Immoral Tales Review

Rating: ★★★★☆ (4/5) – A sumptuous, shocking, and strangely philosophical gallery of erotic obsessions.

Paloma Picasso’s terrifying, silent queen. The blood-bath scene, which will never leave your memory. The feeling that you are glimpsing something truly forbidden—not because it is pornographic, but because it is honest. immoral tales

The first two episodes feel like sketches or exercises. The Tide is lovely but slight. Thérèse is playful but drags its joke. The film truly awakens only with the brutal 30-minute centerpiece of Erzsebet Bathory . The final Lucrezia is beautiful but so abstract it risks losing the viewer entirely. You sense Borowczyk was less interested in narrative than in creating four distinct "rooms" of desire. Rating: ★★★★☆ (4/5) – A sumptuous, shocking, and

You need a plot, happy endings, or clear distinctions between good and evil. The feeling that you are glimpsing something truly

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