The Voyeur

Dom Robinson reviews

The VoyeurDistributed by
Nouveaux Pictures

    Cover

  • Cat.no: NPD 1004
  • Cert: 18
  • Running time: 91 minutes
  • Year: 1993
  • Pressing: 1999
  • Region(s): 2 (UK PAL)
  • Chapters: 12 plus extras
  • Sound: Linear PCM Stereo
  • Languages: English dubbing
  • Subtitles: None
  • Widescreen: 1.44:1 (13:9)
  • 16:9-enhanced: No
  • Macrovision: No
  • Disc Format: DVD 5
  • Price: £15.99
  • Extras : Scene index, Picture Gallery

    Director:

      Tinto Brass

    (Caligula, The Key, Miranda, PO Box Tinto Brass, Salon Kitty)

Screenplay:

    Tinto Brass

Cast:

    Katarina Vasilassa
    Francesco Casale
    Cristina Garavaglia
    Raffaella Offidani
    Franco Branciaroli

The Voyeuris a film from Italian erotica director Tinto Brass which has a simplestoryline if it has one at all: Dodo loves his sensuous, blonde wife Sylviavery much and the feeling is reciprocated. However, she keeps disappearingfor no good reason whatsoever (even the back cover doesn’t give any clues).

Dodo is The Voyeur and as well as playing hide the salami with his missus,he turns on the charm with his black, female student Pascasie and watchesher do her bit for international relations with her white girlfriend.Meanwhile, he also has eyes when his father Alberto makes advances towardshis housemaid Fausta.

The film plays out in a series of segments but don’t expect the greatest ofplot consistencies here. However, what you can expect is hinted at in thethree screengrabs accompanying this review.


film pic

# “Ebony and Ivory
go together in perfect harmony…”
#


The picture quality is acceptable but not outstanding. Most of it is shotin soft-focus but there doesn’t seem to be any particular artifact problemsso it’s as good as it’s going to get. The back cover states the ratio as4:3 fullscreen, but it’s more like a slight-widescreen ratio of approximately1.44:1 (13:9) and can comfortably be zoomed in to fill a widescreen TV.The average bitrate is an above average 6.46Mb/s, occasionally peakingabove 9Mb/s.

The sound is mostly cheesy music – exactly what you expect when the charactersstart getting down to the business – and the language, originally Italian,is dubbed into English with a Dynasty-style dialogue. There’s no Dolby Digitallogo on the cover so I presume it’s uncompressed Linear PCM Stereo.


film pic

The Spring 2000 Collection for Nuns.


Extras : Chapters :

There are only 12 chapters during the 91-minute film. Usually I’d like tosee more, but each covers an individual “encounter”.

Languages & Subtitles :Dubbed English as previously stated, but no subtitles. Picture Gallery :Not the greatest of extras, but a 16-strong selection of soft-focusclip-shots (*I* said CLIP !) Menu :Static and silent, but a couple of pics of the seductive Sylvia providethe backdrop to the options to start the film, select a scene or viewthe picture gallery.


film pic

The sun and the moon.


Overall :If you buy this disc, don’t be expecting a state-of-the-art impressionof what DVD has to offer. It’s a bit of a laugh and if you have a penchantfor Channel 5’s late-night erotic offerings then this may well be for you.

Just one point of bad news: the BBFC

saw fitto exorcise 8 seconds from the submitted print.BBFC FILM : **PICTURE QUALITY : ***SOUND QUALITY: **EXTRAS: *——————————-OVERALL: **


Review copyright © Dominic Robinson, 2000.

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