The Cousin Explained

The Cousin
Director:Aldo Lado
Producer:Felice Testa Gay
Starring:Massimo Ranieri
Dayle Haddon
Christian De Sica
Music:Ennio Morricone
Cinematography:Gábor Pogány
Editing:Alberto Galletti
Studio:Testa Gay Cinematografica
Distributor:Unidis
Runtime:92 minutes
Country:Italy
Language:Italian

The Cousin (Italian: La cugina, same meaning but with feminine expressed) is a 1974 Italian drama film by the director Aldo Lado, with a score by Ennio Morricone. From a novel by Ercole Patti, it tells the coming of age stories of a group of young people in Sicily in the 1950s.[1] [2]

Summary

Like other young bourgeois men, Enzo learns about sex with servants, whores and married women. None excite him like his alluring cousin Agata, who has tantalised him with erotic games since childhood. Her ambition, however, is to keep her virginity and make an advantageous marriage. She sets her sights on Nini, amiable but dim, who is a nobleman and has a country estate. To force his hand, a venal priest arranges a fake abduction and then marries the pair. Now baroness and mistress of a vast palazzo, she discovers that her precious virginity was wasted on Nini, who is uninterested in marital sex. When a proud Enzo comes round to tell the two that he has graduated, she gives herself to him at last.

Production

In an interview published in 2005 the director said the story of the original novel was altered so that the erotic tension between the two cousins gradually intensified up to the time of their final encounter. When filming it, he and his cinematographer decided to alternate between normal time and slow motion: “What I wanted to convey was that for them at that moment time as we know it had ceased to exist.”

Cast

Notes and References

  1. (it)Web site: CinemaItaliano. 20 August 2016.
  2. (fr)Web site: Iken-Eiga. 20 August 2016.