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Dorian Gray

Original title: Das Bildnis des Dorian Gray
  • 1970
  • R
  • 1h 33m
IMDb RATING
5.8/10
1.4K
YOUR RATING
Dorian Gray (1970)
A corrupt young man somehow keeps his youthful beauty eternally, but a special painting gradually reveals his inner ugliness to all.
Play trailer2:28
1 Video
61 Photos
HorrorThriller

A corrupt young man seemingly sells his soul to eternally retain his youthful beauty, all while a special painting gradually reveals his inner ugliness to all.A corrupt young man seemingly sells his soul to eternally retain his youthful beauty, all while a special painting gradually reveals his inner ugliness to all.A corrupt young man seemingly sells his soul to eternally retain his youthful beauty, all while a special painting gradually reveals his inner ugliness to all.

  • Director
    • Massimo Dallamano
  • Writers
    • Oscar Wilde
    • Marcello Coscia
    • Massimo Dallamano
  • Stars
    • Helmut Berger
    • Richard Todd
    • Herbert Lom
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.8/10
    1.4K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Massimo Dallamano
    • Writers
      • Oscar Wilde
      • Marcello Coscia
      • Massimo Dallamano
    • Stars
      • Helmut Berger
      • Richard Todd
      • Herbert Lom
    • 33User reviews
    • 26Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 2:28
    Trailer

    Photos61

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    Top cast28

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    Helmut Berger
    Helmut Berger
    • Dorian Gray
    Richard Todd
    Richard Todd
    • Basil Hallward
    Herbert Lom
    Herbert Lom
    • Henry Wotton
    Marie Liljedahl
    Marie Liljedahl
    • Sybil Vane…
    Margaret Lee
    Margaret Lee
    • Gwendolyn Wotton
    Maria Rohm
    Maria Rohm
    • Alice Campbell
    Beryl Cunningham
    Beryl Cunningham
    • Adrienne
    Isa Miranda
    Isa Miranda
    • Patricia Ruxton
    Eleonora Rossi Drago
    Eleonora Rossi Drago
    • Esther Clouston
    Renato Romano
    Renato Romano
    • Alan Campbell
    Stewart Black
    • James Vane
    Stuart Brisbane Colin
    • Party Guest
    • (uncredited)
    Franz Colangeli
    • Party Guest
    • (uncredited)
    Peter Evans
    • Man on Street
    • (uncredited)
    Ferruccio Fregonese
    • Party Guest
    • (uncredited)
    Iris Fry
    • Charity Worker
    • (uncredited)
    Margherita Horowitz
    • Party Guest
    • (uncredited)
    Juba Kennerley
    Juba Kennerley
    • Art Gallery Visitor
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Massimo Dallamano
    • Writers
      • Oscar Wilde
      • Marcello Coscia
      • Massimo Dallamano
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews33

    5.81.3K
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    Featured reviews

    6Angeneer

    Better than expected

    I was certain that no cinematic representation would do justice to the book. However, the clever idea of making a contemporary film made it interesting and original. Even the focus on Helmut Berger looks is not faulty, since this is the spirit of the book. Thankfully, all the girls were also very pretty. Although it's no masterpiece on its own right, Oscar Wilde would have liked it.
    7rundbauchdodo

    Oscar Wilde would have liked this

    Massimo Dallamano's film of Oscar Wilde's work places the story to the London of the 1960s. Even though many reviews obviously didn't like this and wrote rather negative about the film, I think the story works surprisingly well.

    Helmut Berger is excellent and undeniably gorgeous as the (in the end tragic) title character, but also the other actors deliver their best. Especially Herbert Lom as Henry Wotton acts absolutely great, and most of the women are not only very pretty, but also deliver convincing performances.

    All in all, "Dorian Gray" surely is the most unusual film version of the writing, it is rather drama than horror, but that's what Oscar Wilde's work is too, isn't it? I guess that Oscar Wilde would have liked this.
    7claudio_carvalho

    Good Contemporary Adaptation of a Classic Novel

    In the late 60's in London, the model Dorian Gray (Helmut Berger) meets the aspirant actress Sybil Vane (Marie Liljedahl) and they fall in love for each other. Meanwhile, his friend Basil Hallward (Richard Todd) concludes his painting, and Dorian Gray, fascinated with the picture, proposes the devil to exchange his soul per a permanent youth and beauty. From this moment on, the character and behavior of the former sweet Dorian changes and he becomes a corrupt and amoral man, sex driven and capable of destroying many lives inclusive Sibyl's. While his friends grow older, Dorian remains young never aging, but his painting discloses his innermost ugliness, fruit of his despicable social conduct.

    "Dorian Gray" is a good contemporary adaptation of the famous Oscar Wilde's classic novel "The Picture of Dorian Gray", which I believe is one of the books most read, or at least known, worldwide. Everybody is familiarized with this dramatic and evil story. The handsome Helmut Berger fits perfectly to the role and I really liked this underrated movie. Massimo Dallamano's version is original, attractive and has a good international cast. My vote is seven.

    Title (Brazil): "O Retrato de Dorian Gray" ("The Picture of Dorian Gray")

    Note: On 14 July 2022, I saw this film again.
    6Cineanalyst

    Shagadelic Dorian Gray

    This updating of Oscar Wilde's Victorian-age novel, "The Picture of Dorian Gray," to the 1970s and translating of the English-language text to Italian is surprisingly faithful--more so in some ways than the classic 1945 MGM version, among others. I generally don't find faithfulness important for an adaptation, but in this case it's usually for the best. And, the ways in which it does diverge from Wilde are interesting, including all of the 1970s style. I also believe that this is the first screen version to be explicit about homosexuality, which, of course, even the book wasn't (although granted, chronologically, this is only the third Dorian Gray film I've found available after the 1945 one and a 1915 silent two-reeler).

    Some of the film techniques employed leave much to be desired, including the abruptness of the opening prolepsis, and its point-of-view shots of bloody hands. Some of the sex scenes are too long as well, although they're not very explicit because the bodies are generally obscured by foreground objects. Consequently, some consider this trashy or a sexploitation film, but I don't necessarily agree. At least, it could've been a lot more risqué considering its source. Anyways, it's not the gorgeous piece of art that the MGM film remains. It does, however, have plenty of 1970s fashion and style and a groovy soundtrack. It also benefits from the most-appropriate-looking (as far as being blonde, blue-eyed, young and handsome) and probably best-looking Dorian to ever appear on screen, Helmut Berger. The removal of many of Wilde's epigrams, however, leaves an unusually dull Henry.

    Unlike other versions, including the 1945 and 2009 ones, this film doesn't do away almost entirely with the details of Sybil Vance's Shakespearean acting. It keeps the reason that Dorian rejects her because of her poor performance, even though she still has sex with him, as in the other movies and as just about everyone else in this film does. It bothers me that other adaptations miss the self-reflexive implications and theme of artistic illusion of this plot point. Another thing I like here is that it doesn't add a second grand romance, who is either related to Basil or Henry, for Dorian. It's entirely unnecessary. The Gladys here is an actual character from the book who partly fits that bill, instead, as well as the host of other characters from Wilde whom Dorian shags here. One of these liaisons explains his wealth, as 1970s Dorian, apparently, must work unlike his 19th-century counterpart. Another is the source of his blackmail of Alan Campbell, which is unexplained in the novel. The Alan storyline also involves photography, which is better employed here than it was in the 2009 "Dorian Gray."

    Most sensationally, however, is the scene where Dorian drops the soap in the shower and Henry picks it up, and there are a few more homosexual hookups besides that. Oddly, the two characters I thought were most coded as gay when reading the novel are straight here: Basil, who gushes over his feelings for Dorian's looks in the book and fears that his portrait will expose those feelings, is merely a painter for hire here; and the usual theory of Alan's blackmail in the book is that Dorian threatened to expose his homosexuality--a crime back then, for which the author Wilde would later be sentenced. Dorian, Henry and Gwendolyn, on other hand, all take part in this iteration. I'm also rather surprised by the lack of drugs for a 1970s low-budget, supposed exploitation film. Even Wilde had Dorian visit an opium den. Regardless, this remains the most daring Dorian Gray screen adaptation to that date, which benefited by its updating to the sexual revolution.
    8BA_Harrison

    A Wild(e) portrait of degradation.

    Massimo Dallamano's Dorian Gray is a REALLY kitsch version of Oscar Wilde's classic tale, set in 'swinging' London, with funky music, gaudy fashion, and decadent sexually-liberated characters of all persuasions. Helmut Berger is the beautiful young Gray, who sells his soul so that his portrait will age and decay while he himself stays eternally youthful; Richard Todd is artist Basil, who captures the likeness of Gray so perfectly that his subject becomes obsessed with his own attractiveness; and Herbert Lom is influential art dealer Henry Watton, who leads Gray astray by telling him to make the most of his youth and yield to temptation. Marie Liljedahl plays stage actress Sybil, who falls for Dorian, but finds herself abandoned once Gray gets a taste of the high life.

    Dallamano keeps the film moving at a decent pace, and his cast all put in entertaining performances, with Lom being particularly fun as the corruptor of youth, providing the film's funniest moment (unintentionally so) when he pops up in Dorian's shower, bar of soap in hand. Isa Miranda is also a hoot as ageing millionairess Mrs. Ruxton, who Dorian reluctantly treats to a spot of back-door sex in a stable. Perhaps the best thing about the film is the hideous '70s clothing, especially Berger's wardrobe: his blue velvet shirt and shorts two piece is quite the fashion statement, but it pales in comparison to the zebra stripe coat, brown flares, foppish hat and cravat ensemble that he opts for in the final act. Talking of zebra stripes, they must have been popular back then - Dorian's apartment is adorned with zebra pattern curtains, and not one, but two zebra skin rugs. Other animal-based decorations include a lion skin rug (you can never have too many dead animal skins to lounge on) and an elephant tusk picture frame. How tasteful!

    7.5/10, rounded up to 8 for Liljedahl, who is gorgeous (and not averse to taking her clothes off), and for the hilarious pair of mincing queens outside the Black Cock nightclub (I kid you not!).

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Richard Todd said in interviews that he had no idea this film featured nudity until he discovered it was playing at a well-known porn cinema in London.
    • Connections
      Featured in Trailer Trauma 2: Drive-in Monsterama (2016)

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • August 17, 1970 (Italy)
    • Countries of origin
      • United Kingdom
      • Italy
      • West Germany
      • Liechtenstein
    • Official site
      • arabuloku.com
    • Languages
      • English
      • Italian
    • Also known as
      • El retrato de Dorian Gray
    • Filming locations
      • Royal Vauxhall Tavern Pub, London, England, UK(drag bar)
    • Production companies
      • Etablissement Sargon
      • Sargon Film
      • Terra-Filmkunst
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      1 hour 33 minutes
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.66 : 1

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