Horror Extreme Movie Catalog
Salo - Criterion Collection
Theatrical Release Date: 1975
MPAA Rating: 
Studio: Criterion
Editorial Review - Description
A loose adaptation of the Marquis de Sade's The 120 Days of Sodom, Pier Paolo Pasolini's Salo is perhaps the most disturbing and disgusting film ever made. It is also one of the most important, offering a blistering critique of fascism and idealism that suggests moral redemption may be nothing but a myth. Criterion presents Salo in its uncut, uncensored version.
not a movie for anybody
A Customer Review by Robert E. Dembkoski
This movie is gross from a multiply of positions. It doesn't have any redeeming features or points what so ever. Not for anyone with a weak stomach.
Salo, or The 120 Days of Sodom
A Customer Review by JeffreyJGH
With his "Salo, or The 120 Days of Sodom," director Pier Paolo Pasolini gives us depravity to the nth degree. Nine teenage boys and nine teenage girls are taken prisoner in a majestic villa in 1944 Fascist Italy. With the source material being the Marquis de Sade's tome, we pretty much think we have an idea of what we are in store for. Yet it is more graphic than that, given that the images are celluloid as opposed to just words on a page. Roughly, the first third of the film was fine (a relative term); the second, nauseating; and the third, with a horrendous final ten minutes, almost unbearable. The things I liked about Salo have to do with the first third, especially at the beginning when three young men try to flee on bikes their future captors; you can see the fear in their faces. Or the young lady who mourns the mother who died trying to save her from what is going to be a terrible fate. I enjoyed the sets and the costumes, an elaborateness that, coupled with the grotesqueness, put me in mind of Peter Greenaway's equally disgusting, but for me more gorgeous and far more watchable, The Cook, the Thief, His Wife and Her Lover. Those bits of appreciation are more old-school cinematic, I suppose. The scenes with the human waste and the scenes of violence are ones that I found more difficult, despite the always beautiful cinematography. Pasolini is tough for me, and admittedly the more modern Teorema (with its 1960s bourgeois family affected by an enigmatic visitor) is the work of his that I most esteem.
Salo - Criterion Collection: Related Horror Movie Pictures
Salo - Criterion Collection: Related Horror Movie Clips and Trailers
Please note: If there are no movie links displayed then the selected movies for the current page are no longer available. Although we try to keep our content up to date there will be occasions when no movies are available. Feel free to let us know of missing movies via the
contact us page. Certain related horror movies are the results of an internet search. Although we have tried to refine the search results to be as relevant as possible there may occasionally be clips that are unrelated so please be careful what you click on!
Salo - Criterion Collection: Related Movies
DVD Release Date: 2008
MPAA Rating: 
With Vampyr, Danish filmmaker Carl Theodor Dreyer's brilliance at achieving mesmerizing atmosphere and austere, profoundly unsettling imagery (as in The Passion of Joan of Arc and Day of Wrath) was for once applied to the horror genre. Yet the result-concerning an occult student assailed by various ...
more information, reviews and movie clips of Vampyr - Criterion Collection