Casanova -2005 | Film-
Complications pile like carnival masks. Francesca is promised to the grotesque, sausage-fingered Papprizzio, a Genoese meat tycoon. Meanwhile, the real Bernardo—a timid scholar—shows up, threatening to blow Casanova’s cover. And Pucci arrives from Rome, determined to make Casanova a public example.
“I would never be so rude as to answer that question,” he replies. Within minutes, the husband bursts in, finds Casanova innocently reciting poetry to his fully dressed wife, and ends up apologizing. That night, Casanova wins again. casanova -2005 film-
Enter Victoria (Natalie Dormer), a bookish heiress with no interest in romance. She’s perfect. But before he can propose, his eye—and his vanity—are snagged by a new arrival in the city: a young woman riding astride a horse, wearing a black cloak and a silver mask, fearlessly debating philosophy in the town square. Complications pile like carnival masks
But even legends grow weary. His faithful valet, Lupo (Omid Djalili), warns him that the Doge’s inquisitors, led by the terrifying Pucci (Lena Olin), are building a case. “You have seduced every woman of standing in Venice,” Lupo says. “Pucci will burn you at the stake for ‘impious lewdness.’” The only escape, Casanova realizes, is marriage—a respectable, dull, permanent marriage. And Pucci arrives from Rome, determined to make
“I took it off,” he replies softly. “I am not the man who seduces women. I am the man who was seduced by one woman. The final chapter, Francesca—you were right. I had never read it. Now I want to write it. With you.”
The film’s centerpiece is the carnival finale. Casanova, now hopelessly in love with Francesca, must duel Papprizzio (who turns out to be a surprisingly skilled swordsman), escape Pucci’s guards, win Francesca’s forgiveness for his lies, and ride off into the Venetian sunset.