Vote on this title
Click on a gene to vote or discover related titles.
Find it on:
| IMDb | |
| Rotten Tomatoes |
The Embalmer, 2002
Italian
Italy
Profile of The Embalmer
The mood of The Embalmer is sexual, tense, and suspenseful. The plot centers around suburban life, unfulfilled love, and a dangerous attraction. It is a foreign, drama, and thriller movie. In approach, The Embalmer is serious and realistic. The pacing is slow. It happens in contemporary times.
Summary of The Embalmer
The Embalmer, directed by Matteo Garrone, is the story of unrequited love and repressed homosexuality gone awry. Peppino (Ernesto Mahieux) is a diminutive taxidermist who secretly courts an unsuspecting Greek god named Valerio (Valerio Foglia Manzillo) by grossly overpaying him to work as his assistant. Hungry for direction and purpose in life, Valerio chooses to ignore the romantic yearnings of the older, much homelier man's attentions, throws himself into the work, and pals around with Peppino in spite of their differences. Peppino orchestrates debauched nights on the town with prostitutes in an effort to gain false intimacy with Valerio. There is no denying that the younger man is a willing party, and he even looks the other way when Peppino is employed by the mob to stash drugs in corpses. When Valerio falls in love with the tempestuous Deborah (Elisabetta Rochetti), Peppino is outraged to find that she is stubborn and shrewd, and cannot be manipulated for his own ends. The seemingly gentle path of Matteo Garrone's naturalistic film gives way to darker undercurrents and a creeping suspense that is irresistibly absorbing and quietly nerve-wracking. Director of photography Marco Onorato provides deep and dark wide-angle shots. And the littered beaches and abandoned streets of Cremona and locations outside Naples create a beautifully bereft backdrop that enhances this tale of three lost souls.
Details
| Language: | Italian |
| Country: | Italy |
| Release date: | 12 October 2002 |
| Runtime: | 101 min |
Cast and Crew
as Peppino
as Valerio
as Deborah
Critics Reviews
Los Angeles Times
- |
- by: Kevin Thomas
Chicago Tribune
- |
- by: Michael Wilmington
Mood:
Plot:
Genres:
Time/Period:
Attitudes:

