Bestiality -bestialita- - Peter Skerl 1976 -vhs... -
But the mystery is this: how could this be real? In an era before CGI, many viewers assumed the scenes were either real (an unspoken crime) or the clever use of fakery. The truth, as revealed by actress Franca Stoppi (who played Jeanine's mother), is that the scenes were "clearly, of a simulation". The director's achievement was not in capturing an illegal act, but in staging it so effectively that audiences were left wondering. The trick was assisted by the fact that the dog in the film, a Doberman named Satana, was an exceptionally calm animal who followed his trainer's commands.
Despite its explicit title and subject matter, the film operates less as pure pornography and more as a surrealistic, pitch-black psychological thriller that ultimately courted legal disaster and permanent censorship. The Narrative: Trauma, Isolation, and Obsession Bestiality -Bestialita- - Peter Skerl 1976 -Vhs...
Shot by Giuseppe Bernardini, capturing a beautiful, sun-bleached Mediterranean isolation But the mystery is this: how could this be real
Co-written by Luigi Montefiori, better known by his stage name George Eastman . Eastman is legendary among genre fans for his work in ultra-violent cult films like Anthropophagus (1980) and Porno Holocaust (1981). His footprint on the script injects the film with a characteristic dark, gritty, and misanthropic worldview. Synopsis and Plot Structure The director's achievement was not in capturing an
Peter Skerl, a filmmaker whose career was heavily impacted by the commercial failure and distribution blockages of this specific project. Bestialità was originally intended to be part of an ambitious trilogy, but Skerl was never able to complete it due to severe financial and legal pushback.
Critics, including rights advocates, argue that welfare is a "slow slaughter" philosophy. They contend that improving the conditions of a cage does not erase the fundamental immorality of using a sentient being as a production unit. As philosopher Tom Regan put it, "A comfortable cage is still a cage."



