Vanessa Redgrave, Franco Nero, Leopoldo Trieste, and Corin Redgrave
The film’s title thus carries a powerful irony. Immacolata’s “vacation” is a cruel joke—a brief taste of freedom that is destined to be snatched away. The happiness she finds with Osiride and the gypsies is authentic but fleeting, a small pocket of resistance within a world that is fundamentally hostile to her. When she is ultimately returned to the clinic, the implication is clear: true freedom, for those who exist outside the bounds of society, is impossible. The Vacation -La Vacanza- - Tinto Brass 1971 -S...
In the context of Tinto Brass's career, La vacanza is the work of a director unmoored, stuck between the intellectualism of his past and the wild hedonism of his future. It is a film of radical ideas, a powerful indictment of the Italian patriarchy and mental health system, but it is also messy, incoherent, and at times, intentionally grotesque. Vanessa Redgrave, Franco Nero, Leopoldo Trieste, and Corin
The narrative shifts from social critique to a surreal journey when she escapes and encounters Osiride, a poacher/birdcatcher played by Franco Nero. Together, they embark on a series of "free-flowing adventures" across the Italian countryside, allowing Brass to explore themes of liberty, madness, and the repression of human desire. Artistic Style: Brass Before the Explicit Era When she is ultimately returned to the clinic,
La Vacanza was his thesis: The bourgeoisie does not need to be overthrown from the outside. It will implode from its own sexual and emotional impotence. The “vacation” is a metaphor for the false promise of consumer freedom. You can drive a fast car and wear expensive sunglasses, but if your soul is dead, you are already a ghost.