35° TORINO FILM FESTIVAL
BRIAN DE PALMA

DIONYSUS IN '69

DIONYSUS IN '69
by Brian De Palma
Country: USA
Year: 1970
Duration: 85'


When De Palma’s actor-friend William Finley invites him to a performance of Dionysus in ’69, an experimental version of The Bacchae by Euripides, staged by the New York theatrical company The Performance Group and directed by Richard Schechner, he falls in love with the show. He decides to film it and to get the most out of the ideology of the confrontation-clash between actors and audience, he uses the split screen for the first time, two movie cameras on the stage and two on the audience.

Biography

film director

Brian De Palma

Brian De Palma (Newark, NJ, USA, 1940) studied physics at Columbia University in the 1960s, then switched to theater and film studies in grad school. He was exposed to various influences, from the movies made by Welles, Hitchcock, Antonioni, and Godard, to the lessons he learned from his drama teacher Wilford Leach. He started making short films and showing a keen interest in experimental cinema and European nouvelle vague movements. He made his first noteworthy feature films in the late 1960s and early 1970s with independent production companies: Greetings (1968), The Wedding Party (1969), and Hi, Mom! (1970), which starred Robert De Niro. Sisters (1973) was his first psychological thriller, which would become his trademark style. He gained international recognition in the late 1970s with the musical-thriller Phantom of the Paradise (1974), the horror movie Carry (1976, based on Stephen King’s novel), and Dressed to Kill (1980). He made some of his greatest hits in the 1980s: Blow Out (1981), Scarface (1983, which featured Al Pacino in the remake of Howard Hawks’ 1932 classic), and The Untouchables (1987), revealing his predilection for thrillers and gangster movies. After the flop of The Bonfire of the Vanities (1990, based on Tom Wolfe’s novel), he regained the critics and public’s favor with Carlito’s Way (1993), which starred again Al Pacino. He made his first blockbuster Mission: Impossible in 1996, and his first science fiction Mission to Mars in 2000. He then directed Femme Fatale (2002), The Black Dhalia (2006, based on James Ellroy’s novel), and the war movie Redacted (2007, winner of the Silver Lion at the Venice Film Festival). These last movies confirmed his visionary talent, unique among his generation of filmmakers that grew up in the New Hollywood period, and his sometimes-troubled relationship with the American movie industry.

FILMOGRAFIA

Icarus (cm, 1960), 660124: The Story of an IBM Card (cm, 1961), Woton’s Wake (cm, 1962), Jennifer (cm, 1964), Mod (cm, 1964), Bridge That Gap (cm, 1965), The Responsive Eye (cm, 1966), Show Me a Strong Town and I’ll Show You a Strong Bank (cm, 1966), Murder à la Mod (cm, 1968), Greetings (Ciao America!, 1968), The Wedding Party (Oggi sposi, 1969), Dionysus in ’69 (Dionisio nel ’69, 1970), Hi, Mom! (id., 1970), Get to Know Your Rabbit (Conosci il tuo coniglio, 1972), Sisters (Le due sorelle, 1973), Phantom of the Paradise (Il fantasma del palcoscenico, 1974), Obsession (Complesso di colpa, 1976), Carrie (Carrie - Lo sguardo di Satana, 1976), The Fury (Fury, 1978), Home Movies (Home Movies - Vizietti familiari, 1980), Dressed to Kill (Vestito per uccidere, 1980), Blow Out (id., 1981), Scarface (id., 1983), Body Double (Omicidio a luci rosse, 1984), Dancing in the Dark (videoclip, 1984), Relax, Version 3 (videoclip, 1984), Wise Guys (Cadaveri e compari, 1986), The Untouchables (The Untouchables - Gli intoccabili, 1987), Casualties of War (Vittime di guerra, 1989), The Bonfire of the Vanities (Il falò delle vanità, 1990), Raising Cain (Doppia personalità, 1992), Carlito’s Way (id., 1993), Mission: Impossible (id., 1996), Snake Eyes (Omicidio in diretta, 1998), Mission to Mars (id., 2000), Femme Fatale (id., 2002), The Black Dahlia (Black Dahlia, 2006), Redacted (id., 2007), Passion (2012), Domino (2018).

Cast

& Credits

regia/directors
Brian De Palma, Richard Schechner
soggetto/story
dalla messa in scena di Richard Schechner di Le baccanti di Euripide/from Richard Schechner’s production of The Bacchae by Euripides
sceneggiatura/screenplay
William Arrowsmith
fotografia, montaggio/cinematography, film editing
Brian De Palma, Robert Fiore
interpreti e personaggi/cast and characters
William Finley (Dioniso), William Shepherd (Penteo), Joan MacIntosh, Ciel Smith (Agave), Richard Dya (Cadmo)
produzione/production
Performance Group
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