Giulio Girola, an actor known for his role in The Sexual Revolution (1968), navigates the tumultuous landscape of 1960s Italian cinema. In this film, he embodies the spirit of a generation grappling with shifting sexual mores and personal freedoms. Girola's performance contributes to the film's commentary on desire and societal expectations, making it a notable entry in the realm of erotic cinema. His work reflects the bold experimentation of the era, capturing the essence of a time when boundaries were being challenged.
The Sexual Revolution
Fourteen people of different ages - seven men and seven women - gather in a comfortable hotel by the sea to carry out an experiment inspired by the theories of an Austrian psychoanalyst. The creator - Professor Emilio Missiroli - wants to show that only a thousand breaking taboos' that stifle the sexual life can liberate man from his existential malaise. Every night, so, for a whole week, men and women of the group will couple through a draw, without giving any importance to their feelings, thus demonstrating that these can and should do without. Based on Wilhelm Reich's The Sexual Revolution.