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La Fantasia di Beba (XConfessions Volume 17)

Erika Lust Films

18 min. Directed by
  • Studio: Erika Lust Films
  • Year: 2019
  • Runtime: 18 min.
  • Country: Italy
  • Languages: Italian language
  • Captions: English captions, French captions, German captions, Spanish captions
  • Date Added: 2025/06/29
  • Performers: Eros Braciola, Magena Yama

Curator's Note:

About the Director: Lidia Ravviso is an Italian filmmaker and visual artist based in London, who has worked both as a director and video editor across cinema, television, documentary and music videos. In 2011 she joined the collective "Le Ragazze del Porno", a group of Italian directors, writers, and artists who share the urge to talk about sexuality, eroticism and pornography from a personal point of view. In 2015 she directed Insight, her first adult movie that participated in several international film festivals, and won the best short film prize at the Hacker Porn Film Festival in 2017.


Description:

In this erotic film, Lidia Ravviso rewrites the narrative of sex workers presented in romantic Italian movies in the 70s and 80s. Beba is an independent and wise woman who consciously taps into the tired stereotypes placed on sex workers. She chooses to imitate these stereotypes by wearing a deep shade of red lipstick and symbolic red shoes. Ravviso, through Beba, rejects the idea that sex workers are always stigmatized or victimized by presenting a woman working with free agency and through her own pleasure and desire.

Director Statement:
As a filmmaker and cinema geek, I am a huge fan of Italian erotic movies from the 70s and 80s, and I am especially passionate about Tinto Brass’ cinematographic work.

I love the voluptuous atmosphere of the stories set in an Italian landscape that is extremely difficult to find nowadays. Even though his work is controversial from a feminist perspective, I have always been fascinated by Brass' female characters, such as the protagonist of 'Paprika' which is the story of a sex worker in postbellum Italy. But there is something about movies like this that disturbs me. I don't like the way they portray sex work. In 'Paprika', the protagonist chooses to become a sex worker to help her fiancé with his business, even though she eventually finds 'redemption' in true love.

I find that empowering aspect of sex work very erotic, and I think many other people do, too, But I think it is problematic that these directors depicted sex workers as damaged goods, or rich girls who enter this work out of boredom, trying to escape their life or because of some untreated childhood trauma. The women I see behind all the stereotypes and stigmas in movies like this are not bored. Their life is not trivial, and their desire to transgress has the taste of cool ice cream on a summers day.

This is why when I read 'La fantasia di Beba' written by Agnese Trocchi, I found the perfect story and character to challenge the way these old, white, male directors of the 70s and 80s portrayed these women. Beba is not a broken little thing just waiting to be saved. She consciously taps into all of their stupid stereotypes. She wears the red shoes, the short skirt and the lipstick but she swaps the roles and subverts the expected narrative of a sex worker who is always either stigmatized or victimized for her choices. She is aware of dealing with a potentially dangerous experience, but she turns it around in her favor.

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