Love Circle (1969)
10/10
The Crystal Plumage.
26 January 2014
Warning: Spoilers
April 2011:

Listening to UK film reviewers Alan Jones and Kim Newman's excellent commentary on the Blue Underground DVD edition of director Dario Argento's debut title The Bird with the Crystal Plumage (1970-also reviewed),I was surprised to find out,that before working on Plumage,Argento (in a co-writing role),lead actor Tony Musante and composer Ennio Morricone had worked together on a 1969 movie called The Love Circle.

Being interested in seeing their earlier collaboration,I decided to search everywhere online for a DVD/Video version of the title.

With the happy exception of discovering that parts of Morricone's music had come out on an "ultimate collection" CD set,I was disappointed to find that the only version of the movie available was an old Italian Video,that did not feature an English soundtrack or any English subtitles.

Late 2013:

As I begun to gather up titles that I have saved for a "special occasion" to mark my upcoming 500th IMDb review,I decided to make one last attempt in tracking down an English edition of the title. Originally expecting to turn up with nothing,I was delightfully caught by surprise,when a DVD seller told me that they had recently tracked down a version of the movie with English subtitles,which led to me excitingly getting ready to see the circle finally become completed.

View on the film:

Bringing his own stage show to the big screen,co-writer/ (along with Dario Argento and Carlo Carunchio) director Giuseppe Patroni Griffi shows no fear at all in breaking the title out of its theatrical roots,with Griffi closely working with cinematographer Tonino Delli Colli,(who also did the cinematography for most of Sergio Leone's epics) & backed by an ultra smooth jazzy score from Ennio Morricone to give the film a dazzling stylized atmosphere,with Griffi and Colli giving the movie a "light" appearance during the happier times of the characters relationships,which gradually melt into Gothic blacks,as each of them start to discover how fragile their friendships (and marriage) really are.

Showing,what looks to be a nod to the direction that co-writer Dario Argento would take later on,Griffi gives the secret hideaway of Nine's third secret lover a strong Gothic Horror chill,by placing him in a hidden,closed-off lair that is based underneath a theatre.

Limiting the number of characters to a handful of people,the writers take a scalpel and brilliantly cut deep into the gaps of Michele,Nina and Max's relationship,with the writers showing Michael's idealistic image of an extra-marital affair to be something that contains darker veins hidden underneath.

Featuring a (for its time) daring three-sum,the writers s,smartly focus on the sensual and psychological effects of the event,as the writers gradually reveal,that instead of combining them together,Max and Nina now feel further apart than ever.

Giving the movie an erotic breeze,Florinda Bolkan gives an excellent performance as Nina,with Bolkan avoiding the cold shoulder that Nina could have been given,to instead give Nina a warm sensuality,that slowly reaches the suffice,as Nina and Max struggle to keep their affair hidden.

Despite being given a rather stern role,Jean-Louis Trintignant,(who would decades later star in the Oscar winning movie Amour) gives Michael an oddly charming side,as Michael finds himself attempting to adapt to the new situation that he finds himself in.

Showing all the skills that would lead to him shining in Dario Argento's debut,Tony Musante gives a fantastic performance as Max,with Musante peeling away Max's playboy layers,to show his weaknesses,as Max starts to fear that the "love circle" is about to close.
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