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Camille 2000

1969

Action / Drama / Romance

Plot summary


Uploaded by: FREEMAN

Top cast

720p.BLU 1080p.BLU
1.17 GB
1280*544
English 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
2 hr 10 min
P/S 0 / 4
2.17 GB
1920*816
English 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
2 hr 10 min
P/S 0 / 3

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by trashgang6 / 10

everybody making love with everybody

I saw this flick due being released on the Arrow label. i do know that it was made i the roaring sixties, a time of drugs and free sex. And let this be a flick about forbidden romance.

They way it was shot I was rather surprised that some dare to call it soft erotic. Sure, there's a lot of making love going on but it's so tame for the time being shot. The girls are really lovely and all are voluptuous and that's what this all about, all showing their juggs on some LSD music. Let me say that the score is excellent but the erotic, well, for example, in the first love scene you can easily spot on the Blu ray release that the girl was wearing flesh coloured knickers not to reveal a thing. No pubic hair is ever shown. On the men site they show almost everything not intended but you know, you can't hide their testicles.

It's a classic for so many people and I can agree on many ways, the way the love scene's are shot with mirrors used that all looks fine but to say it's erotic, well, there are other flicks made back then showing more then Carmilla did. Just look at the orgy going on, a bit of master and slave but low on nudity. Go figure out that not one year later Mona was released, the first explicit flick without credits to start the golden age of porn.

A perfect example of the free sex era.

Gore 0/5 Nudity 2/5 Effects 0/5 Story 2,5/5 Comedy 0/5

Reviewed by jadavix3 / 10

XXX? More like zzz...

Was there ever a worse filmic sub-genre than the late '60s, early '70s genre known as "art porn"? These were still dirty movies. They just made you wait 20-30 minutes in between the sex and nudity - and in the case of Radley Metzger, generally interposed something between you and the good bit, or focused the camera somewhere else. Wow. That's arty. "Man".

I guess the actual movie, or at least the "art" part, was whatever was going on during those long breaks in between sex scenes. What was going on in those scenes, you ask? Um, generally just rich people wandering around doing and saying nothing of interest.

I assume this is what made these movies "arty" - or what fooled audiences into thinking that that was what they were. You see, if something happens that has no apparent meaning or purpose... it must be art. At least, that is what you are supposed to think.

There are movies with excess sex and nudity that were nevertheless fantastic movies aside from, or despite, this content. Try "Turkish Delight", "In the Realm of the Senses", "The Dreamers", "Shortbus". I think in the '60s they hadn't yet realised how to pull off a serious movie with sex.

This one seemed to be "about" some rich kid from America who goes to Rome where he meets a bunch of rich types and goes to parties and whatever... but I think it was really about one of the women he meets, who has a few other guys circling around her. It's hard to tell. The focal point seems to be the environments, rather than the people in them.

The movie makes you wait almost half an hour before it shows you even one breast. Nothing happens in the meantime.

And it doesn't even give you a good look. I guess that's another arty affectation: if we don't properly SHOW the nudity, it must really be about something else, right? ...Right...?

The movie's first sex scene has the lady with some guy in a room full of mirrors. These mirrors actually prevent us from seeing what's going, but perhaps we're supposed to be impressed with Metzger being able to hide the camera. You have to admit that a straight-up porno movie probably wouldn't be able to conceal the camera in such a room. But then, they'd focus on the people in it, and thus probably wouldn't need to hide the camera...

Metger's chief method of hiding the dirty nature of his movie is to focus on something else while sex is supposed to be going on. In another scene, the camera focuses on a flower, going in and out of focus, while we hear some traditional female panting and moaning sounds.

When we finally get to a sex scene we can actually make out, we get what might be the next arty contrivance, and it's strange to behold... the couple don't move. Everybody knows that the only way to simulate sex is to fake thrusting along with the moans and gasps. The movie just shows two people lying on each other. It's weird. It's like they don't know how to do it properly. Maybe they saw a drawing of the missionary position in a book, and didn't realise that movement is also involved.

The scenes of drama and dialogue in this movie come to absolutely nothing. They are just wastes of time. The movie has no real story, nor any characters.

There is a climactic scene at a party-cum-orgy in which some people are shown to have sex while others wander around or stay still. AGAIN, you can barely make out any nudity, and the sex seems completely inert.

Unfortunately, Metzger did the same thing in "The Lickerish Quartet": he filmed actors and actresses poorly simulating sex, and didn't bother to give us a good look. This may have fooled late '60s audiences into thinking they were seeing something more sophisticated than your average porno flick. But I wonder if even they were fooled into thinking they'd seen a good movie?

Reviewed by nogodnomasters8 / 10

PLAY FOR YOUR DREAMS

In the year 1971 (not 2000) Marguerite Gautier (Danièle Gaubert) is a drug using party girl who lives in the manor of the Duke in Rome. Young rich son of a businessman Armand Duval (Nino Castelnuovo) becomes infatuated with her and is warned about her. His friend has other recommendations (I would have taken the young red-haired girl) but Armand is set on breaking his heart and his own destruction. The two indeed hook-up, but Marguerite (not named Camille) has other lovers.

I liked the retro style. No cell phones, mini skirts, mirrors everywhere, and clear plastic air filled furniture being sheik, but not really practical with all those indoor smokers. Looks like lava lamps and black light posters were for us poor slobs and Peter Fonda films.

As a drama/romance it was pretty much the pits. The acting wasn't there. The plot was not convincing and if the women didn't run around naked/half naked I would have never watched it. BTW more nudity in the outtakes. The restoration was a B+ to A-. There were a few scenes where you could see the age of the film. If you look at the bonus material and trailers, you get a good idea about the original condition.

Guide: sex and nudity. Not much swearing. Inspired by Dumas' ""The Lady of the Camellias"

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