Erotic Movie: Casanova
This excellent comedy, with just the right amount of erotic elements, features the unfortunately deceased Heath Ledger, who is brilliant in this role.
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The recently deceased Heath Ledger, for which girls will crave for a number of years to come, played the main role in the 2005 movie Casanova and portrayed the famous Italian womanizer as a lustful and naughty man. He portrays him in such a way that we believe everything he says.
A comedy of errors
It is more than welcome that this latest Casanova isn’t really a biography, but a comedy of errors. It is more than excellent. It is so good that it in fact has no errors. It is so good that it will entertain and relax you. It will seem a long time since you last felt this way. Welcome to Venice, the city built on posts, well, built on Casanova’s penis, where all the women who are worthy of sin end up on it, even the nuns, of course. “I left my window open,” said one of them. “Oh, dear lady, too many open windows and not enough time,” replied Giacomo Casanova (Heath Ledger), who was just falling in love with Francesca Bruni (Sienna Miller). This is a girl he wants to give his heart to, beside his penis.
Hunting the sinner
It is no wonder, seeing as the infamous inquisitor Pucci (Jeremy Irons), who would even hang himself if he ever sinned, is in town. Casanova sins like there is no tomorrow, so Pucci hunts him, breaths down his neck and waits for the moment when he will finally have him. Naturally, the infamous lover, who the innocent young girl Victoria (Natalie Dormer) also wants to feel between her legs (a girl he is supposed to marry because he was told so by the local bishop (Tim McInnerny) and could thus save his head), has to play three roles, pose as poets and rich lords and hide from the authorities and the Vatican.
This is a real comedy of errors. It is temperamental, unique and just erotic enough as a comedy and movie. You could use it instead of a massage, especially when the pope’s celebrating his birthday. Or as Casanova says: “If you want to be loved, you have to be worthy of love. Be the flame, not the moth.” If you’re more interested in the older and more famous movie version, see the Fellini movie from 1976, where the infamous lover is played by Donald Sutherland. The TV series is just as famous. There, women were easily twisted around his little finger and penis by Richard Chamberlain.
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