| Index | 5 reviews in total |
5 out of 6 people found the following review useful:
A fascinating thunderstorm of impressive, unique pictures that appear from a bubbling kettle again and again!!, 31 December 2000
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Author:
(jhay@pandora.be) from Bruges, Belgium
Candide is a nice, innocent young man who is raised in a castle of a noble
family in Westphalia during the medieval age. Dr. Pangloss, a teacher of
metaphysics and philosophy educates him and tells that he lives in the best
of all possible worlds and that any apparent absurdity, misery and conflict
are actually all parts of a greater good that mortals cannot perceive. The
happy life of Candido changes drastically when he falls in love with the
Baron's daughter Cunegonda and is caught with her. Candide is banned from
the castle and starts traveling into a timeless world, searching for his
lost love.
Candide attempts to stay optimistic as unbelievable horrors unfold in a
world full of brutality, war, slavery and sickness...
The makers of this movie base the film on a cynical satire `Candide' from
the French writer Voltaire. Directors Gualtiero Jacopetti and Franco
Prosperi are known for their documentaries in which they have already
presented the horrors of the world: MONDO CANE (part 1 and 2), AFRICA ADDIO
and the very revolting ADDIO ZIO TOM. In comparison with other
shockumentaries, all these movies are very well directed, have a racy
comment and contain unforgettable images. "Mondo Candido" is a masterpiece.
It's sensational, sometimes shocking but you will see a series of
unforgettable images, very beautifully filmed, even though they are cruel,
nihilistic and pessimistic.
The superb musical score from Riz Ortolani is available now, but it is very
difficult to find this exceptional movie.
Rating:10!
6 out of 8 people found the following review useful:
Bizarre, but fascinating and full of symbolism., 27 January 2001
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Author:
mac-hammer-fan from Belgium
This movie reminds me at the work of Fellini. It's perhaps even more cynical and extravagant. But "Mondo Candido" is a true, genuine, masterpiece, a rare gem coming from the colourful imagination of the Italian directors team Jacopetti & Prosperi who were responsible for the shockumentaries in the past. Behind this kaleidoscope of violence, black humour and pessimism you will find a series of metaphors and a lot of symbolism. We can only hope that this movie will become available in widescreen on DVD in the future... Highly recommended!
3 out of 4 people found the following review useful:
Wonderfully wild retelling of Voltaire's Candide, 23 September 2005
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Author:
dbborroughs from Glen Cove, New York
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
Think Fellini meets Burton meets Lynch meets Greenaway meets Pasolini
meets any of a half dozen other film makers. A film of visual delights
thats coupled with a very thought provoking narrative.
The plot concerns a very happy go lucky "skips everywhere with wild
abandon" young man who falls madly in love with a princess. When he is
caught in an inappropriate situation with her, he's banned from the
castle. Thus begins a quest to find his lady love and himself as he
travels across a medieval landscape that becomes modern New York,
Ireland and Israel. During the course of the journey he finds that all
is not as happy and joyous as he once thought.
I watched this in Italian with no subtitles and was completely
enraptured. This is a visually wonderful film that makes you think and
ponder about what life really is and who people are (his grand lady
love is far from the chaste goddess he imagines). I can only imagine
how much understanding the dialog will add to the experience. This is a
film unlike anything they make now a days, and only did when one of the
cinema's great minds was behind it. Its wild and wanton and has
everything including, in all probability, a kitchen sink. Even 12 hours
after viewing it I'm still playing out much of what I saw in my mind.
Forgive the lack of discussion but this is a hard film to explain or
discuss briefly.
Many people don't like the work of the directors Gualtiero Jacopetti
and Franco E. Prosperi who made their name in the world of Mondo movies
and think that all they wanted to do was cause a sensation. On some
level I think they did want to do that but at the same time they did
manage to turn out some very thought provoking films chiefly Africa
Addio and Addio zio Tom. Here they prove that they could do more than
real life sensationalism and have managed to turn out a fine little
film.
I really liked this movie a great deal and look forward to seeing it
again with some form of English translation. I recommend it especially
if you want to get away from conventional European cinema.
4 out of 8 people found the following review useful:
Trash as a form of art, 14 December 2004
Author:
Zingus J. Rinkle
Starting off as some kind of a typical Italian, gross, sexy comedy of the seventies, I wasn't really expecting it could end up digging into me. Lousy gags everywhere, absurd, unacceptable, incoherent sights (I mean, naked female Israeli fighters, come on) and featuring Gianfranco D'Angelo as the baron. "Thrash" seemed the only viable label for that. But as the movie goes on, incoherence, harass and nonsense build up to such an amount (and even mix up with suggestive images) one must admit it really is *something*. Some good time to spend for those who loved "mondo cane," but I probably wouldn't mind enough to start a video shop hunt for it (in fact it was being aired overnight by Italian stations.)
1 out of 4 people found the following review useful:
MONDO CANDIDO (Gualtiero Jacopetti and Franco Prosperi, 1975) **1/2, 9 March 2008
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Author:
MARIO GAUCI (marrod@melita.com) from Naxxar, Malta
Despite the title, this isn't yet another repellent documentary by the
notorious film-makers behind MONDO CANE (1962) et al; rather, it's an
adaptation their only 'proper' feature as a team of the popular
allegory "Candide" by the celebrated French author Voltaire.
Incidentally, I own this classic piece of literature and, in fact, had
read it some years ago; while I can't objectively determine the film's
actual proximity to the source novel (also for reasons I'll get to
later), as I lay watching it, I certainly recalled the episodic and
essentially tasteless nature of the plot (placing the subject matter
firmly down the film-makers' alley!) not to mention connotations
relating to the main characters (the naively optimistic hero Candide,
his long-suffering lover Cunegonde serenely accepting every card
dealt her by Fate and the boy's infuriatingly practical mentor Dr.
Pangloss), and even key phrases from the book!!
Voltaire's narrative thrust the titular character (after being banished
for ravishing Cunegonde) into all the socio-political strife that went
on in that particular era; in hindsight, little has changed throughout
the centuries and, in fact, this satirical- picaresque style has
influenced other notable works including Evelyn Waugh's "Decline And
Fall" (filmed in 1968) and Lindsay Anderson's second "Mick Travis"
adventure O LUCKY MAN! (1973). "Candide" itself has been adapted for
cinema and TV a number of times, with perhaps the most interesting
version being the 1960 French film (which updates the tale to WWII)
with an all-star cast Jean-Pierre Cassel (as the hero), Daliah Lavi
(Cunegonde), Pierre Brasseur (Pangloss), Michel Simon, Louis De Funes,
Michel Serrault, etc. As for MONDO CANDIDO, it starts off in period
vein but then switches to more recent times and events (presumably for
a greater political immediacy) so that we see Candide & Co. involved
with IRA bombings, Jewish freedom-fighters, even hippies; that said, it
maintains a curious balance throughout of old and new: for instance, at
one point Cunegonde is raped by a rocker dressed in a knight's
outfit(!) - which emerges to be perhaps the film's comic/absurd
highlight. For this reason, the ever-reliable Riz Ortolani provides a
suitably eclectic score.
Given its considerable length of 110 minutes (and with the only notable
performers in the cast being Jacques Herlin as Pangloss and popular
Italian comic Gianfranco D'Angelo as Cunegonde's campy Baron father),
it's small wonder that the film bogs down after the IRA scenes.
Nevertheless, it features ample nudity and violence (notably the
slow-motion massacre of the Jewish troops) to say nothing of
weirdness to keep the interest alive (and is good-looking into the
bargain).
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