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The Rage of Pasolini
(La Rabbia di Pasolini)

Screening on Film
Directed by Giuseppe Bertolucci and Pier Paolo Pasolini.
Italy, 1963, 35mm, color and b&w, 53 min.
Italian with English subtitles.
Print source: Cineteca di Bologna

In 1962, Pasolini was invited by an Italian newsreel producer to create a feature-length film essay from his company’s library of footage. Inspired by diverse wealth of imagery, Pasolini set out to make a film as “a show of indignation against the unreality of the bourgeois world.” Assembling images from the Soviet bloc and various anti-colonial movements as complement and contrast to the newsreel footage, Pasolini crafted a remarkable tour de force of politically trenchant commentary on the modern world, climaxing in a moving meditation on the death of Marilyn Monroe. Fearing controversy and box-office failure, the producer ordered Pasolini to cut the original version to less than an hour and then promptly added a right-wing counterpart by the filmmaker Giovanni Guareschi, packaging the two parts as one film. Disowned by Pasolini, this version was indeed a failure. Although Pasolini’s original version remains lost, an ambitious reconstruction was recently completed by Giuseppe Bertolucci and the Cineteca di Bologna using the shot list and a dialogue transcript from the first version, as well as Pasolini’s notes on music for the film.

Please Note: Tonight’s screening includes only the first part directed by Pasolini; the running time is 53 minutes.  We will not screen the second part directed by Giovanni Guareschi but instead offer La Ricotta, which will immediately follow The Rage of Pasolini.

Part of film series

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The Complete Pier Paolo Pasolini

Current and upcoming film series

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The Reincarnations of Delphine Seyrig

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Rosine Mbakam, 2025 McMillan-Stewart Fellow