

Saturday, November 24, 2007
| 7:15 p.m. | The Arabian Nights Pier Paolo Pasolini (Italy, 1974) |
Recommended for adults only.
(Il fiore delle mille e una notte). For the third in his “Trilogy of Life,” Pasolini desired to convey the Arabian Nights tales in the spirit of their original telling. He roots this magic-carpet fantasy in the kind of realism that he consistently drew from landscapes (here, in Yemen, Ethiopia, Iran, and Nepal) and the faces of his largely nonprofessional, native casts. Ninetto Davoli and Franco Citti are featured in key roles, Davoli particularly memorable as the sad-sack Aziz, who abandons his wife on their wedding day after being lured off by a mysterious beauty. Ines Pellegrina plays the sassy Zumurrud. The tales are marbled throughout with the good-natured sexuality and unabashed nudity with which Pasolini approaches the Arab proverb, “To the pure, all things are pure.” British critic Tony Rayns called this “Pasolini’s most beautiful film, and a triumphant vindication of the entire trilogy.”
• Written by Pasolini, based on stories from One Thousand and One Nights. Photographed by Giuseppe Ruzzolini. With Ninetto Davoli, Ines Pellegrina, Franco Citti, Tessa Bouche. (155 mins, In Italian with English subtitles, Color, 35mm, From MGM)

