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The Divine Nymph

1975 [ITALIAN]

Drama

Plot summary


Uploaded by: FREEMAN

Top cast

Terence Stamp Photo
Terence Stamp as Dany di Bagnasco
Tina Aumont Photo
Tina Aumont as Woman at party
Marina Berti Photo
Marina Berti as Manoela's Aunt
Marcello Mastroianni Photo
Marcello Mastroianni as Michele Barra
720p.WEB 1080p.WEB
1.02 GB
1280*694
Italian 2.0
NR
24 fps
1 hr 54 min
P/S 3 / 1
1.9 GB
1920*1040
Italian 2.0
NR
24 fps
1 hr 54 min
P/S 0 / 4

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by AudemarsPiguet10 / 10

An underrated classic

They were called Women in Love,The Great Gatsby,Day of the Locust,Glissando,Valentino,Star!,Cabaret,Boulevard Du Rhum,Lucky Lady and so on. But another movie depicting the excessive and addictive adventure called the roaring twenties was largely forgotten and underrated. Divina Creatura is,in fact,a masterpiece and Patroni Griffi,its director equals Fellini,Bolognini and Visconti both in psychological depth and the portrayal of the decadent Italian aristocracy. Often this film has been criticized for various reasons: 1.nothing ever happens-nothing but the lavish,kingly boredom of some decadent members of the upper crust 2.the story is,at a closer look,plain and commonplace-you wouldn't need such an all-star cast and opulent settings just to depict love's labors lost of certain characters,which,to our disappointment,in spite of their privileged background repeat a story typical for every time and place where men and women exist. If at first look these two accusations might be true,from the first scenes this film proves the opposite.settings are superb,filmed in a way only European cinema can,almost every scene being visually a feast,exhaling that Mediterranean,baroque,antique,colorful and sometimes melancholic beauty of the settings often used in Italian cinema(this film was partly shot in a palace in Palermo,the ultra-sophisticated Grand Hotel Villa Igiea,probably not far from that used in Visconti's Gattopardo).Besides the storyline must be stressing upon the (apparently)unimportant little conflicts and pleasures of aristocratic life.To depict all these details with care and combine them into an accomplished work of art-this is what Patroni Griffi is achieving,where other filmmakers might fail. A story about the twenties doesn't need to be necessarily very profound,rather a lavish feast for the senses will do. The cast is marvelous and richly fulfilling:Ternce Stamp as Dany Bagnasco exhales the same elegant style Visconi's Fabrizio Di Salina from Il Gattopardo or Tullio Hermil from Innocente does-the same fascination for sensuality,luxury,death as a voluptuous dissipation,dandy-ism.Whereas Laura Antonelli almost equals Garbo in the part of the divine,chillingly distant,yet vulnerable femme fatal-actually the part would have fitted Garbo perfectly,would the film have been made decades earlier. The quotes in silent movie style prove that this film has a high intellectual level,while the visual impact is one of the most beautiful in movie history:it's worth watching almost only for the settings,irrespective of the storyline.Perfect for the moviegoers who enjoy Italian&European cinema,for all readers of literature dealing with aristocratic life(Zuccoli the writer of the novel which was turned into this film was also an aristocrat,count Luciano Von Ingenheim)like Turgheniew,Proust,D'Annunzio,Lampedusa,of literature about the roaring twenties(Fitzgerald,D.H.Lawrence),of authors like Thomas Mann,Nabokow,Moravia. My absolute favorite!

Reviewed by Cristi_Ciopron10 / 10

Impressing masterpiece,a work of bitter observation

Does a corpus of aesthetically acceptable decadent cinema, or a cinema of beauty in abundance and sharp human observation—movies of rich human and psychological content that take a decided aestheticism—informed stance, exist? At a first sight, the answer is far from obvious.

There are a number of decadent wanna—be directors, yet obviously too uncultured and incompetent to may raise any significant claim. The genre requires subtlety, sharpness, intelligence, taste, finesse, vigor.

The primary thing to be acknowledged is that DIVINA … is not a _bibelot or a highly decorated , ornate oddity ,but a true strong insightful drama.

Take a look, if you please, at Wikipedia's article about master Stamp—there, DIVINA CREATURA is not even mentioned! Obviously, the authors (whom I most wrongly presumed to take some degree of interest into Stamp's career …) of that article found this film to be negligible—after all, it's only Stamp's leading role in the most beautiful movie ever! I assumed a Stamp fan ought to be particularly sensitive about each and every Stamp leading role—I presume they're not so many, after all ….

DIVINA CREATURA is a cherished, lovable wonder of emotional richness; it's as well a commending film, deeply respectable for its craftsmanship and competence. Style and content, to use this worn—out dichotomy, are equally commending and important and of vigorous beauty.

Movies being so expensive an amusement or creation, it seems unlikely that a man of professed decadent and individualistic profile such as Griffi would find a way to work in this unaffordable branch where almost every effort must become a collective one. (Even as an art, cinema is not for the individualists, and Griffi was resolutely one. There are, of course, Welles, Hitchcock, Tarkovsky, Bergman, Antonioni, etc., also the great independents and experimenters—yet, Griffis' case is a peculiar and highly instructive one. In the sense that his independent credo demanded the considerable budgets of the financially successful independents—without having their financial success. Look at DIVINA CREATURA—it boasts in a marvelous cast—three great actors—Stamp, Mme. Antonelli and Mastroianni! And then, he was a resolute decadent, leaving no room for the partial comprehension and misunderstandings that sometimes manage to bring some fame to other independents. He is the impeccable cinematographic equivalent of the most uncompromising literary _decadentism—and he managed to get his movies done!) His is the decadent-ism of an insider ,like that of Visconti, and unlike the fake _decadentism of more pedestrian or exploitative directors. Griffi gives the decadent-ism its purest expression, and makes it a joy to speak about such things ….

Yet, decadent is a way of speaking; DIVINA amazes by its assured, virile and masterful tone and diction. As art, as craft, it is very sane and strong. Also, its content ,its insight are imposing. If we are to continue using the D word, then Griffi it's decadent the way the greatest, from Balzac and Lampedusa to Visconti, were. DIVINA … is not morally corrupt; on the contrary, it's vigorous and insightful and detached. The emotional richness that I have indicated is very appropriately served by this detached attitude of Griffi.

It takes many things to be imposing; like the best directors in their best hours, Griffi gathered them all. His style is sharp, cold and inspired, if these can be conceived together. The result is poetry. Griffi's style enhances the valences of his content. Using an uncompromisingly ironic and detached style, of cold observation, the emotional richness is much enhanced.

Back to the main actors—Stamp's role is one of surgical, cold precision; Mastroianni gives truly his best here, in a quite large and substantial part; while Mme. Laura Antonelli proves to be a first—class actress. DIVINA CREATURA is a hallmark of uncompromising aestheticism ,where content more than equals (and fits ) the style; it is not a vain exercise, it is poetry. Visually rich, it's also rich psychologically, analytically, emotionally. And Griffi uses a nonchalance that serves the movie. The stylistic results are delightful—the movie is suspenseful, amusing, intelligent, relentlessly interesting. The point is that the man has the heart, while the woman has the body (the same in Le Jour Se Lève or in Gegen Die Wand).

DIVINA … is the opposite of what is called, condescendingly, a small movie; on the contrary, it is a large, imposing, awe—inspiring one. It is a notable experience. As a side effect, it's also a needed antidote to the prevalence of movies about amorphous people.

DIVINA …,by its discrete subtlety and sure perspicacity, is a reminder that the European cinema was a most distinct world. Be it that we may serve at least by word this legacy.

My beginning as an Europhile and Anglophile were when, at 18, I realized I could resume the best of the world's cinema in only three names (a Swedish, a Spanish and a Japanese one). Later, I indulged in the ingenuity of some snappy Americanophiles, yet without a true inner assent. In the European cinema—and mostly in that of the past—I have all that I need, from Tarkovski to the genre movies of the '50s—'80s.

DIVINA … is a movie of infinite beauty. Griffi was a director of intelligence, insight and depth.

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