Thaïs (1917 Italian film) explained

Thaïs
Director:Anton Giulio Bragaglia
Starring:Thaïs Galitzky
Country:Italy
Runtime:105 minutes
Language:Silent

Thaïs is a 1917 Italian silent film directed by Anton Giulio Bragaglia. The movie is the sole surviving Italian Futurist film, and currently kept at the Cinémathèque Française. It is not based on the novel of the same name by Anatole France.

Plot

The plot is fairly conventional and refers to the love stories of turbid "diva-film" typical of the period.

The beautiful Slavic countess Vera Preobrajenska (played by Thaïs Galitzy) is a seductress of married men, dragging them to the brink of ruin. Vera resolves to seduce Count San Remo, the lover of her best friend, the Countess Bianca Stagno-Bellincioni (played by Ileana Leonidoff). Bianca, in the midst of depression, falls off her horse and dies. Vera feels guilty and commits suicide.[1] [2] [3]

Characteristics

The film sets are characteristic of the Futurist movement. They were designed by Enrico Prampolini who used geometric shapes based on a strong black/white contrast: spiral, diamond, chess, symbolic figures (cats, masks spewing smoke). Painted scenes often interact with the characters, creating a world of illusions where it is difficult to distinguish fact from fiction. As the film progresses, it becomes more and more abstract to reflect Vera's increasing confusion.

The oppressive and anti naturalistic visions can be seen as a preamble to the German expressionist cinema, which was notably inspired by the style of Prampolini.

See also

Bibliography

External links

Notes and References

  1. Review, synopsis and link to watch the film: Web site: A cinema history. 5 June 2014.
  2. Book: Paulicelli, Eugenia. Italian Style: Fashion & Film from Early Cinema to the Digital Age. 2016. Bloomsbury Publishing. New York, New York. 978-1-62356-661-6. 23.
  3. Marcus. Millicent. 1996. Anton Giulio Bragaglia's "Thaïs"; or, The Death of the Diva + The Rise of the Scenoplastica = The Birth of Futurist Cinema. 3190372. South Central Review. 13. 2/3. 63–81. 10.2307/3190372.