
Color, 1997, 93 mins. 23 secs.
Directed by Tinto Brass
Starring Cinzia Roccaforte, Cristina Rinaldi, Erika Saffo Savastani, Gaia Zucchi, Tinto Brass, Laura Gualtieri, Alessandra Antonelli, Gabriella Barbuti, Carla Solaro
Cult Epics (Blu-ray) (US RA HD), RHV (DVD) (Italy R0 PAL) / WS (1.85:1) (16:9), Dutch Filmworks (Holland R2 PAL)
on by the success of The Voyeur (his
seventh erotic epic in a row), Italian filmmaker Tinto Brass had established himself as the Stradivarius of skin and cultivated a public image as a cigar-chomping imp with a passion for women's backsides. Naturally that meant the time was right for him to take center stage as the star of one of his films, and the result was P.O. Box Tinto Brass, a random collection of vignettes strung together by the framing device of the auteur himself enjoying letters and videos mailed to him detailing the erotic tales sent in by avid female viewers. The result is pure Tinto, something like a collection of Penthouse Forum letters hijacked by Bugs Bunny.
husband's
rampant gambling problem. All the while, the stories are read out loud by his bubbly secretary (Riccaforte) who eventually shares a wild fantasy of her own.
earlier Brass films composed for 1.66:1 (and mangled in the vast majority of presentations),
the 1.85:1 framing has been the constant and appears to be correct. The sequences aren't consistent in quality (the first beach story is heavily diffused and poses some unavoidable compression challenges), but it's definitely a massive upgrade over any prior version and is a fine way to mark the film's American debut in any format. The default audio option is Italian DTS-HD 2.0 stereo, with Dolby Digital Italian 2.0 mono and the English mono dub also provided (with optional English subtitles). The Brass interview from the Italian DVD is carried over here (now 16m1s at corrected speed), and a gallery (1m25s) of fun production photos and lobby cards is also included along with the usual Italian trailer. As for the second Blu-ray disc, there you'll find the entertaining 2013 Massimiliano Zanin documentary Istintobrass, a career-spanning look anchored by an extensive interview with the maestro himself along with exclusive contributions from the likes of Helen Mirren, Ken Adam, Franco Nero, Serena Grandi, Gigi Proietti, Adriana Asti, Franco Branciaroli, and more. It's loaded with great stories and observations including thoughts on Brass' positive portrayals of women (as the "subject" rather than the "object"), his often overlooked early experimental and satirical work, and amusing personal notes like Grandi's first screening of the film Miranda for her son. Also included are an interview with Zanin (18m25s) about the making of the doc (complete with behind the scenes footage), a photo gallery (2m48s) of Brass at work and play over the years, a "Praise" (2m49s) interview outtake, and a teaser and trailer. The very thick insert booklet features an appraisal of Brass by Ranji Sandhu and a cavalcade of production photos over the course of his career.


