The Black Decameron

Not to be confused with "El Decameron Negro", a classical guitar suite composed by Leo Brouwer.
The Black Decameron
Directed by Piero Vivarelli
Produced by Alfredo Bini
Written by Ottavio Alesi
Piero Vivarelli
Based on Der schwarze Dekameron
by Leo Frobenius
Starring Beryl Cunningham (La regina bella)
Djibril Diop Mambéty (Che cosa non ha fatto)
Music by Luciano Michelini
Cinematography Roberto Gerardi
Release dates
15 October 1972
Running time
98 min
Country Italy
Language Italian

The Black Decameron (Italian: Il decamerone nero) is a 1972 Italian costume drama comedy film directed by Piero Vivarelli.

Background

An adaptation of five stories from the anthology Der schwarze Dekameron: Belege und Aktenstücke über Liebe, Witz und Heldentum in Innerafrika (1910) by ethnologist Leo Frobenius with a short final vignette, The Black Decameron is essentially a cross between Decamerotici films of the early commedia sexy all'italiana genre and Mondo films in featuring gratuitous pseudo-ethnographic nudity.

The Black Decameron was shot in the Province of Matera and in Senegal[1] and it features, besides Beryl Cunningham who was the director's partner at the time,[2] a multinational cast including Senegalese actors such as Djibril Diop Mambéty and Senegal-based Haitian actor couple Jacqueline Scott and Lucien Lemoine.[3]

Synopsis

Each story starts with a griot introduction in the Wolof language by korafola Bana Cissokho.

La regina bella (The Beautiful Queen): A queen is single and decides to marry and she puts her suitors on harsh trials of strength and courage. Knowing that all former candidates had perished this way, N'sani plans to win the queen's hand by cunning and trickery.

Guarigione di una pazza per gli uomini (Healing of a Woman Crazy for Men): A man is married to a nymphomaniac and asks his friend's help to solve this problem.

Gli amanti puniti (The Punished Lovers): A fisherman suspects that his wife Adu is cheating on him and pretends to be blind to learn the truth.

Vendetta di prostituta (Vengeance of the Prostitute): Elders in a village punish men who sleep with prostitute Mande and she sets a trap to the elders in order to expose their hypocrisy.

Che cosa non ha fatto (What He Did Not Do): Handsome and "well-endowed" Simoa gets drunk of too much toddy and wears women's clothes. He soon contemplates that his drag may also bring some advantages and arrives at the house of a village judge to be his "new wife" but ends up sleeping with all women of the household.

Cast

References

  1. Il Decamerone nero
  2. Enrico Lancia, Fabio Melelli. Le straniere del nostro cinema. Gremese Editore, 2005.
  3. Disparition du comédien et poète d'origine haïtienne Lucien Lemoine
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 12/6/2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.