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The Decameron

Original title: Il Decameron
  • 1971
  • R
  • 1h 51m
IMDb RATING
7.0/10
13K
YOUR RATING
Ninetto Davoli in The Decameron (1971)
An adaptation of nine stories from Boccaccio's "Decameron".
Play trailer1:28
1 Video
65 Photos
FarceComedyDramaHistoryRomance

An adaptation of nine stories from Boccaccio's "Decameron".An adaptation of nine stories from Boccaccio's "Decameron".An adaptation of nine stories from Boccaccio's "Decameron".

  • Director
    • Pier Paolo Pasolini
  • Writers
    • Pier Paolo Pasolini
    • Giovanni Boccaccio
  • Stars
    • Franco Citti
    • Ninetto Davoli
    • Jovan Jovanovic
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.0/10
    13K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Pier Paolo Pasolini
    • Writers
      • Pier Paolo Pasolini
      • Giovanni Boccaccio
    • Stars
      • Franco Citti
      • Ninetto Davoli
      • Jovan Jovanovic
    • 55User reviews
    • 49Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 win & 3 nominations total

    Videos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 1:28
    Trailer

    Photos65

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    Top cast50

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    Franco Citti
    Franco Citti
    • Ciappelletto
    Ninetto Davoli
    Ninetto Davoli
    • Andreuccio of Perugia
    Jovan Jovanovic
    • Rustico
    • (scenes deleted)
    Vincenzo Amato
    Vincenzo Amato
    • Masetto of Lamporecchio
    Angela Luce
    Angela Luce
    • Peronella
    Giuseppe Zigaina
    • Monk
    Maria Gabriella Maione
    Maria Gabriella Maione
    • Una madonna
    • (as Gabriella Frankel)
    Vincenzo Cristo
    Pier Paolo Pasolini
    Pier Paolo Pasolini
    • Allievo di Giotto
    • (as P.P. Pasolini)
    Giorgio Iovine
    • Lizio da Valbona
    Salvatore Bilardo
    Vincenzo Ferrigno
    • Giannello
    Luigi Seraponte
    Antonio Diddio
    Mirella Catanesi
    • Gemmata
    Vincenzo De Luca
    Erminio Nazzaro
    Giovanni Filidoro
      • Director
        • Pier Paolo Pasolini
      • Writers
        • Pier Paolo Pasolini
        • Giovanni Boccaccio
      • All cast & crew
      • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

      User reviews55

      7.013.2K
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      Featured reviews

      7valadas

      Eros in Middle Ages

      The erotic and more or less picaresque stories of which this movie is composed is based upon a collection of tales written in the 14th century by Bocaccio an Italian writer already called the Voltaire of 14th century. In the Middle Ages there was a tendency later abandoned, of considering erotic adventures under a humoristic point of view. The most common "hero" of those tales was the cuckold husband. I'm not a great fan of Pasolini. However this movie is more or less successful in depicting a series of funny situations related with erotic entanglements. Its merit is more due to the narrative form than to the stories itselves some them less funny than others. But the composition of the successive scenes develops in a series of pictures full of colour and movement portraying the people in the streets in a realistic way, showing popular types such as peasants, merchants, priests, nuns, etc. most of them with no make-up at all which contributes to create a vivid atmosphere that really puts us in the middle of a mediaeval scenery. Not a masterwork but something worth to be seen anyway.
      RobertF87

      Amusing Medieval Adventures

      This film is a portmanteau film based on the famous 14th Century Italian story collection "The Decameron" by Giovanni Boccaccio. The book deals with ten people telling a story each every day for ten days, but Pier Paolo Pasolini (for obvious reasons) chooses merely nine stories for his film. Most of the stories deal with sex or deception (usually both).

      Like all portmanteau films, some stories are better than others, but most of the stories in this film are so short that, if you don't enjoy one story, you don't have to wait long for the next one.

      The film depicts a world filled with dirt and vulgarity but also full of life. Pasolini used a lot of ordinary people in his films and here we see many of the actors are not conventionally attractive (for example many have bad, or missing, teeth). Pasolini appears in the film as a pupil of the painter Giotto who is assigned to paint a mural on the wall of a church.

      I found this film funny, charming and very entertaining. Definitely for adults though, there is quite a lot of sex and nudity on display here.

      This was the first film in Pasolini's so-called "Trilogy of Life" and was followed by "The Canterbury Tales" and "The Arabian Nights".
      KGB-Greece-Patras

      This was fresh and enjoyable!

      I haven't yet seen too many Pasolini films / I intend to do so though... I suppose many combine him with the disgusting Salo (100 days in Sodoma) but thats not the case here.

      In Decameron is actually several shorts, 9 or so, a series of funny tales in medieval Italy with similar touch and atmosphere. The humour is great, we had various laughs in almost every single bit. Some of the humour might of course offend hardcore Christians, but this is by no means a minus in my book. Pasolini's assault to this eras ethics is truly a delight! And even if this dates back to 1971, the stories remain fresh and provocative as is, and this is the height of Pasolini's vision.

      Many indicated this as erotic. Sure, there is much of full frontal male and female nudity, some of which quite stimulating, which might be too much for some. But this ain't no erotic film. There are stories which have not erotic element in - and there are nude scenes which function as laugh scenes. Overall, this is a multi-layered short-stories film. I RECOMMEND THIS TO ALL FANS OF COMEDY & European FILMS.
      9Galina_movie_fan

      Lust for Life

      Pasolini freely adapts ten or so episodes from Boccaccio's fourteenth century collection of hundred short stories. He interweaves the tales of happy or tragic lovers, naughty nuns and lusty priests, naive husbands and cheating but quick-witted wives, inept grave robbers, and a young gardener who got more than he had bargained for, with his own meditations on art, life, death and love. Pasolini himself plays a painter Giotto who observes the characters that inspire him to paint a fresco on the church's wall.

      "Decameron" is the first part of Pasolini's "Trilogy Of Life", which continues with adaptations of two other celebrated works of world fiction; "The Canterbury Tales" (1972) and the "Arabian Nights" aka "A Thousand and One Nights" (1974). All these books have been known as distinguished and revered works of literature that belong to the immortal classics. There are probably so many big volumes have been written about them that it would take more than a thousand and one days and nights to read them. They talk about love, death, the meaning of life, and religion but first and most of all – they entertain. At the time they were told and written down, no one would think of them as the future academic references. That's why they are so alive, earthy, coarse, and bold. I have not seen two other Pasolini's films but 'Decameron' captures the original spirit of Boccaccio's tales truthfully and with love, humanity, and perfect sense of the medieval Italy.

      The film has a look of a renaissance painting – not only Italian Renaissance (Giotto) but Netherlandish Northern Renaissance - Peter Bruegel and Hieronymus Bosch.

      As he often did, Pasolin used in the film the non-professional actors to play the medieval peasants. They had none of the Hollywood glamor or classical features or perfect teeth and smiles– but their faces are interesting, original, and real.

      Full of rustic comedy and innocence, earthy humor and lust for life –"Decameron" is one of the most optimistic, and celebrating life films ever made. Its sexuality is straightforward and honest, moving and not insulting. This film, my first Pasolini made me want to see the rest of the trilogy and the rest of his films.
      6Nazi_Fighter_David

      The movie is lively, gutsy, and quite funny

      This is the first of Pasolini's three feature-film adaptations of obscene tales of antiquity, the other two being "The Canterbury Tales" and "The Arabian Nights." It contains ten of Boccaccio's most famous tales… The bawdiest story concerns a merchant who back-doors his partner's wife by promising to tell her his secret of turning a woman to a female horse and back to a woman again...

      The tale of the two lovers sleeping together on the terrace is quite nice and very erotic, but the most hilarious one involves a young man who pretends he's a deaf mute in order to get into a convent... Once inside, he discovers that the sisters are very curious about all the excitement the world has made over sex and want to find out if it is worth it...

      The stories are quite funny and the acting is adequate especially for non-professionals… But the film's charm is in its unrefined energy…It spends as much time showing nude men as it does showing nude women, which was quite unusual for its time

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      Romance

      Storyline

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      Did you know

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      • Trivia
        The Decameron (1971) is the first film in Pier Paolo Pasolini's "Trilogy of Life," continuing with The Canterbury Tales (1972) and concluding with Arabian Nights (1974). Each film was an adaptation of a different piece of classical literature focusing on ribald and often irreligious themes. The tales contain abundant nudity, sex, slapstick and scatological humor.
      • Goofs
        When the Mother Superior seduces the deaf-mute boy, he's sleeping in a tomato garden. Tomatoes are a New World crop that wouldn't be brought to Italy for another two centuries. The same is true of the corn (maize) growing in the convent's little field.
      • Quotes

        Allievo di Giotto: Why create a work of art when dreaming about it is so much sweeter?

      • Alternate versions
        Although the cinema version was intact the 1988 UK Warner video was cut by 22 secs by the BBFC to remove shots of naked genitals during the bedroom sex scene with the nun. The cuts were fully restored in the 2001 BFI DVD release.
      • Connections
        Edited into Porn to Be Free (2016)
      • Soundtracks
        Fenesta Ca Lucive
        Written by Guglielmo Cottrau, Vincenzo Bellini and Giulio Genoino in 1842

        Performed by Franco Citti

        Sung by Ser Ciappelletto and his Neapolitan hosts in Germany. Also sung by one of the Neapolitans to a monk.

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      Details

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      • Release date
        • October 29, 1971 (France)
      • Countries of origin
        • Italy
        • France
        • West Germany
      • Languages
        • Italian
        • Neapolitan
        • German
        • Latin
      • Also known as
        • El decamerón
      • Filming locations
        • Mount Vesuvius, Naples, Campania, Italy
      • Production companies
        • Produzioni Europee Associate (PEA)
        • Les Productions Artistes Associés
        • Artemis Film
      • See more company credits at IMDbPro

      Box office

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      • Gross worldwide
        • $839
      See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

      Tech specs

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      • Runtime
        • 1h 51m(111 min)
      • Sound mix
        • Mono
      • Aspect ratio
        • 1.85 : 1

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