Salon Kitty (Madam Kitty). Tinto Brass, 1976.
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Edition screened: Argent Blu-ray, released 2011. Italian language with English subtitles. Runtime approximately 133 minutes.
Summary: Graphic slaughter and mutilation of a pig.
Details: A one-minute slaughterhouse scene begins at 8:30. The vignette goes far beyond butchering, as a living pig squeals in pain while it is slit open and then mutilated. The butchers laugh, hoot, and have pantomimed sex-play with its entrails. There are no special effects here.
This scene is queued by a medical lecture in which a Nazi professor asks who first discovered the biological superiority of the master race. A student answers “Adolf Hitler,” and the film cuts abruptly to the slaughterhouse scene with some of the butchers dressed as Nazi officers. The slaughter scene ends with a loud pig snort and abruptly cuts to an elegant Nazi banquet. The director’s intent is obvious but regrettable in its delivery. Except for this one-minute torture sequence, the remainder of Salon Kitty plays out like a sexually explicit sequel to Cabaret, with plenty of campy posturing, bawdy stage shows, and weird Nazi lingerie. While not one of the world’s great films, there is far more plot and general interest here than in much of Brass’s catalogue. For those interested in viewing, I provide this schedule of the opening scenes:
1) The opening title sequence is a cabaret routine.
2) Immediately following is a naked male Nazi gymnastics scene, intercut with dialogue establishing the plot to follow.
3) Immediately following the embarrassing gymnastics is the silly Nazi medical lecture which cuts to the slaughter scene as described above.
With that schedule in mind, watch what you want of the opening scenes, bail out during the lecture, and skip ahead to the 9:45 mark to miss the cruel slaughter and begin with the real plot and eroticism of the film.