Grazie zia
Salvatore Samperi.
Grazie, Zia
a k a Come Play With Me; Thank You, Aunt
1967-Italy
NEW DVD
Gabriele Ferzetti,
Lisa Gastoni
, Lou Castel, Nicoletta Rizzi, Massimo Sarchielli.
Starring:
Lisa Gastoni,
Lou Castel,
Gabriele Ferzetti
Directed by:
Salvatore Samperi
91 minutes.
Italia 1968.
PAL Area 2
Widescreen)
in italian, Dolby Digital 1.0 - mono
Young Alvise's body is paralyzed, or at least he thinks so.
He is infatuated by his beautiful aunt Lea. What starts as innocent
therapy and care soon develops into strange erotic and
psychological battle between them.
Grazie Zia is better known by its
English-language title
Thank You, Aunt
. As an act of defiance against a world he never fit into,
17-year-old Alvise (
Lou Castel) has willed himself into a
state of psychosomatic paralysis. From the vantage point of his
wheelchair, Alvise cruelly manipulates all those around him. The
only one who seems to resist his tyranny is his gorgeous aunt Lea (
Lisa Gastoni). Hopelessly in love with
Lea, Alvise determines to "conquer" her as well. Her response to
his insidious mind games is hardly what Alvise expects, but it's
certainly what the audience has been clamoring for since Reel One.
To call
Grazie Zia
kinky would be putting it mildly. The film was also
released as
Come Play With Me.
Samperi's directorial debut is also the first film of his I've
watched and it seems that his other films - culminating in MALIZIA
(1973), which made an international star of Laura Antonelli - are
more or less along the same art-house erotica lines with the added
benefit of having, at least initially, a decent array of
international performers appearing in them. Italian cinema of the
1960s and 1970s yielded several obscure gems and, while this is
certainly not one of its shining examples, it is intriguing enough
to warrant at least one viewing.
Leading man Lou Castel, repeating his brooding, handicapped
hero act from Marco Bellocchio's FIST IN HIS POCKET (1965), is an
ungrateful, mischievous, wheelchair-bound teenager who is
hopelessly infatuated with his sensual aunt Lisa Gastoni, much to
the chagrin of her journalist fiancée Gabriele Ferzetti.
The three actors acquit themselves well enough under the
circumstances given that the material is rather too thin (and, in
hindsight, rather pretentious and not terribly compelling either)
to sustain even a moderately long film such as this one. Still, the
film's depiction of the tragic downward spiral their lives take
once the two relatives give in to their baser instincts makes for
some powerful if mildly titillating footage. The ubiquitous Ennio
Morricone contributes yet another typically quirky and effective
score which, given the film's adult theme, ironically relies much
on children's vocals.