Wild Blood tells the story of an Italian director living in Venice during World War II. The movie explores themes of homosexuality, drug use, fascism, and the nonlinear timeline of the director's life. It also touches on topics such as abortion, Italian cinema, and the Italian intelligence agency. The protagonist's struggle with his own identity and the challenges he faces as an artist in a time of war are central to the plot.
Short documentary about the Italian town of Salò during World War 2 and what it endured.
We are on the set of "Salò or the 120 days of Sodom". Pasolini lets a small camera team led by the journalist Gideon Bachmann follow him around engaging him in a long and extraordinary interview/conversation. The interview turns into a long, clear-sighted and violent attack on society that accompanies photos of the set in a surprising juxtaposition of film and reality, revealing Pasolini's metaphorical portrait of modernity.
the italian social republic was born in september 1943 after the armistice with the allies and the liberation of mussolini, as an attempt to rebuild an italian state that would continue the work of fascism. the government of the new republic is based in salo ', on the shores of lake garda, with a political center in verona, where the republican fascist party is rebuilt. from then until 1945 Italy lived nineteen dramatic months, characterized by deaths and destruction. in the vain attempt to regain the consent of the masses, the republic of salo 'became an instrument of repression in the hands of the Germans and collapsed, in April 1945, in the face of the advance of the allied armies. this documentary reconstructs the history of those 600 days with largely unpublished material.
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