So last night we did some trick or treating with the kids in the village and then went to visit some friends that were putting on a haunted courtyard in their building. It was an un-seasonally warm Friday night holloween in the city and there were thousands of people out and about roaming the streets wearing ridiculous costumes and drinking too much. But really, the highlight of the evening was not the pruscutto and arugula pizza or even the total mayhem on 2nd ave around 1am, It was the unexpected and fantastically inspirational viewing of Turner Classic Movies presentation of “Spirits of the Dead” The imagery flowing through the Fellini segment had everyone in the room gasping in amazement.
three titans of European cinema–Roger Vadim, Louis Malle, and Federico Fellini–team up for a stylish film based on the works of macabre author Edgar Allan Poe. Vadim directs the first segment, METZENGERSTEIN, with Jane Fonda portraying the spoiled, vicious Frederique. When she finally meets her neighbor, Baron Wilhelm (played by her brother Peter), her advances toward him are met with rejection. Humiliated, she takes matters into her own hands, leading her into a downward spiral with a tragic ending. Malle takes the middle slot with WILLIAM WILSON, featuring Alain Delon as the troubled hero, a man who has been haunted since childhood by a man with his exact name. After torturing a gorgeous woman (Brigitte Bardot), a final duel brings William’s ghosts home once and for all. Last but not least is Fellini’s segment, a story set in the 1970s entitled TOBY DAMMIT, which stars Terence Stamp as a spacey English actor who travels to Rome in order to play Christ in a New Testament Western. When he gets the keys to a brand-new Ferrari, he embarks on a dangerous drive that just might cost him his life.