Camille 2000

Director: Radley Metzger
Actors: Daniele Gaubert, Nino Castelnuovo, Eleonora Rossi Drago, Roberto Bisacco, Massimo Serato
Category: DVD

Buy New: $19.99



New (1) Used (1) from $19.99

Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars 6 reviews

Format: Pal
Language: English (Original Language)
Rating: X (Mature Audiences Only)
Region: 0
Aspect Ratio: 2.35:1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2
Dimensions (in): 7.1 x 5.4 x 0.6

EAN: 5034377011234
ASIN: B00008IATX

Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Camille 2000

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Customer Reviews

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5 out of 5 stars camille 2000!!!    August 15, 2008
rachel (milwaukee, wi usa)
I love it. Awesome to find this. I stumbled upon a burned copy of the soundtrack for this movie in San Francisco, not knowing it was a soundtrack, and loved it. Eventually I googled it and it led me hear. What a nice suprise. Fun movie. Thank you!


3 out of 5 stars watch as "regular" movie    June 22, 2008
Moviewatcher (Switzerland)
Well, the first Metzger movie we watched was "the Image" needless to say it is BRILLIANT! THerefore we (unfortunately) compare every Metzger movie with this one....(we never can make through the movie "the Image" without having sex:-), this movie is ok if you watch it as being a "normal" movie of the 70's, don't expect explicit sex scenes and the story is ok.




3 out of 5 stars Softcore deconstruction of 'la dolce vita'    July 18, 2003
Libretio
5 out of 5 found this review helpful

CAMILLE 2000 (USA 1969): During a visit to Rome, the romantic Armand (Nino Castelnuovo) falls in love with a promiscuous young Countess (Daniele Gaubert), but their unlikely romance is opposed by Castelnuovo's wealthy father (Massimo Serato), and Fate deals a tragic blow...

A sexed-up love story for the swinging Sixties, adapted from a literary source (Alexandre Dumas' 'La Dame aux Camellias') by screenwriter Michael DeForrest, and directed with cinematic flair by Radley Metzger who, along with Russ Meyer and Joe Sarno (amongst others), is credited with redefining the parameters of 'Adult' cinema throughout the 1960's and 70's. Using the scope format for the last time in his career, Metzger's exploration of 'la dolce vita' is rich in visual excess (note the emphasis on reflective surfaces, for example), though the film's sexual candor seems alarmingly coy by modern standards. Production values are handsome throughout, and while the actors are slightly hamstrung by post-sync dubbing, the performances are engaging and humane (Castelnuovo and Gaubert are particularly memorable). Though set in an unspecified future, Enrico Sabbatini's wacked-out set designs locate the movie firmly within its period, and Piero Piccioni's 'wah-wah' music score has become something of a cult item amongst exploitation devotees. Ultimately, CAMILLE 2000 is an acquired taste, but fans of Metzger's brand of elegant softcore erotica won't be disappointed.

Image's DVD print is a little ragged in places, particularly at reel-ends, where a couple of lines of dialogue have been clipped by the ravages of time, though the overall presentation is fair. Similarly, the 1.0 mono soundtrack is a little unbalanced, with occasional dips in volume during dialogue exchanges, but nothing too distracting. The only extra is a trailer which offers little more than a series of still-frames, set against Piccioni's memorable (though irritating) theme music. Next up for Metzger was THE LICKERISH QUARTET (Esotika Erotika Psicotika, 1970), which many consider his best film.

116m 33s
2.35:1 (Panavision) / Letterboxed, without enhancement
DVD soundtrack: Mono 1.0
Theatrical soundtrack: Optical mono
No captions or subtitles
All regions



1 out of 5 stars Stunk    July 4, 2000
9 out of 22 found this review helpful

Lame, lame, lame. Rich men, expensive brothel... blah, blah, blah. Waste of money. Don't believe me? Rent it first.


4 out of 5 stars GREAT EARLY 70s PSYCHO-ITALIANA    May 12, 2000
L. S. Slaughter (Chapel Hill, NC)
9 out of 10 found this review helpful

An old story gets a soft-porn twist in Metzger's 1970 outing. Some artfully framed sex scenes, Piero Piccioni's catchy, sexy soundrack, and some fun costumes of the period-imagining-the-not-too-distant-furture make the enterprise a cut way above most films of this genre. Production design fans will like it for no reason other than its aesthethic, which recalls Pietro Germi's great TENTH VICTIM of four years earlier (1966). This was Metzger's best foray before Zalman King usurped the genre (you know, TWO MOON JUNCTION and all that jazz). What one should really do though is find the incredible score by Maestro Piero Piccioni (available on Easy Tempo Records). It's a seductive tapestry of orchestral, psychedelic, and organ-funk sounds with a never-ending bass line.

Art...uh, no. Wack, fun filmmaking of its period, most certainly.