5% DTO EN TUS COMPRAS SUPERIORES A 35€. HAZTE CHEF CULINARIUM Y APROVÉCHALO

Fylm Marquis De Sade Justine 1969 Mtrjm Fasl Alany

The Sadean Nightmare on Screen: A Deep Dive into Marquis De Sade: Justine (1969)

In the landscape of 1960s cinema, few films captured the collision between high art, philosophy, and exploitation quite like the 1969 adaptation of the Marquis de Sade’s most famous novel. Directed by a curious collaboration between American independent cinema giant Joseph W. Sarno and producer/director Chris Boger, Marquis De Sade: Justine (often simply titled Justine) stands as a unique artifact of its era.

Have you seen Justine (1969)? Share your thoughts below—respectfully, of course. fylm Marquis De Sade Justine 1969 mtrjm fasl alany

Tone: Critics often describe it as "tame" compared to Franco’s other sleaze-heavy works or de Sade’s original, brutal source material. The Sadean Nightmare on Screen: A Deep Dive

Composer: Features a lush and popular soundtrack by Bruno Nicolai. Production & Reception The Marquis de Sade

Film: Marquis de Sade’s Justine (1969)
Director: Jesús Franco
Also known as: Justine ou Les Infortunes de la Vertu
Language notes: The version you’re referring to (with “mtrjm” + “fasl”) suggests an Arabic-subtitled or dubbed release, possibly divided into parts or chapters (“fasl”) — common in old TV broadcasts or VHS rips in the Arab world.

The central thesis of the film, drawn from Sade’s text, is a cynical inversion of the "just world" hypothesis: that virtue is not a shield, but a target.

Other Notable Cast: Akim Tamiroff (Du Harpin), Mercedes McCambridge (Madame Dusbois), and Sylva Koscina (Marquise de Bressac). Critical Reception Marquis de Sade's Justine (1969) - Box Office Mojo