The Castro's Abbess (1974)
DVDRip | AVI | 672x512 | XviD @ 919 Kbps | 94 min | 699 Mb
Audio: Italiano MP3 @ 107 Kbps | Subs: English hardcoded
Genre: Thriller, Drama
DVDRip | AVI | 672x512 | XviD @ 919 Kbps | 94 min | 699 Mb
Audio: Italiano MP3 @ 107 Kbps | Subs: English hardcoded
Genre: Thriller, Drama
Director: Armando Crispino
Stars: Barbara Bouchet, Pier Paolo Capponi, Ida Galli
A young woman is forced into a convent. However, due to her nobility she rises to be an abbess. She has to deal with corruption in the church.
This is an early 70's "nunsploitation" picture, which means it is neither supernatural like a lot of the later, post-"Exorcist" ones (i.e. "Alucarda"), nor is it a total softcore sex romp like those made closer to the end of the decade (i.e. "Images in a Convent"). It also differs from contemporary "nunspolitation" entries like "Story of a Cloistered" and "The Nuns of St. Archangel" in that it doesn't really have an ensemble cast–instead of having a voluptuous older woman (Anne Heywood, Suzie Kendall) as the Mother Superior and a nubile lovely (Eleanora Giorgi, Ornella Muti, Jenny Tamburi) as the young initiate committed by her parents, the two roles are kind of combined here in Barbara Bouchet, who pretty much carries the whole movie. In this respect, the movie mostly resembles "Flavia, the Heretic" with Florinda Bolkan, but with a lot less graphic violence.
The movie does make some serious criticisms of the Church as they hypocritically indulge in their vices and schemes, isolated from the ignorant, superstitious people who are suffering from a terrible drought in the medieval Italian countryside. There's a very interesting, and no doubt metaphoric, scene where a "snake man" shows up at the convent and throws live snakes on a bonfire while all the nuns dance around in orgasmic ecstasy. The director Armando Crispino ("Autopsy", "Frankenstein all'Italia") is definitely as talented as anyone else that worked in this genre. Of course, the movie doesn't neglect to get the lovely Bouchet naked at the slightest pretext. This hurts the realism a little–none of the actresses mentioned above were especially believable as nuns (if they were, I would have enjoyed Catholic school a lot more), but a habit-less Bouchet, barely 30 at the time, is especially hard to buy as a "Mother Superior". Still, she's tries her best, and I'm sure no one then or now is going to complain.
(click to enlarge)
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