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| Index | 30 reviews in total |
21 out of 22 people found the following review useful:
A magnificent piece of Pop Art, 16 August 2001
Author:
sinistre1111 from Kasparhauser, NJ, USA
To judge this film by "today's standards" misses the point--what are we comparing it to? Armageddon? Scream 3? This was the European 60s vision of the 'future'-- and why didn't it turn out that way? An odd, cheeky little plot mixing romance, light sci-fi and gunplay is underscored by dazzling visuals in a similar style to The Prisoner series, or Alphaville (if it were in color). Piero Piccioni's score is pure 'Jazz 2001', and is available as an import reissue. Mastroianni is charming and Ursula Andress is at her sexiest, in an array of groovy ensembles. It all depends on what you're after, but personally I wish the WORLD LOOKED like this movie and that men's and women's fashion reflected this film's 'in the future, people will dress like this' style. Anchor Bay's DVD is a great addition to the collection of any 60s/European film fan.
17 out of 19 people found the following review useful:
A hidden gem..., 13 February 2001
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Author:
carrienations from Philadelphia, PA
I normally don't feel compelled to write reviews for films, especially
when
similar views have already been presented. However, after seeing a
blatantly off-base review under the title of "hopeless" for "The 10th
Victim", I had to make up for it. That reviewer is obviously incapable of
appreciating a film like this because it's not easily pigeonholed. It's a
fun, exciting comedy, drama, and farce rolled into one... I really liked
the interactions between Andress (who looks absolutely stunning in this
film) and Mastroianni. An interesting concept that is well executed...
after viewing it for the first time, I knew it would remain an all-time
favorite of mine for life... I am thrilled that this is finally seeing
the
light of day on DVD (after a way-outdated VHS version that even had a
photo
of Andress from ten years later on the cover, instead of a proper still
from
the movie). I'm buying this on DVD the second it's released...
Lest I forget... the soundtrack of this film is simply amazing... Not a
large amount of original music, but what a score it is... by the Italian
master Piero Piccioni. Listen and love...
15 out of 17 people found the following review useful:
A Futuristic, sci-fi, dark comedy, 9 June 2005
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Author:
justin from United States
In the future an organization sets up a game show that show people hunting each other. Two people are chosen: the Hunter and the Victim. Anything goes as the Victim flees for the designated time period. Marcello Mastorianni plays the most successful killer and then his number comes up as a victim. The hunters and victims have know knowledge of one another and Marcello must always be on guard. The hunter after him is the beautiful Ursula Andress, always dressed in knock-out fashions. Marcello's as cool as ever, always dressed in black, wearing sunglasses. The production design is fantastic. The colourful comic book architecture is the height of retro cool. For fan of Italian '60s pop art science fiction, this is one to check out.
17 out of 21 people found the following review useful:
It's an Italian Sex Farce, really, but it's also a fine sci-fi and pop art fantasy, 11 August 2006
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Author:
dhermanson-1 from United States
The more serious you get about this movie, the more you are missing the
point. It's an Italian Sex Farce, really, but it's also a fine pop art
film, and a fine science-fiction romp that would be a great double
feature with Blade Runner. The review "A wonderful example of 60s pop
art film-making,Italian-style", by jisenhath from New York, New York
USA, really nails the essence of this social-satire sci-fi.
Like the crocodile tears the sun worshippers cry for the setting sun
(satire on religion, of course, though it's also close to the excesses
of the 60's hippy-dippies doing nature "for real" in 65), the movie is
best taken in the vapid, mondo gellato style it revels in.
From the novel by Robert Sheckley (still a great read, too), the
"shocking" hunt takes a swipe at the media circus and boredom of
excess, while visually reveling in it. The fashion, style and beauty of
both Elsa Martinelli and Ursula Andress are a joy, while Marcello works
his casual nonchalance and easy timing as the Italian sophisticate at
ease with multiple meanings. That's come to pass, hasn't it, as we read
from this computer on a network spanning the world. Is this a cult we
are a part of? If so, don't cry, but laugh. Like this film does.
Cheesy one review says... no, cheesy is when the film attempts
something and does not succeed through taste, budget or in-ineptitude.
Opera is not cheesy, but it is ornate, over-the- top and hyper. So is
this film. It's space opera in the operatic sense of La Scala.
It's spun gold, and a fine bookend to Marcello's 60's sex romps like
Cassanova 70. (done in '65 too, a good year for vintage Marcello). Asti
Spumante, anyone?
14 out of 16 people found the following review useful:
One of the very best SF movies ever made...POSITIVELY BRILLIANT!!!, 23 September 1999
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Author:
inframan from the lower depths
There are always some people too wrapped up in themselves to pick up on the spectacular ideas & images in this movie, though it's hard to believe. The look & concept of the "future" in this movie is one of the most original in film, from the s/m club to the sexual roadside rest stops to having to hide your parents because it's a law to turn them in after a certain age _ but above all _ the concept of the hunt itself. Absolutely brilliant!!!
14 out of 18 people found the following review useful:
A wonderful example of 60s pop art filmmaking,Italian-style., 3 June 2000
Author:
jisenhath from New York, New York USA
As a wonderful example of 60s pop art filmmaking, Elio Petri has taken many of the decade's most popular culture crazes (the Bond films, Courreges fashions, discotheque jazz, etc.) and used them with great success to give a plausible look to a highly improbable (in 1965!) future world. Petri's digs at Mad Ave advertising and humanity's relentless pursuit of fame and money (no matter the price) are on-target, and his delight in mocking societal idiosyncrasies (the sun worshipers) is priceless. However, at the heart of The Tenth Victim is the old-fashioned battle-of-the-sexes plot (still very popular in the mid-60s), and yet Petri has the upper hand by his spoofing of the romantic-comedy genre and giving us instead a deliciously amusing trifle that is fun to watch for its joking attitude towards everything it depicts, including Marcello and Ursula! To one reviewer who found it outdated, it must be remembered that this film was made 35 years ago and so it naturally has nothing to do with today's standards - and why should it? That's like dismissing Griffith's Intolerance because it's a silent film!
11 out of 15 people found the following review useful:
An interesting look at the future's past, 26 May 2005
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Author:
isotope_217 from United States
Coming at the tail-end of one of the most provocative eras of film, European new wave, and featuring Italian cinema's premiere leading man of the time, Mr. Mastroianni, The 10th Victim exciting movie, given its year of release. The concept, that a group of over-bored members of a somewhat Utopian society spend their time hunting and being the hunted in the then-futuristic 1990's, works well, while the Italian backdrop is, as usual, a treat. While at times aping better Italian filmmakers of the time such as Fellini, the movie chugs along into a somewhat twisted relationship between hunter and hunted - the female component of this equation being played by Ursula Andress, yow!. Themes of a desensitized society, anonymity, and a thrill-seeking populace would re-emerge around the early 90's in America with cult obsessions over serial killers, a groundswell of violent video games/movies/television,and the formation of underground social cliques and groups such as gen x and "grunge" culture, whose attitudes towards sex/society/money/politics differed radically from the norm. The Tenth Victim may not have been on the spot prediction-wise, but its themes were accurate to the future scape it was attempting to create.
3 out of 3 people found the following review useful:
Kitsch-art-camp political satire that has lost some of its bite but none of its stylish European charm, 27 April 2009
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Author:
chaos-rampant from Greece
THE TENTH VICTIM might not be the kind of film one readily associates
with Italy's foremost political director, Elio Petri, but it sure has
his leftist mark stamped all over it. Set in a not-so-distant future, a
hodge podge of pseudo-futuristic art installments, snazzy backgrounds
and a general air of camp-kitsch than a fully realized world, more A
CLOCKWORK ORANGE than BLADE RUNNER in that sense, and involving a
peculiar game called The Big Hunt where people are assigned to murder
complete strangers and become in turns hunters and victims, an idea
that seems to have resurfaced in another form in Robert Altman's
QUINTET a decade later, The Tenth Victim is at once a biting critique
of capitalism and all assorted paraphernalia and a thoroughly enjoyable
absurdist comedy.
Nothing escapes Petri's ire. Although not particularly profound, his
satire makes the rounds firing among other things at the media's
obesssion with violence, reality TV, society's fixation on youth and
beauty, the ostracizing of the elders, etc. It's all very
tongue-in-cheek and vibrant in an irreverent Euro-kitsch way but still
quite imaginative for its time. Later in the film, Mastroianni presides
in a sun ritual by the seaside, mourning the setting of the sun, which
is interrupted by a group of 'neo-realists' throwing tomatoes at the
assembled crowd. Petri's stab at Rossellini, De Sica and the rest?
Mastroianni's character admits of doing the ceremony for the money and
the tears he cried were fake thanks to a 'tear pill' that lasts for 15
minutes.
That's pretty much the tone set for the entire movie. Petri doesn't
seem to dwell on anything for long or take his critique any more
serious than he has to. The movie declines significantly in quality in
the last 20 minutes, the last 10, an awkward shootout between
Mastroianni and his two ex-wives, should've been left out altogether,
but overall it's never boring and it's filled with great little
moments. The opening titty-shotgun murder in the Masoch Club, students
beating each other up as a nonchalant Mastroianni walks through them,
other players of the game popping up randomly throughout the movie
shooting at each other. If all else fails, you can still oogle at the
gorgeous Ursulla Andress and her skimpy outfits.
4 out of 5 people found the following review useful:
Clever But Thin, 3 February 2008
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Author:
gftbiloxi (gftbiloxi@yahoo.com) from Biloxi, Mississippi
According to film lore, actor Marcello Mastroianni was so impressed
with a short-story by science-fiction author Robert Sheckley that he
sent it to director Elio Petri. The result was a groundbreaking Italian
film that alternately shocked and amused audiences of 1965--and which,
like the 1976 NETWORK, proved prophetic re the rise of "reality
television." Set in a future imagined in terms of minimalist 1960s
fashion and design movements, THE 10TH VICTIM (LA DECIMA VITTIMA)
presents us with a world that has sublimated the human race's hunger
for violence into a game known as "The Big Hunt." Register as a member
and you become predator and prey, with each player seeking to survive
while killing ten others in order to win fame, fortune, and national
acclaim.
American Caroline Meredith (Ursla Andress) is particularly celebrated
and--after dispatching her ninth victim via her boobytrapped bra--is
eager to win the grand prize by taking out her tenth: Italian Marcello
Polletti (Marcello Mastroianni.) But an advertiser promises her even
bigger bucks if she can turn it into a television ad for his product,
creating a situation in which Caroline cannot simply kill Marcello at
will: she must do it at a particular place and time where the cameras
will be rolling.
In order to accomplish this, Caroline decides to seduce Marcello with
both her body and the lure of cash--which he badly needs--for a
television interview. Marcello is no fool, and even as Caroline plans
to blow his head off for benefit of television he's signing his own
advertising deal to accomplish her death by crocodile. But there's a
further complication: even as they attempt to maneuver each other into
death, they also unwillingly fall in love.
THE 10TH VICTIM was extremely celebrated in 1965; today, however, it
reads as slightly thin. We've become used to the idea of people who are
willing to do just about anything on television, and the idea of murder
by game show isn't nearly so far-fetched as it used to be. The film
scores, however, in its specific ideas, which range from exploding
boots to a government that occasionally switches out your apartment's
furniture whether you like it or not. The DVD transfer is quite nice,
but bonuses are limited to cast notes and the theatrical trailer.
Recommended, but mainly for fans of 1960s futurism who haven't lost
their sense of humor! GFT, Amazon Reviewer
3 out of 4 people found the following review useful:
run out and rent this oddity!, 3 June 2003
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Author:
John Dean from John Dean
This instantly shot to up to one of my new favorite films. It's everything the film SERIES-7 pretended to be, based on the Sheckley novel that pretty much invented the televised human hunting sub-genre. This film has all the irreverence of the a mid-60's, the ornate costumes, set design and absurdist wit. Marcello Mastrioni is hilarious as the bored, easygoing contestant who seems to be waltzing through without a scratch, and Ursula Andress is wonderful as the cold-blooded siren. The film falls off the deep end in the last five minutes, must have been some great LSD on the set that day, but overall this is a must see for any true cinephile.
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