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{{Short description|1974 film by Liliana Cavani}}
{{For|the 1930 film|The Night Porter (1930 film)}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=January 2024}}
{{More citations needed|date=January 2024}}
{{Infobox film
{{Infobox film
| name = The Night Porter
| name = The Night Porter
| image =Thenightporter.jpg
| image = Thenightporter.jpg
| caption = Italian promotional poster
| caption = Theatrical release poster
| native_name = {{Infobox name module|it|Il portiere di notte}}
| director = [[Liliana Cavani]]
| writer = [[Liliana Cavani]]
| director = [[Liliana Cavani]]
| screenplay = {{plainlist|
| starring = [[Dirk Bogarde]]<br />[[Charlotte Rampling]]<br />[[Philippe Leroy (actor)|Philippe Leroy]]<br />[[Gabriele Ferzetti]]<br />[[Isa Miranda]]
* Liliana Cavani
| producer = [[Robert Gordon Edwards]]<br />[[Esa De Simone]]
| music = [[Daniele Paris]]
* [[Italo Moscati]]
* [[Barbara Alberti]]{{efn|name=collab|Collaboration}}
* Amedeo Pagani{{efn|name=collab}}
}}
| story = {{plainlist|
* Liliana Cavani
* Barbara Alberti
* Amedeo Pagani
}}
| producer = {{ubl|Robert Gordon Edwards|Esa De Simone}}
| starring = {{plainlist|
* [[Dirk Bogarde]]
* [[Charlotte Rampling]]
* [[Philippe Leroy]]
* [[Gabriele Ferzetti]]
}}
| cinematography = [[Alfio Contini]]
| cinematography = [[Alfio Contini]]
| distributor = [[The Criterion Collection]]
| editing = [[Franco Arcalli]]
| music = Daniele Paris
| released = '''[[France]]''':<br />3 April 1974<br />'''[[United States]]''':<br />1 October 1974
| studio = Lotar Film
| runtime = 118 minutes
| distributor = Ital-Noleggio Cinematografico
| country = [[Italy]]
| released = {{Film date|df=yes|1974|4|3|France|1974|4|11|Italy}}
| language = [[English language|English]]
| runtime = 118 minutes
| country = Italy
| language = {{Plainlist|
* English
* German
}}
}}
| gross = $1.3 million (West Germany)<ref name=ger/>
'''''The Night Porter''''' ({{lang-it|'''Il Portiere di notte'''}}) is a controversial [[1974 in film|1974]] [[art film]] by [[Italy|Italian]] director [[Liliana Cavani]], starring [[Dirk Bogarde]] and [[Charlotte Rampling]].
}}
'''''The Night Porter''''' ({{langx|it|Il portiere di notte}}) is a 1974 Italian [[Psychological drama|psychological]] [[War film|war]] [[Drama (film and television)|drama]] film<ref name=criterion>{{cite web |last=Insdorf |first=Annette |author-link=Annette Insdorf |url=https://www.criterion.com/current/posts/66-the-night-porter |title=The Night Porter |publisher=[[The Criterion Collection]] |date=10 January 2000}}</ref> co-written and directed by [[Liliana Cavani]]. It stars [[Dirk Bogarde]] and [[Charlotte Rampling]], with [[Philippe Leroy]], [[Gabriele Ferzetti]] and [[Isa Miranda]] in supporting roles. Set in [[Vienna]] in 1957, the film centers on the [[sadomasochistic]] relationship between a former [[concentration camp|Nazi concentration camp]] officer (Bogarde) and one of his inmates (Rampling).


The film's themes of sexual and sadomasochistic obsession, and its use of [[Holocaust]] imagery, have made the film controversial since its initial release, dividing critics over its artistic value.<ref>{{cite magazine |last=Wolff |first=Zoë |url=https://www.interviewmagazine.com/film/charlotte-rampling |title=Charlotte Rampling |magazine=[[Interview (magazine)|Interview]] |date=2 September 2014}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.americancinemathequecalendar.com/content/the-night-porter |title=The Night Porter |publisher=[[American Cinematheque]] |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220107233320/http://americancinemathequecalendar.com/content/the-night-porter |archive-date=7 January 2022}}</ref> In July 2018, it was selected to be screened in the Venice Classics section of the [[75th Venice International Film Festival]].<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.labiennale.org/en/news/restored-films-venezia-classici |title=The restored films of Venezia Classici |publisher=[[Venice Biennale]] |date=1 September 2018 |orig-date=13 July 2018 |access-date=22 July 2018}}</ref>
== Synopsis ==
Dirk Bogarde plays Maximilian Theo Aldorfer, a former [[Nazism|Nazi]] [[SS]] officer, and Charlotte Rampling plays Lucia Atherton, a [[concentration camp]] survivor who had an ambiguous relationship with Aldorfer. Flashbacks show Max tormenting Lucia, but also acting as her protector. In an iconic scene, Lucia sings a [[Marlene Dietrich]] song "Wenn ich mir was wünschen dürfte" to the concentration camp guards while wearing pieces of an SS uniform, and Max "rewards" her with the severed head of a male inmate who had been bullying the other inmates, a reference to [[Salome]].


==Plot==
Thirteen years after [[World War II]], Lucia meets Aldorfer again; he is now the night porter at a [[Vienna]] hotel. There, they fall back into their [[sadism and masochism|sadomasochistic]] relationship.
During [[World War II]], Maximilian Theo Aldorfer, a [[Nazism|Nazi]] [[Schutzstaffel|SS]] officer who posed as a doctor to take sensational photographs in concentration camps, and Lucia, a teenage girl interned in one such camp due to her father's [[Socialism|socialist]] political ties, had an ambiguous [[sadomasochism|sadomasochistic]] relationship. Max tormented Lucia, but also acted as her protector.


In 1957, Lucia, now married to an American orchestra conductor, meets Max again by chance. He is now a night porter at a hotel in [[Vienna]], and a reluctant member of a group of former SS comrades who have been carefully covering up their pasts by destroying documents and eliminating witnesses to their wartime activities. Max has an upcoming [[mock trial]] at the hands of the group for his [[war crime]]s. The group's leader, Hans Vogler, accuses Max of wanting to live "hidden away like a church mouse." Max wishes to remain hidden, but voices support for the group's activities.
== Themes ==
{{refimprove|date=April 2012}}
The film depicts the political continuity between wartime Nazism and post-war Europe and the psychological continuity of characters locked into compulsive repetition of the past. On another level it deals with the psychological condition known as [[Stockholm Syndrome]]. The movie also raises the issue of sleeper Nazi cells and their control, and possibly hints at what could have spurred the 1960s reaction to the [[Red Army Faction]] (aka [[Baader-Meinhof]]).


Memories of the past punctuate Max and Lucia's present with urgent frequency, suggesting that Lucia survived through her relationship with Max—in one such remembered scene, Lucia sings a [[Marlene Dietrich]] song, "Wenn ich mir was wünschen dürfte" ("If I Could Make a Wish"), to the camp guards while wearing pieces of an SS uniform, and Max "rewards" her with the severed head of a male inmate who had been bullying her, referencing [[Salome]].
More basically, it explores two people in an uneasy yet inextricably bound relationship within the context of a greater political malaise during and after World War II. Lucia (Rampling) is not specifically identified as Jewish, possibly to depict the plight of all women. Her name may be a pun of "light" and St. Lucia, the patron saint of the blind. Max seems to have a guilt complex, given he's afraid of the light, and lives a modest lifestyle after the war. Allusions to sexual ambivalence can be seen in his relationship with the nearly naked male ballet dancer.{{citation needed|reason=pov: '...possibly to depict ...naked male dancer'. This entire passage needs citation. It is highly subjective and needs much corroboration, not to mention: validity! Quite controversial...needless to say.|date=April 2013}}


Because she could testify against him, Lucia's existence is a threat to Max and his former comrades. He goes to see a former Nazi collaborator, Mario, who knows Lucia is still alive; Max murders him offscreen to protect his secret and Lucia. After Lucia's husband leaves town on business, Max and Lucia renew their past lovemaking in Max's apartment. Max confesses to Countess Stein, another guest at his hotel, that he has found his "little girl" again. The Countess tells him that he is insane; Max replies that they are both "in the same boat." Meanwhile, Vogler has Max spied on by Adolph, a youth who works at the hotel.
== Criticism ==

In responses to ''The Night Porter'', Cavani was both celebrated for her courage in dealing with the theme of sexual transgression and, simultaneously, castigated for the controversial manner in which she presented that transgression: within the context of a Nazi [[Holocaust]] narrative. The film has been accused of mere sensationalism: film critic [[Roger Ebert]] calls it "as nasty as it is lubricious, a despicable attempt to titillate us by exploiting memories of persecution and suffering."<ref>{{cite web|url=http://rogerebert.suntimes.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/19750210/REVIEWS/502100301/1023|title=The Night Porter|last=Ebert|first=Roger|date=February 10, 1975|publisher=''Chicago Sun-Times''|accessdate=2008-12-23}}</ref> Given the film's dark and disturbing themes and a somewhat ambiguous moral clarification at the end, ''The Night Porter'' has tended to divide audiences. It is, however, the film for which Cavani is best known.
Max is interviewed by the police about Mario's murder. He spends days with Lucia in his apartment, chaining her to the wall so that "they can't take her away", and sleeps little. Vogler, who wants Lucia to testify against Max in the mock trial—though he harbors more ambiguous long-term intentions towards her—visits and informs her that Max is ill. He suggests that Lucia must also be ill to allow herself to be in this position, but she sends him away, claiming to be with Max of her own free will.

The former SS officers are infuriated at Max for hiding a key witness. Max refuses to proceed with the trial, calling it a "farce," and admits that he works as a night porter due to his sense of shame in daytime. He returns to Lucia, telling her that the police questioned him and others at the hotel about her disappearance, and that no suspicion fell on him. Eventually, Max quits his job, devoting all of his time to Lucia. The former SS officers cut off the couple's supply of food from a nearby grocery store. When Max briefly walks along an outdoor terrace, Vogler shoots and wounds him. Max barricades the door to the apartment, and he and Lucia begin rationing.

Max seeks help by phoning one of his old hotel friends, who refuses, and imploring his neighbour, who is unwilling to provide aid and harbouring Adolph in her apartment. Max retreats again to the apartment, where Lucia is almost unconscious from [[malnutrition]]. After one of the former SS officers cuts off the electricity to Max's apartment, Max and Lucia, respectively dressed in his Nazi uniform and a negligee resembling one he gave her in the concentration camp, leave the building and drive away, followed by a car driven by Max's former colleagues. Max parks on a bridge, and he and Lucia get out and walk along the bridge rail as dawn breaks. Two gunshots ring out, and the lovers fall dead.

==Cast==
{{Cast listing|
* [[Dirk Bogarde]] as Maximilian Theo Aldorfer
* [[Charlotte Rampling]] as Lucia
* [[Philippe Leroy]] as Klaus
* [[Gabriele Ferzetti]] as Hans Vogler
* [[Giuseppe Addobbati]] as Stumm
* [[Isa Miranda]] as Countess Stein
* Nino Bignamini as Adolph
* [[Marino Masè]] as Atherton
* [[Amedeo Amodio]] as Bert
* [[Piero Vida]] as day porter
* [[Geoffrey Copleston]] as Kurt
* {{ill|Manfred Freyberger|fr}} as Dobson
* {{ill|Ugo Cardea|it}} as Mario
* Hilda Gunther as Greta
* [[Nora Ricci]] as neighbour
* Piero Mazzinghi as concierge
* Kai S. Seefeld as Jacob
* {{ill|Luigi Antonio Guerra|it}} (uncredited)
}}

==Production==
{{Unreferenced section|date=January 2024}}
Filming took place in Vienna and at [[Cinecittà|Cinecittà Studios]] in [[Rome]]. Locations included the [[Vienna Volksoper]], the [[Linke Wienzeile Buildings]], the [[Mozarthaus Vienna|Mozarthaus]], the [[Vienna Central Cemetery]], [[Karl-Marx-Hof]], and [[Schönbrunn Palace]]. The concentration camp scenes were shot in the [[Tuscolano]] district of Rome. The film's costumes were designed by five-time [[Academy Award for Best Costume Design|Oscar]]-nominee [[Piero Tosi]].

The budget, which had been paid for by the Italian distributor, ran out near the end of the shooting of the film's interiors at Cinecittà. To ensure the film's completion, producer Robert Gordon Edwards instructed editor [[Franco Arcalli]] to create a rough cut of the best scenes that had been shot, which he presented to an American colleague who worked at Les Artistes Associés (the French arm of [[United Artists]]). On the basis of the rough cut, the company agreed to pay for the filming of the exterior scenes in Vienna in exchange for French distribution rights.

[[Romy Schneider]] turned down the role of Lucia. [[Mia Farrow]] was considered, as well as [[Dominique Sanda]], before Charlotte Rampling was cast. Rampling shot the film only four months after giving birth to her son Barnaby. She and Dirk Bogarde re-wrote and ad-libbed much of their dialogue. Bogarde also enlisted [[Anthony Forwood]] to help rewrite the script, uncredited. Bogarde seriously considered retiring from acting after the end of principal photography, which he considered a very draining experience.

Several of the actors' voices were [[Dubbing (filmmaking)|dubbed]], including Philippe Leroy (by [[Edmund Purdom]]), Gabriele Ferzetti (by [[David de Keyser]]) and [[Geoffrey Copleston]] (by [[Charles Howerton]]).

==Reception==
===Critical response===
On [[Rotten Tomatoes]], the film holds an approval rating of 67% based on 33 reviews, with an average rating of 5.8/10. The website's critics consensus reads, "''The Night Porter''{{'s}} salaciousness gives its exploration of historical trauma a bitter aftertaste, but audiences seeking provocation are unlikely to forget the sting of this erotic drama."<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/night_porter|title=The Night Porter|website=[[Rotten Tomatoes]]|access-date=20 May 2024}}</ref> In response to ''The Night Porter'', Cavani was both celebrated for her courage in dealing with the theme of sexual transgression{{citation needed|date=March 2024}} and, simultaneously, castigated for the controversial manner in which she presented that transgression within the context of a Nazi Holocaust narrative.

[[Roger Ebert]] of the ''[[Chicago Sun-Times]]'' thought the main roles were well-performed, but nonetheless gave the film one star out of four, and called ''The Night Porter'' "as nasty as it is lubricious, a despicable attempt to titillate us by exploiting memories of persecution and suffering", while adding that he did not "object per se to the movie's subject matter."<ref name=ebert>{{cite news|url=http://rogerebert.suntimes.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/19750210/REVIEWS/502100301/1023|title=The Night Porter|last=Ebert|first=Roger|author-link=Roger Ebert|date=February 10, 1975|newspaper=[[Chicago Sun-Times]]|access-date=2008-12-23|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120928084352/http://rogerebert.suntimes.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=%2F19750210%2FREVIEWS%2F502100301%2F1023|archive-date=28 September 2012}}</ref> In ''[[The New York Times]]'', [[Nora Sayre]] praised the performances of Bogarde and Rampling, and the "dark, rich tones" of the cinematography, but began her review by writing, "If you don't love pain, you won't find ''The Night Porter'' erotic—and by now, even painbuffs may be satiated with Nazi decadence."<ref>{{cite news |last=Sayre |first=Nora |author-link=Nora Sayre |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1974/10/02/archives/the-night-porter-portrait-of-abuse-stars-bogarde.html |title=' The Night Porter,' Portrait of Abuse, Stars Bogarde |newspaper=[[The New York Times]] |date=October 2, 1974 |access-date=20 May 2024}}</ref> [[Vincent Canby]], also writing for ''The New York Times'', called it "romantic pornography" and "a piece of junk".<ref>{{cite news |last=Canby |first=Vincent |author-link=Vincent Canby |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1974/10/13/archives/the-night-porter-is-romantic-pornography-porter-is-romantic.html |title=The Night Porter' Is Romantic Pornography |newspaper=[[The New York Times]] |date=13 October 1974 |access-date=20 May 2024}}</ref> [[Leonard Maltin]]'s 2015 ''[[Leonard Maltin's Movie Guide|Movie Guide]]'' called it a "[s]leazy, bizarre drama", awarding it two out of four stars.<ref>{{cite book |editor-last=Maltin |editor-first=Leonard |editor-link=Leonard Maltin |title=Leonard Maltin's 2015 Movie Guide: The Modern Era |title-link=Leonard Maltin's Movie Guide |location=New York |publisher=[[Signet Books|Signet]] |year=2014 |page=1008}}</ref>

In Europe, the film was met with opposition as well. German magazine ''[[Filmdienst]]'' categorised the film as "political pornography".<ref>{{cite magazine|url=https://www.filmdienst.de/film/details/32742/der-nachtportier |title=Der Nachtportier| magazine=[[Filmdienst]] |access-date=15 January 2024 |language=de}}</ref> Despite the poor German critical response, it grossed over $1.3 million.<ref name=ger>{{cite magazine|magazine=[[Variety (magazine)|Variety]]|url=https://archive.org/details/sim_variety_1975-05-07_278_13/page/274/mode/2up?view=theater|page=275|title=In Germany Big Pics Do Biz|last=Kocian|first=Billy|date=7 May 1975|via=[[Internet Archive]]|url-access=registration}}</ref> In the French ''[[Cahiers du Cinéma]]'', [[Michel Foucault]] criticised what he saw as a sexualised vision of Nazism.<ref>{{cite magazine |last=Foucault |first=Michel |author-link=Michel Foucault |title=" Anti-Rétro ", entretiens avec P. Bonitzer et S. Toubiana |magazine=[[Cahiers du Cinéma]] |language=fr |issue=251–252 |date=July–August 1974}} Reprinted in {{cite book |last=Foucault |first=Michel |title=Dits et écrits I: 1954–1975 |title-link=Dits et Écrits |series=Quarto |language=fr |volume=1 |location=Paris |publisher=[[Éditions Gallimard|Gallimard]] |year=2001 |pages=1520–1521}}</ref>

In her 2000 essay for the [[The Criterion Collection|Criterion Collection]] release, [[Annette Insdorf]] called ''The Night Porter'' "a provocative and problematic film. ... [I]t can be seen as an exercise in perversion and exploitation of the Holocaust for the sake of [[sensationalism]]. On the other hand, a closer reading of this English-language psychological thriller suggests a dark vision of compelling characters doomed by their World War II past."<ref name=criterion /> In his 2020 review for ''[[The Guardian]]'', [[Peter Bradshaw]] described the film as a "dated" but "intriguing period piece", adding, "Perhaps there is something in its very crassness, horror and tastelessness that does at least jolt us towards an acknowledgment of pure evil."<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.theguardian.com/film/2020/nov/27/the-night-porter-review-dirk-bogarde-charlotte-rampling-liliana-cavani |title=The Night Porter review – descent into sex and Nazism still chills |last=Bradshaw |first=Peter |author-link=Peter Bradshaw |newspaper=[[The Guardian]] |date=27 November 2020 |access-date=4 March 2024}}</ref>

Mikel J. Koven characterised ''The Night Porter'' as a "[[Nazi exploitation|Nazi]] [[Sexploitation film|sexploitation]]" film.<ref>{{cite book |last=Koven |first=Mikel J. |chapter='The Film You Are About to See Is Based on Documented Fact': Italian Nazi Sexploitation Cinema |editor-last1=Mathijs |editor-first1=Ernest |editor-last2=Mendik |editor-first2=Xavier |title=Alternative Europe: Eurotrash and Exploitation Cinema Since 1945 |location=London |publisher=[[Wallflower Press]] |year=2004 |page=[https://books.google.com/books?id=H8kmu4hmTx4C&pg=PA15-IA5 20] |isbn=978-1-903364-93-2}}</ref>

===Accolades===
The film was nominated in two categories at the 1975 [[Nastro d'Argento]] Awards, for Best Director (Liliana Cavani) and for Best Screenplay (Cavani and [[Italo Moscati]]), but did not win in either category.


==See also==
==See also==
*[[Sadism and masochism in fiction]]
* [[List of cult films]]
* [[Sadism and masochism in fiction]]

==Notes==
{{Notelist}}


==Footnotes==
==References==
{{reflist}}
{{Reflist}}


==External links==
==External links==
* {{IMDb title|id=0071910|title=Portiere di notte, Il}}
* {{IMDb title}}
* {{AllMovie title}}
* {{Amg movie|35235|The Night Porter}}
* {{Rotten Tomatoes}}
* {{cite web|url=http://www.criterion.com/films/604|title=Synopsis|publisher=The Criterion Collection|accessdate=2008-12-23}}
* {{TCMDb title}}
* {{cite web|url=http://www.criterion.com/current/posts/66|title=Criterion Collection essay|last=Insdorf|first=Annette|date=Jan 11, 2000|publisher=The Criterion Collection|accessdate=2008-12-23}}
* [https://www.criterion.com/current/posts/3393-the-night-porter-power-spectacle-and-desire ''The Night Porter: Power, Spectacle, and Desire''] – an essay by Gaetana Marrone at [[The Criterion Collection]]
* {{cite web|url=http://www.othervoices.org/2.1/scherr/sexuality.html|title=The Uses of Memory and the Abuses of Fiction: Sexuality in Holocaust Fiction and Memoir|last=Scherr|first=Rebecca|date=February 2000|publisher=Other Voices, vol. 2.1|accessdate=2008-12-23}}
* {{cite journal|url=https://www.othervoices.org/2.1/scherr/sexuality.php|title=The Uses of Memory and the Abuses of Fiction: Sexuality in Holocaust Fiction and Memoir|last=Scherr|first=Rebecca|date=February 2000|journal=[[Other Voices (journal)|Other Voices]]|volume=2|issue=1|access-date=20 May 2024}}


{{Liliana Cavani}}
{{Liliana Cavani}}
{{Authority control}}


{{DEFAULTSORT:Night Porter, The}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Night Porter, The}}
[[Category:1974 films]]
[[Category:1974 films]]
[[Category:English-language films]]
[[Category:1974 drama films]]
[[Category:Italian films]]
[[Category:1974 LGBTQ-related films]]
[[Category:1970s drama films]]
[[Category:1974 independent films]]
[[Category:Italian drama films]]
[[Category:1974 war films]]
[[Category:Erotic films]]
[[Category:1970s English-language films]]
[[Category:1970s erotic drama films]]
[[Category:1970s Italian films]]
[[Category:1970s psychological drama films]]
[[Category:1970s war drama films]]
[[Category:BDSM in films]]
[[Category:BDSM in films]]
[[Category:Holocaust films]]
[[Category:English-language Italian films]]
[[Category:Films about Nazi fugitives]]
[[Category:Films about sexual repression]]
[[Category:Films directed by Liliana Cavani]]
[[Category:Films directed by Liliana Cavani]]
[[Category:Films set in 1957]]
[[Category:Films set in hotels]]
[[Category:Films set in hotels]]
[[Category:Films set in Vienna]]
[[Category:Films set in Vienna]]
[[Category:Films shot in Rome]]
[[Category:Films shot at Cinecittà Studios]]
[[Category:Films shot in Vienna]]
[[Category:Films shot in Vienna]]
[[Category:Italian erotic drama films]]
[[Category:Italian LGBTQ-related films]]
[[Category:Italian nonlinear narrative films]]
[[Category:Italian psychological drama films]]
[[Category:Italian independent films]]
[[Category:Italian war drama films]]
[[Category:1970s LGBTQ-related drama films]]
[[Category:English-language erotic drama films]]
[[Category:English-language war drama films]]

Latest revision as of 14:53, 11 December 2024

The Night Porter
Theatrical release poster
ItalianIl portiere di notte
Directed byLiliana Cavani
Screenplay by
Story by
  • Liliana Cavani
  • Barbara Alberti
  • Amedeo Pagani
Produced by
  • Robert Gordon Edwards
  • Esa De Simone
Starring
CinematographyAlfio Contini
Edited byFranco Arcalli
Music byDaniele Paris
Production
company
Lotar Film
Distributed byItal-Noleggio Cinematografico
Release dates
  • 3 April 1974 (1974-04-03) (France)
  • 11 April 1974 (1974-04-11) (Italy)
Running time
118 minutes
CountryItaly
Languages
  • English
  • German
Box office$1.3 million (West Germany)[1]

The Night Porter (Italian: Il portiere di notte) is a 1974 Italian psychological war drama film[2] co-written and directed by Liliana Cavani. It stars Dirk Bogarde and Charlotte Rampling, with Philippe Leroy, Gabriele Ferzetti and Isa Miranda in supporting roles. Set in Vienna in 1957, the film centers on the sadomasochistic relationship between a former Nazi concentration camp officer (Bogarde) and one of his inmates (Rampling).

The film's themes of sexual and sadomasochistic obsession, and its use of Holocaust imagery, have made the film controversial since its initial release, dividing critics over its artistic value.[3][4] In July 2018, it was selected to be screened in the Venice Classics section of the 75th Venice International Film Festival.[5]

Plot

[edit]

During World War II, Maximilian Theo Aldorfer, a Nazi SS officer who posed as a doctor to take sensational photographs in concentration camps, and Lucia, a teenage girl interned in one such camp due to her father's socialist political ties, had an ambiguous sadomasochistic relationship. Max tormented Lucia, but also acted as her protector.

In 1957, Lucia, now married to an American orchestra conductor, meets Max again by chance. He is now a night porter at a hotel in Vienna, and a reluctant member of a group of former SS comrades who have been carefully covering up their pasts by destroying documents and eliminating witnesses to their wartime activities. Max has an upcoming mock trial at the hands of the group for his war crimes. The group's leader, Hans Vogler, accuses Max of wanting to live "hidden away like a church mouse." Max wishes to remain hidden, but voices support for the group's activities.

Memories of the past punctuate Max and Lucia's present with urgent frequency, suggesting that Lucia survived through her relationship with Max—in one such remembered scene, Lucia sings a Marlene Dietrich song, "Wenn ich mir was wünschen dürfte" ("If I Could Make a Wish"), to the camp guards while wearing pieces of an SS uniform, and Max "rewards" her with the severed head of a male inmate who had been bullying her, referencing Salome.

Because she could testify against him, Lucia's existence is a threat to Max and his former comrades. He goes to see a former Nazi collaborator, Mario, who knows Lucia is still alive; Max murders him offscreen to protect his secret and Lucia. After Lucia's husband leaves town on business, Max and Lucia renew their past lovemaking in Max's apartment. Max confesses to Countess Stein, another guest at his hotel, that he has found his "little girl" again. The Countess tells him that he is insane; Max replies that they are both "in the same boat." Meanwhile, Vogler has Max spied on by Adolph, a youth who works at the hotel.

Max is interviewed by the police about Mario's murder. He spends days with Lucia in his apartment, chaining her to the wall so that "they can't take her away", and sleeps little. Vogler, who wants Lucia to testify against Max in the mock trial—though he harbors more ambiguous long-term intentions towards her—visits and informs her that Max is ill. He suggests that Lucia must also be ill to allow herself to be in this position, but she sends him away, claiming to be with Max of her own free will.

The former SS officers are infuriated at Max for hiding a key witness. Max refuses to proceed with the trial, calling it a "farce," and admits that he works as a night porter due to his sense of shame in daytime. He returns to Lucia, telling her that the police questioned him and others at the hotel about her disappearance, and that no suspicion fell on him. Eventually, Max quits his job, devoting all of his time to Lucia. The former SS officers cut off the couple's supply of food from a nearby grocery store. When Max briefly walks along an outdoor terrace, Vogler shoots and wounds him. Max barricades the door to the apartment, and he and Lucia begin rationing.

Max seeks help by phoning one of his old hotel friends, who refuses, and imploring his neighbour, who is unwilling to provide aid and harbouring Adolph in her apartment. Max retreats again to the apartment, where Lucia is almost unconscious from malnutrition. After one of the former SS officers cuts off the electricity to Max's apartment, Max and Lucia, respectively dressed in his Nazi uniform and a negligee resembling one he gave her in the concentration camp, leave the building and drive away, followed by a car driven by Max's former colleagues. Max parks on a bridge, and he and Lucia get out and walk along the bridge rail as dawn breaks. Two gunshots ring out, and the lovers fall dead.

Cast

[edit]

Production

[edit]

Filming took place in Vienna and at Cinecittà Studios in Rome. Locations included the Vienna Volksoper, the Linke Wienzeile Buildings, the Mozarthaus, the Vienna Central Cemetery, Karl-Marx-Hof, and Schönbrunn Palace. The concentration camp scenes were shot in the Tuscolano district of Rome. The film's costumes were designed by five-time Oscar-nominee Piero Tosi.

The budget, which had been paid for by the Italian distributor, ran out near the end of the shooting of the film's interiors at Cinecittà. To ensure the film's completion, producer Robert Gordon Edwards instructed editor Franco Arcalli to create a rough cut of the best scenes that had been shot, which he presented to an American colleague who worked at Les Artistes Associés (the French arm of United Artists). On the basis of the rough cut, the company agreed to pay for the filming of the exterior scenes in Vienna in exchange for French distribution rights.

Romy Schneider turned down the role of Lucia. Mia Farrow was considered, as well as Dominique Sanda, before Charlotte Rampling was cast. Rampling shot the film only four months after giving birth to her son Barnaby. She and Dirk Bogarde re-wrote and ad-libbed much of their dialogue. Bogarde also enlisted Anthony Forwood to help rewrite the script, uncredited. Bogarde seriously considered retiring from acting after the end of principal photography, which he considered a very draining experience.

Several of the actors' voices were dubbed, including Philippe Leroy (by Edmund Purdom), Gabriele Ferzetti (by David de Keyser) and Geoffrey Copleston (by Charles Howerton).

Reception

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Critical response

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On Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds an approval rating of 67% based on 33 reviews, with an average rating of 5.8/10. The website's critics consensus reads, "The Night Porter's salaciousness gives its exploration of historical trauma a bitter aftertaste, but audiences seeking provocation are unlikely to forget the sting of this erotic drama."[6] In response to The Night Porter, Cavani was both celebrated for her courage in dealing with the theme of sexual transgression[citation needed] and, simultaneously, castigated for the controversial manner in which she presented that transgression within the context of a Nazi Holocaust narrative.

Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun-Times thought the main roles were well-performed, but nonetheless gave the film one star out of four, and called The Night Porter "as nasty as it is lubricious, a despicable attempt to titillate us by exploiting memories of persecution and suffering", while adding that he did not "object per se to the movie's subject matter."[7] In The New York Times, Nora Sayre praised the performances of Bogarde and Rampling, and the "dark, rich tones" of the cinematography, but began her review by writing, "If you don't love pain, you won't find The Night Porter erotic—and by now, even painbuffs may be satiated with Nazi decadence."[8] Vincent Canby, also writing for The New York Times, called it "romantic pornography" and "a piece of junk".[9] Leonard Maltin's 2015 Movie Guide called it a "[s]leazy, bizarre drama", awarding it two out of four stars.[10]

In Europe, the film was met with opposition as well. German magazine Filmdienst categorised the film as "political pornography".[11] Despite the poor German critical response, it grossed over $1.3 million.[1] In the French Cahiers du Cinéma, Michel Foucault criticised what he saw as a sexualised vision of Nazism.[12]

In her 2000 essay for the Criterion Collection release, Annette Insdorf called The Night Porter "a provocative and problematic film. ... [I]t can be seen as an exercise in perversion and exploitation of the Holocaust for the sake of sensationalism. On the other hand, a closer reading of this English-language psychological thriller suggests a dark vision of compelling characters doomed by their World War II past."[2] In his 2020 review for The Guardian, Peter Bradshaw described the film as a "dated" but "intriguing period piece", adding, "Perhaps there is something in its very crassness, horror and tastelessness that does at least jolt us towards an acknowledgment of pure evil."[13]

Mikel J. Koven characterised The Night Porter as a "Nazi sexploitation" film.[14]

Accolades

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The film was nominated in two categories at the 1975 Nastro d'Argento Awards, for Best Director (Liliana Cavani) and for Best Screenplay (Cavani and Italo Moscati), but did not win in either category.

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ a b Collaboration

References

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  1. ^ a b Kocian, Billy (7 May 1975). "In Germany Big Pics Do Biz". Variety. p. 275 – via Internet Archive.
  2. ^ a b Insdorf, Annette (10 January 2000). "The Night Porter". The Criterion Collection.
  3. ^ Wolff, Zoë (2 September 2014). "Charlotte Rampling". Interview.
  4. ^ "The Night Porter". American Cinematheque. Archived from the original on 7 January 2022.
  5. ^ "The restored films of Venezia Classici". Venice Biennale. 1 September 2018 [13 July 2018]. Retrieved 22 July 2018.
  6. ^ "The Night Porter". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved 20 May 2024.
  7. ^ Ebert, Roger (10 February 1975). "The Night Porter". Chicago Sun-Times. Archived from the original on 28 September 2012. Retrieved 23 December 2008.
  8. ^ Sayre, Nora (2 October 1974). "' The Night Porter,' Portrait of Abuse, Stars Bogarde". The New York Times. Retrieved 20 May 2024.
  9. ^ Canby, Vincent (13 October 1974). "The Night Porter' Is Romantic Pornography". The New York Times. Retrieved 20 May 2024.
  10. ^ Maltin, Leonard, ed. (2014). Leonard Maltin's 2015 Movie Guide: The Modern Era. New York: Signet. p. 1008.
  11. ^ "Der Nachtportier". Filmdienst (in German). Retrieved 15 January 2024.
  12. ^ Foucault, Michel (July–August 1974). "" Anti-Rétro ", entretiens avec P. Bonitzer et S. Toubiana". Cahiers du Cinéma (in French). No. 251–252. Reprinted in Foucault, Michel (2001). Dits et écrits I: 1954–1975. Quarto (in French). Vol. 1. Paris: Gallimard. pp. 1520–1521.
  13. ^ Bradshaw, Peter (27 November 2020). "The Night Porter review – descent into sex and Nazism still chills". The Guardian. Retrieved 4 March 2024.
  14. ^ Koven, Mikel J. (2004). "'The Film You Are About to See Is Based on Documented Fact': Italian Nazi Sexploitation Cinema". In Mathijs, Ernest; Mendik, Xavier (eds.). Alternative Europe: Eurotrash and Exploitation Cinema Since 1945. London: Wallflower Press. p. 20. ISBN 978-1-903364-93-2.
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