Salò, or the 120 Days of Sodom (1976)
Salò, or the 120 Days of Sodom (1976)


Plot.
Where to Watch.

Currently Salò, or the 120 Days of Sodom is available for streaming online, rent, buy or watch for free on: Filmin
Streaming in:
🇪🇸 Spain
Cast & Crew.

Paolo Bonacelli
The Duke

Giorgio Cataldi
The Bishop

Uberto Paolo Quintavalle
The Magistrate

Aldo Valletti
The President

Caterina Boratto
Signora Castelli

Elsa De Giorgi
Signora Maggi

Hélène Surgère
Signora Vaccari

Sonia Saviange
The Pianist

Sergio Fascetti
Sergio - Male Victim

Bruno Musso
Carlo Porro - Male Victim

Antonio Orlando
Tonino - Male Victim

Claudio Cicchetti
Male Victim

Franco Merli
Male Victim

Umberto Chessari
Male Victim

Lamberto Book
Lamberto Gobbi - Male Victim

Gaspare Di Jenno
Rino - Male Victim

Giuliana Melis
Female Victim

Faridah Malik
Fatimah - Female Victim

Graziella Aniceto
Female Victim

Renata Moar
Female Victim

Dorit Henke
Doris - Female Victim

Antiniska Nemour
Female Victim

Benedetta Gaetani
Female Victim

Olga Andreis
Eva - Female Victim

Tatiana Mogilansky
Daughter

Susanna Radaelli
Daughter

Giuliana Orlandi
Daughter

Liana Acquaviva
Daughter

Rinaldo Missaglia
Guard

Giuseppe Patruno
Guard

Guido Galletti
Guard

Efisio Etzi
Guard

Claudio Troccoli
Collaborator

Fabrizio Menichini
Collaborator

Maurizio Valaguzza
Collaborator

Ezio Manni
Collaborator

Paola Pieracci
Wife

Carla Terlizzi
Wife

Anna Maria Dossena
Wife

Anna Recchimuzzi
Wife

Ines Pellegrini
The Slave Girl

Alessandro Gennari
OVRA Officer (uncredited)

Marco Lucantoni
First Male Victim (uncredited)

Dante Trazzi
Boys Recruiter (uncredited)

Anna Troccoli
First Female Victim (uncredited)

Pupi Avati
Writer

Sergio Citti
Writer

Dante Ferretti
Production Design

Danilo Donati
Costume Design

Ennio Morricone
Music Consultant / Music

Maurizio Forti
istration

Pietro Innocenti
istration

Roland Barthes
Thanks

Maurice Blanchot
Thanks

Simone de Beauvoir
Thanks

Pierre Klossowski
Thanks

Philippe Sollers
Thanks

Nico Naldini
Publicist

Alberto Grimaldi
Presenter / Producer

Beatrice Banfi
Script Supervisor

Arnaldo Graziosi
Musician

Enzo Ocone
Post Production Coordinator

Alfredo Menchini
Assistant Editor

Ugo De Rossi
Assistant Editor

Vanni Castellani
Costume Assistant

Carlo Tafani
Camera Operator

Giancarlo Granatelli
Second Assistant Camera

Emilio Bestetti
Camera Operator

Deborah Imogen Beer
Still Photographer

Sandro Battaglia
First Assistant Camera

Alfredo Tiberi
Special Effects / Makeup Artist

Giuseppina Sagliano
Boom Operator

Domenico Pasqua Di Bisceglie
Sound

Giorgio Loviscek
Sound

Massimo Anzellotti
Sound Effects Editor

Fausto Ancillai
Sound Mixer

Italo Tomassi
Painter

Maria Teresa Barbasso
Draughtsman

Fiorella Infascelli
Second Assistant Director

Umberto Angelucci
First Assistant Director
Media.

























Details.
Release Date
January 10, 1976
Original Name
Salò o le 120 giornate di Sodoma
Status
Released
Running Time
1h 56m
Budget
$800,000
Box Office
$1,800,000
Filming Locations
Salò · Villa Riesenfeld · Gardeletta · Cinecittà · Bologna, Italy
Genres
Last updated:
This Movie Is About.
Wiki.
Salò, or the 120 Days of Sodom (Italian: Salò o le 120 giornate di Sodoma), billed on-screen as Pasolini's 120 Days of Sodom on English-language prints and commonly referred to as simply Salò (Italian: [saˈlɔ]), is a 1975 political art horror film directed and co-written by Pier Paolo Pasolini. The film is a loose adaptation of the 1785 novel (first published in 1904) The 120 Days of Sodom by the Marquis de Sade, updating the story's setting to the World War II era. It was Pasolini's final film, released three weeks after his murder.
The film focuses on four wealthy, corrupt Italian libertines in the time of the fascist Republic of Salò (1943–1945). The libertines kidnap 18 teenagers and subject them to four months of extreme violence, sadism, genital torture and psychological torture. The film explores themes of political corruption, consumerism, authoritarianism, nihilism, morality, capitalism, totalitarianism, sadism, sexuality, and fascism. The story is in four segments, inspired by Dante's Divine Comedy: the Anteinferno, the Circle of Manias, the Circle of Shit, and the Circle of Blood. The film also contains frequent references to and several discussions of Friedrich Nietzsche's 1887 book On the Genealogy of Morality, Ezra Pound's poem The Cantos, and Marcel Proust's novel sequence In Search of Lost Time.
Premiering at the Paris Film Festival on 23 November 1975, the film had a brief theatrical run in Italy before being banned in January 1976, and was released in the United States the following year on 3 October 1977. Because it depicts youths subjected to graphic violence, torture, sexual abuse, and murder, the film was controversial upon its release and has remained banned in many countries.
The confluence of thematic content in the film—ranging from the political and socio-historical, to psychological and sexual—has led to much critical discussion. It has been both praised and decried by various film historians and critics and was named the 65th-scariest film ever made by the Chicago Film Critics Association in 2006.
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