In this allegory on capitalism, director of a known car corporation invites one of his employees to his country villa to give him the good news. He just got promoted. However, the old man is... Read allIn this allegory on capitalism, director of a known car corporation invites one of his employees to his country villa to give him the good news. He just got promoted. However, the old man is not what he seems and promotion has a price.In this allegory on capitalism, director of a known car corporation invites one of his employees to his country villa to give him the good news. He just got promoted. However, the old man is not what he seems and promotion has a price.
- Awards
- 1 win
- Alberto Valle
- (as Giuliano Disperati)
- Priest
- (uncredited)
- Scientist in spot commercial
- (uncredited)
- Actor in commercial spot
- (uncredited)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaFirst banner Alberto drives under, translated from Italian, reads: "Civic Gallery of Modern Art, Yves Klein, 2 December - 31 December 1970."
- Quotes
Actor in commercial spot: A shower isn't a shower if your water pipes don't contain A-1 Tonic.
Actress in commercial spot: With A-1 Tonic, you're younger, stronger ... happier to live and love!
Actor in commercial spot: [letter "A" in Italian, sighed as an ecstatic "Ah!"] A-1 Tonic caresses your skin.
Actress in commercial spot: [also with the ecstatic "Ah!"] I'd also like to feel A-1 Tonic caress my skin.
Actor in commercial spot: You can't, unless you surrender. without shame, young and naked.
Actress in commercial spot: I am young, and I'm also...
[Alberto turns off water, cuts off ad]
- ConnectionsSpoofs La Strada (1954)
Alberto Valli is an inconspicuous employee in a large automobile company. His modest job status is perfectly illustrated by the floor he works on. One morning, he hears from the CEO that none other than the company's founder and Vice President, Giovanni Nosferatu, has summoned Alberto to his mansion in a remote mountain area. With a name like that, Alberto should know better than to accept, but he's honored and undertakes the journey. He meets up with a half-naked hitchhiker and a whole bunch of dead-silent mountain villagers before arriving at the estate. Nosferatu is a strange fella, or what else did you expect, but he does make some very impossible-to-refuse offers to Alberto.
There are many bizarre gimmicks in "They've Changed Faces", and the fact they remain unexplained only makes the film more intriguing. What is a topless hippie girl doing in the middle of nowhere? What is the meaning of Nosferatu's mute henchmen driving around the estate in white Fiat 500s? Why does Alberto leave behind a gorgeous naked girl and sleeps around with a creepy, asexual secretary instead? How brilliant is the idea of playing advertisements when sitting down in a chair or stepping into a shower?
The essence of the film, namely that old-fashioned Gothic vampires have evolved and now form the elite members of the business, media, advertisement, sports,religious, artistic world, is truly unique. Adolfo Celi is fantastic, as usual, but I would have preferred he had more screen time. The musical score by Amadeo Tommasi (also known for his excellent work for "The House with Laughing Windows) is the best thing in an already very good movie. Writer/director Corrado Farina's other cult-horror flick "Baba Yaga" might be more popular and better known, but personally I think this one is a much better film.
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Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- They've Changed Faces
- Filming locations
- Chieri, Torino, Piemonte, Italy(Giovanni Nosferatu's house)
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime1 hour 36 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.85 : 1