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I'm sorry, this is getting too complicated for me. Does anybody know if Tinto Brass is going to make a movie version?

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by martingale on Wed Jun 17th, 2009 at 11:40:47 PM EST
Brass would certainly simplify it. He'd hunker down to the basic bump and grind.

There is a long interview in Corriere della Sera with Patrizia D'Addario published last night.

For once it's Corriere della Sera who got the scope. Ferruccio de Bortoli has just returned to the Corriere after a long stint at Sole24 Ore, the Italian financial daily. De Bortoli had been ousted previously for his stubborness in covering Berlusconi's trials- although de Bortoli has never spoken of it in those terms.

by de Gondi (publiobestia aaaatttthotmaildaughtusual) on Thu Jun 18th, 2009 at 01:28:40 AM EST
[ Parent ]
I got a title for the movie:

"Belle, sporchi e cattivi"

Not sure if it works in Italian but the Portuguese version would be spot on.

by Torres on Thu Jun 18th, 2009 at 08:32:30 PM EST
[ Parent ]
He doesn't seem to have any such plans, but would like to make a movie with the current Minister of Education.
Secondo il regista erotico Tinto Brass il presidente del Consiglio Silvio Berlusconi possiede un immaginario erotico vivace. "Ogni volta che va in Russia, ad esempio, sembra torni tutto ringalluzzito" ha detto Brass nel corso di un'intervista con Mario Adinolfi per la trasmissione quotidiana di Red "Finimondo". Il regista veneziano ha poi affermato: "E' un bene avere un premier che non seppellisce il suo lato erotico nonostante l'età".

Brass farebbe volentieri un film con protagonista il ministro dell'Istruzione Mariastella Gelmini. Secondo il regista, infatti, la Gelmini è la più sexy di tutte le donne sedute in Parlamento. "Più erotica di Mara Carfagna" ha affermato Brass per il quale il merito di tutte queste bellezze è proprio del premier.

But Brass is less enthusiastic about Berlusoni's policies
Italian film makers have attacked the imposition of a 25 per cent duty on profits from films, shows and books that have an "explicit" sexual content as part of the Berlusconi Government's anti-crisis "stimulus package". Dubbed a "porno tax" by the Italian media, it applies to works that contain "images or scenes depicting explicit sexual acts not simulated between consenting adults". Sandro Bondi, the Culture Minister, is to decide what constitutes explicit or pornographic scenes. Tinto Brass, a director of erotic films, said that the tax was "devastating, disastrous. Obviously, they don't want people to have fun."
Does that mean that he can tax all the recent news coverage of his affairs?
by gk (g k quattro due due sette "at" gmail.com) on Thu Jun 18th, 2009 at 06:16:45 AM EST
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