A group of pilgrims in the Vatican is trapped in an enclosed elevator. Then chaos erupts, and repressed urges come to the surface.A group of pilgrims in the Vatican is trapped in an enclosed elevator. Then chaos erupts, and repressed urges come to the surface.A group of pilgrims in the Vatican is trapped in an enclosed elevator. Then chaos erupts, and repressed urges come to the surface.
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Once in awhile a movie comes along that is about a group of priests, nuns, and other devout individuals who get trapped for an indefinite amount of time in an ultra-modern elevator in the Vatican and eventually lose all their moral bearings and indulge in all kinds of sins of the flesh culminating finally in cannibalism. Well, this is that movie! Actually, though, strange as this movie sounds, it's not totally without precedent. It's very similar to Luis Bunuel's "The Exterminating Angel" which is about a group of bourgeosis who are for some reason unable to leave a dinner party and, later, a church. This film is even more outrageous and exploitative than the Bunuel film though. It also resembles a series of extreme "survival" films that were popular at that time like "Survive!" or "Cyclone", but its not quite as graphic as those in its depiction of things like cannibalism.
It is definitely pretty blasphemous including scenes of people gorging themselves on communion wafers and sacramental wine, renouncing God (I think--it was Italian without subtitles), and the most outrageous scene has a priest feeling up a teenage girl (with his toe?!) and then humping her right in front of her parents and everybody (who are incredibly slow to react, perhaps so the more perverted viewers can enjoy this spectacle for several minutes). Of course, this scene is totally preposterous (after all, there is also a teenage BOY on the elevator that the priest could have molested). I'm not quite sure the point of all this debauchery and occasional blasphemy. Perhaps it is saying that beneath the veneer of civilization and morality, we are all little better than a collection of animalistic appetites. Not too uplifting I'm sure, but it may very well be true. I wouldn't recommend this movie to observant Catholics, or anyone who's is easily offended, but it is pretty interesting. It's different, a least
It is definitely pretty blasphemous including scenes of people gorging themselves on communion wafers and sacramental wine, renouncing God (I think--it was Italian without subtitles), and the most outrageous scene has a priest feeling up a teenage girl (with his toe?!) and then humping her right in front of her parents and everybody (who are incredibly slow to react, perhaps so the more perverted viewers can enjoy this spectacle for several minutes). Of course, this scene is totally preposterous (after all, there is also a teenage BOY on the elevator that the priest could have molested). I'm not quite sure the point of all this debauchery and occasional blasphemy. Perhaps it is saying that beneath the veneer of civilization and morality, we are all little better than a collection of animalistic appetites. Not too uplifting I'm sure, but it may very well be true. I wouldn't recommend this movie to observant Catholics, or anyone who's is easily offended, but it is pretty interesting. It's different, a least
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By what name was Nel più alto dei cieli (1977) officially released in Canada in English?
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