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Synopsis
There are only 923 words spoken in "Teorema" – but it says everything!
A wealthy Italian household is turned upside down when a handsome stranger arrives, seduces every family member and then disappears. Each has an epiphany of sorts, but none can figure out who the seductive visitor was or why he came.
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Director
Director
Producers
Producers
Writer
Writer
Editor
Editor
Cinematography
Cinematography
Assistant Director
Asst. Director
Camera Operator
Camera Operator
Additional Photography
Add. Photography
Production Design
Production Design
Set Decoration
Set Decoration
Composer
Composer
Sound
Sound
Costume Design
Costume Design
Makeup
Makeup
Hairstyling
Hairstyling
Studios
Country
Language
Alternative Titles
Théorème, Skandalen i Milano, Theorima, To theorima, Teoréma, Teoremat, 테오레마, Teorēma, Teorema - Geometrie der Liebe, Teorem, Θεώρημα, Теорема, 定理, თეორემა, テオレマ
Premiere
05 Sep 1968
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Italy
Venice Film Festival
Theatrical
10 Sep 1968
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ItalyVM18
29 Jan 1969
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France16
14 Feb 1969
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ItalyVM18
21 Apr 1969
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USANR
11 Apr 1970
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JapanR18+
23 Jun 1993
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France16
15 Jul 2005
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Brazil18
27 Jan 2010
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France16
Physical
01 Dec 1999
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France
06 May 2014
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France
Brazil
15 Jul 2005
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Theatrical18
Rio de Janeiro
Denmark
Finland
France
29 Jan 1969
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Theatrical16
Visa CNC 34964
Italy
05 Sep 1968
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Premiere
Venice Film Festival
Japan
Sweden
USA
21 Apr 1969
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TheatricalNR
New York City, New York
More
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dick so good that it leaves you with a pitying feeling of emptiness once it disappears from your life.
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the only movie that dares to ask: what if god wanted to have sex with you?
and then subsequently: what if your bourgeois soul had already been so thoroughly emptied that having sex with god destroyed you?
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This review may contain spoilers. I can handle the truth.
wow love this alternate version of call me by your name where the entire family is seduced by oliver & then they all have a mental breakdown after he leaves
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Lack of self-worth. Lack of ego. Lack of motivation. You're an artless fucking coward. So am I. Cold heart. Even colder shoulder. Desire for sex. More of a desire for chastity. Meaning in the space between words.
Storytelling through the shadows, vision in motion/motion in vision; a film of paradoxical principles (an Outsider somehow stimulating the outlet of positive-yet-harmful values from within a sacred territory), Pasolini loved his sex but the film is never erotic as instead he explores the pure fundamental nature of two bodies, each equally tangled up with the other (emotionally and physically). Belief systems are dangerous but believing in nothing is equally as harmful and Pasolini makes a case for both ultimately settling on... sex? love?…
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[Spoilers: this movie is wild and I'm gonna talk about all of it.]
The Years of Lead – Book Out Now!
"I realize now that I've never had any real interest in anything. I don't mean anything grand. Just the simple, everyday interest my husband takes in his work, or my son in his studies, or Odetta in family life. I've had nothing like that. I don't know how I lived with such emptiness, yet I did. If there was anything at all, some instinctive love of life, it was withering away — like a garden where no one ever goes. Actually, that void was filled with false and wretched values, an appalling jumble of misguided ideas. Now I see:…
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good dick really changes a family
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The circling theory among viewers deals with Pasolini's "inconceivable" attempt to merge Christianity and Marxism in a single feature-film. Yet, the result is magnificent, provoking, seductive, and in love with visual language and ambiguous imagery, highlighting scandal in the eyes of any given society. Brilliantly made. Who needs words when the images speak for themselves?
99/100
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Broke: eat the rich
Woke: dick the rich
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The first film I've logged twice on Letterboxd, and one of my very favourite movies of all time. One of the highlights of that rich, rich period of cinema, of the heyday of European arthouse, which unlike so many of those comes not out of navel-gazing but of intense engagement with the political and cultural spirit of the times, in dialogue with Marxism, existentialism and some profane manifestation of the divine. It's a mysterious and beautiful film, and so thematically dense that on a second viewing I'm only unravelling parts of it - there's a beautiful puzzle at its centre as to the films precise meaning/s and mysteries, that like those impenetrable classics such as L'Avventura or Last Year at Marienbad can haunt, enlighten, provoke and endlessly transfix its viewers, offering further rewards on subsequent viewings, studied and analysed at length but still always keeping its cards close to its chest. A masterpiece of the absolute highest order.
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Pier Paolo Pasolini never fails to surprise me, and from the knowledge I have about him, I believe that this must be the work that most personifies him, that gives life to his beliefs and sides. The film is deeply enigmatic, with a disturbing essence from its beginning. Pasolini, a self-proclaimed Catholic Marxist and radical provocateur, uses the film’s narrative to explore the spiritual and moral emptying of the Italian and Western bourgeoisie, through a lens that mixes religion and politics in a minimalist plot, but loaded with symbolism.
The film’s criticisms are easy to understand, especially the one that revolves around the typical bourgeois family, apparently prosperous and respectable, whose existence is totally shaken by the arrival of a…
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Pier Paolo Pasolini’s “Theorem” is where mathematics and poetry meet; in rhythm, between heartbeats of the divine.
“Theorem” is a departure from the greater share of Pasolini’s filmography, which interchanges between the subproletariat ragazzi and the classical parable. “Theorem,” instead, centers around a bourgeoisie Milanese family that is visited by a beautiful stranger.
The mysterious figure, played by Terrence Stamp, is given little context other than that he is clearly an embodiment of the holy. He comes to each member of the family in their turn; receiving their benediction in the form of whispered frustrations and sexual congress.
Each of the family faces their own crisis of mundane mortality. With such comfort in their upper class, they are unable to…
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By 1968, Pier Paolo Pasolini had made a significant impact on the landscape of Italian cinema with his works of poetic realism and iconoclastic subversion (as well as a respected and textually faithful adaptation of the Bible). Here, he proposes a bold Marxist-Catholic thesis on the power of spiritual and moral interruption. Not only his opus, but in my opinion, his most profound and substantial piece; with Teorema, Pasolini sets out to show the effects of bourgeoisie boredom, sexuality, Communism, religion and transcendence through cryptic allegory and a strikingly minimalist storytelling style. Terrance Stamp (and it’s no coincidence Pasolini cast such a recognizable and attractive film star for this role) plays a mysterious unnamed stranger whom—upon appearing seemingly out of nowhere—disrupts the…