Take Off
Comedy, Fantasy, Horror
Storyline
Linda sneaks into a manor house, discovering a mysterious stag film from the 1920s; after returning to a party, she is soon approached by suave and dashing Darrin Blue, who invites her on a drive and begins to share his incredible life story, from encounters with gangster molls in the 30s through to hippie freak outs in the 60s. But what is Darrinโs secret to remaining eternally youthful?
"Where Hollywood left off... Take Off takes it all off!"
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Reviews from the Web
"**Decorative Pornography** In this bold and lysergic 1978 reinterpretation, Anthony Spinelli transports Oscar Wilde's "The Picture of Dorian Gray" myth to the epicenter of the sexual revolution. The plot follows Darrin Blue (a superb performance by Wade Nichols), a young man of statuesque beauty who, having made a pact with the forces of Vanity, retains his youthful vigor and physical purity while plunging into a spiral of absolute hedonism decade after decade. While he remains untouched by the passage of time and his own excesses, also does exist a hidden film, in the form of a cinematic canvas, functions as a moral mirror, accumulating the scars, decrepitude, and corruption of his soul, and revealing the true nature of his degradation. โTake Offโ stands as one of the pinnacles of adult cinema of its era, but also as the masterpiece of its director, Anthony Spinelli, perhaps alongside the masterful โSexWorld,โ and not so much for its explicit content as for its conceptual sophistication and cinematic technique. Spinelli undoubtedly solidifies his talent behind the camera, showcasing transition techniques and emulsion treatments in a sensational way. It is a tribute to cinema of all times, from those films by the master William A. Wellman, with James Cagney playing a gangster, to a brilliant parody of Humphrey Bogart's "Casablanca". The film masterfully captures the essence of Lord Henry's cynicism and Dorian's tragedy, but envelops them in the sepia-toned celluloid of the 1920s and the saturated color of the 1970s. It is a scathing critique of narcissism in one's own existence, when one seeks to worship image above ethics. Pure Wildean frivolity."
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