Visually, Capriccio is a masterclass in the "Brass Aesthetic." The cinematography is characterized by a warm, sun-drenched palette and a focus on tactile textures—sweat, fabric, and stone. Brass’s camera is famously obsessed with the female form, but in Capriccio , this focus serves a specific narrative purpose. He portrays the body as a landscape of freedom. By emphasizing the exuberance and roundness of his actors, Brass rejects the sanitized, thin-waisted beauty standards of Hollywood, opting instead for a Rubens-esque celebration of vitality. The frequent use of mirrors and wide-angle lenses creates a sense of voyeurism that involves the audience in the characters' transgression, forcing a confrontation with the viewer's own perceptions of "propriety."
Set in the 1940s, the film follows Jennifer and Fred, an American couple living in Capri and Naples. Their marriage is defined by a polite, stifling normalcy that masks deep-seated dissatisfactions. Brass uses the backdrop of post-war Italy not just for historical flavor, but as a symbol of rebirth and raw vitality. The "Capriccio" of the title manifests when both partners seek out former lovers—Jennifer with the rugged Ciro and Fred with the captivating Rosalba. This dual narrative suggests that the "whim" is not a deviation from their true selves, but a return to them. Brass suggests that the structured constraints of the mid-century nuclear family were often at odds with the chaotic, unyielding nature of human desire. Capriccio 1987-[ 18].mp4
The Architecture of Desire: Analyzing Tinto Brass’s Capriccio (1987) Visually, Capriccio is a masterclass in the "Brass Aesthetic
Analyze the of Tinto Brass compared to his peers? By emphasizing the exuberance and roundness of his