you don't want to.
[clears his throat]
Hans: I'm only here to ask you to testify, to find out... if the situation in which you find yourself is of your own choice.
Lucia: I'm all right here.
Hans: Yes. You both want to live in peace, right? One lives in peace... when one is in harmony with one's close friends, when one respects an agreement. Tell Max that. We could have denounced him to the police for the murder of Mario. But we didn't. Max is ill. He mustn't be too far away from us! He's locked you up here. We could go to the police about that, too, no?
Lucia: I'm here of my own free will. This chain is because of you, so none of you can take me away.
Hans: If we wanted to carry you off, would this chain stop us? You poor fool. A chain can be cut. None of us is thinking of violence.
Lucia: Hmm, I know how your, your witnesses end up. Max told me.
[Lucia crawls out from under the table, away from Hans]
Hans: Max doesn't know what he's saying or doing. His mind is disordered.
Lucia: [crawling into the bathroom] Get out. Go away. Go away!
[slams the door]
Hans: If you change your mind, if the chain grows heavy... call me.
- ConexionesEdited into Bellissimo: Immagini del cinema italiano (1985)
Dirk Bogarde plays Maximilian, or "Max" to most around him; the said character in charge of a group of staff at a Vienna hotel in 1957 whose job it is to meet, greet and help new arrivals of an often affluent nature. Max strikes us as a bit of an animal, badgering and ordering his crew around as if with some sort of experience in running a tight ship and getting what he wants. Upstairs, the quarters wherein the live-in staff rest sport pictures hanging from the wall depicting separate images limited exclusively to topless women and two duelling boxers going at it in a ring. This overwhelming presence of sex and aggression apparent in this collection of images will come to define the central pairing we observe play out. This pairing, consisting of Max and one other, is complete with the hotel's latest arrival: a young woman named Lucia Atherton (Rampling), who arrives with what we presume to be her usual entourage but immediately makes us aware of something not quite right when she spies Max behind the front desk and vice-versa as she stands there in the lobby. His nervous behaviour during the immediate thereafter is distinctly different enough to suggest something has truly thrown him, whereas Lucia's experiences of PTSD that evening (as she flashes-back to her time in Wartime Europe) allude to a greater truth.
It is out of these beginnings that the two come together and go through the tryst that they do. It is one built on an enforced power exchange of the past that was initiated by a greater power beyond either of their control as well as the fresh control over the participant, whose role in any work or casual relationship is usually of a dominant nature, the "submissive" participant now has. The pair of them were based at the same Concentration Camp during World War Two, he has a guard; she as an inmate. We observe how he would shoot live rounds at and around Lucia's person where it's inferred many other inmates have already lost their lives. To this extent, it is a game; someone playing out their designated role of aggressor and forcing the other through metaphorical hoops for their own pleasure.
Away from the central tract are Max's peers: a large group of other war criminals hiding out in the Austrian city who meet around large tables in grand drawing rooms when they need to discuss something. They object to her presence, but Max wants her to stick around. Another aside arrives in the form of an odd, homo-erotic tie he has with a man named Bert (Amodio); a dancer who performs near-nude routines in the sanctuary of his own abode in front of him. He too is dissatisfied at Max's presence in his own life when Lucia comes along.
Issue and controversy will always come with a film such as The Night Porter. It's a film dealing with very morbid triggers for sexualised urges, but it's a film distilling all of this through this back story of a prisoner/inmate Stockholm syndrome situation that is initiated in a Concentration Camp. One scene which will kill the film stone dead for those whom do not take to it arrives during an opera; a sequence with both parties present, although away from each other, and peppered with these flashbacks of varying sexualised activity in the camps whilst the tenor's performance acts as a deeply juxtaposed overture to what we're seeing. The point being we're not supposed to know whose flashbacks they are; whose memories are being shown and thus, remain unsure as to whether each of the person's reactions sync up with how much they're enjoying the evening or the fact their head's are being reignited with "pleasurable" instances from the past. In 1995, Katherine Bigelow would direct "Strange Days" wherein there was a scene depicting a rape. Through the certain means therein, rapist and rape victim could be conjoined in their experience and could both systematically share the pain and pleasure, agony and ecstasy of what the other was feeling. It could be argued Italian director Liliana Cavani was using similar ideas of power dynamics and enforced shifting emotions all of twenty years earlier, and in films that did not need fiction technological USP's to do so. The film has upset some, as did Strange Days; I happened to find it a quite engrossing and really rather well made drama.
- johnnyboyz
- 8 feb 2013
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Detalles
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- Países de origen
- Idiomas
- También se conoce como
- The Night Porter
- Locaciones de filmación
- Via Tuscolona, Roma, Lacio, Italia(concentration camp)
- Productoras
- Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro
Taquilla
- Total en EE. UU. y Canadá
- USD 633,298