Sexy proibitissimo

1963
5.7| 1h40m| NA| en| More Info
Released: 17 October 1963 Released
Producted By: Les Films Marbeuf
Country:
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
Official Website:
Info

A 'documentary' of stripping, from the dawn of humanity to the future.

Genre

Documentary

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Director

Marcello Martinelli

Production Companies

Les Films Marbeuf

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Sexy proibitissimo Audience Reviews

CommentsXp Best movie ever!
StyleSk8r At first rather annoying in its heavy emphasis on reenactments, this movie ultimately proves fascinating, simply because the complicated, highly dramatic tale it tells still almost defies belief.
Griff Lees Very good movie overall, highly recommended. Most of the negative reviews don't have any merit and are all pollitically based. Give this movie a chance at least, and it might give you a different perspective.
Marva It is an exhilarating, distressing, funny and profound film, with one of the more memorable film scores in years,
Michael_Elliott Sexy Proibitissimo (1963) *** (out of 4)If you're looking for a hard-hitting and detailed documentary about stripping throughout the ages then you're not going to find it with SEXY PROIBITISSIMO. If you're looking for a somewhat funny look at stripping through the ages then you might enjoy this "documentary" from Italy.What we basically have here is a narrator telling us about the various times that we're watching. It could be from the caveman era, the Biblical era or various others. The connection on all of the skits is that we see the forms of strippers and how they have changed over the years.For the most part I found this to be a rather funny picture and especially with some of the narration. For example, during the caveman sequence the narrator states that it might be hard to imagine a time when women didn't run their mouths. I would really argue that most of the comedy here was much better than the sex jokes that you'd see in Mel Brooks' HISTORY OF THE WORLD PART I. The film also offers up a lot of nudity as we see the various strip skits including one segment that deals with horror films. I guess the biggest plus here is that the women are all extremely attractive and there's no doubt that the "raincoat" crowd will enjoy this. The dance sequences are quite nice and you can just tell that there was a lot more effort put into this film than the type you'd see from America, which were usually just shot in someone's basement.
lor_ SEXY PROIBITISSIMO puts to shame the many American striptease features of the '50s and '60s, playing at adult cinemas. It's definitely worth a look via Something Weird DVD-R reissue.IMDb (and the massive AFI Catalog covering films released during the 1960s) fails to enlighten on the film's history, garbling the credits and establishing two different movies released back in Italy in 1963 from the same producer: SEXY PROIBITO and SEXY PROIBITISSIMO. It is the latter which was imported to the U.S., and my guess is that they have overlapping contents, with perhaps this one being a new, expanded version of the first one. Similar to the way Miramax cut & paste the funny British concert comedy films SECRET POLICEMAN'S BALL and its followups 30 years ago.Format is simple: one vignette after another showing how the fairer sex used striptease to attract and/or subjugate the male of our species, dating from caveman times to a futuristic (in 1963) scene on the moon featuring a stripping cosmonaut ogled by tentacled (and presumably horny) aliens. Whether the Italian filmmakers postulated that the Soviet Union would beat America in the race to the moon was because of their party affiliation, or just based on Russia having women in space before we did is a moot point.What makes this a superior example of the genre is the casting of beautiful women who all dance -each striptease is a real routine, not just shedding of clothes. The costumes, sets and lighting are all pro, not the canned "proscenium arch" shooting style of so many tedious American burlesque movies. This being 1963 the girls only go topless, with the best-built beauty playing a spider lady oddly enough the only one who retains pasties at the end of her act.Presenter for SWV Frank Henenlotter, still a cult figure for his amateur night horror films, leaves a great deal to be desired as historian/self-appointed "expert" (though I must say that only Lisa Petrucci, in-house, is readable and reliable among a dozen or so hacks writing liner notes for the label). He hews the cornball party line of Euro haters complaining that the stripper who portrays Cleopatra in her milk bath has "hairy armpits".Guess what: she is clean-shaven if you take the time to actually watch the film. This reminds me of another misogynistic cliché often trotted out in these notes and summaries, complaining about women with light "mustaches" on their upper lips - a stupid fetish among would-be "critics" that persists to this day (see reviews of Mariah Carey in PRECIOUS).Jazzy musical score is a plus, including an excellent imitation of Dave Brubeck's classic "Take Five", but even though the import version has evidently been seriously cut, down to an hour in length, it is padded by a lengthy "highlights" segment at the end, re-showing footage in a more abbreviated "get to the skin" form.
Paul Petroskey This Italian "documentary" is the best stripping movie I have ever seen. It stages stripteases through the ages: a cavewoman, during the french revolution, biblical times, ancient egypt, etc, etc all the way up to the future (a striptease for aliens on another planet). The narration is witty, the girls are beautiful. There could be little more you'd want in such a film.