Pier Paolo Pasolini

Pier Paolo Pasolini, (b. March 5, 1922, Bologna, Italy—d.
Nov. 2, 1975, Ostia, near Rome), Italian motion-picture
director, poet, and novelist, noted for his socially
critical, stylistically unorthodox films.
The son of an Italian army
officer, Pasolini was educated in schools of the various
cities of northern Italy where his father was successively
posted. He attended the University of Bologna, studying art
history and literature. Pasolini’s stay of refuge among the
oppressed peasantry of the Friuli region during World War II
led to his later becoming a Marxist, albeit an unorthodox
one. His poverty-stricken existence in Rome during the 1950s
furnished the material for his first two novels, Ragazzi di
vita (1955; The Ragazzi) and Una vita violenta (1959; A
Violent Life). These brutally realistic depictions of the
poverty and squalor of slum life in Rome were similar in
character to his first film, Accattone (1961), and all three
works dealt with the lives of thieves, prostitutes, and
other denizens of the Roman underworld.
Pasolini’s best known film,
Il Vangelo secondo Matteo (1964; The Gospel According to
Saint Matthew), is an austere, documentary-style retelling
of the life and martyrdom of Jesus Christ. The comic
allegory Uccellacci e Uccellini (1966; The Hawks and the
Sparrows) was followed by two films attempting to re-create
ancient myths from a contemporary viewpoint, Oedipus Rex
(1967) and Medea (1969). Pasolini’s use of eroticism,
violence, and depravity as vehicles for his political and
religious speculations in such films as Teorema (1968;
“Theorem”) and Porcile (1969; “Pigsty”) brought him into
conflict with conservative elements of the Roman Catholic
Church. He then ventured into medieval eroticism with Il
Decamerone (1971) and The Canterbury Tales (1972). In
addition to his motion pictures, Pasolini published numerous
volumes of poetry and several works of literary criticism.