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Dangerous Beauty, from thirtysomething director Marshall Herskovitz, purports to tell the true story of Veronica Franco (Catherine McCormack), a 16th century Venetian poet who, as a popular courtesan, exercised considerable influence over the politics of this Italian city-state. Unable to marry socially superior Marco Venier (Rufus Sewell), Veronica is advised by her mother Paola, a retired courtesan, to take up the profession as a means of supporting the family as well as of winning the man she loves, as a mistress rather than as a wife. Along the way, Veronica becomes the toast of Venetian male society, saves the city from invasion by her sexual expertise with Henri III of France, and survives both the plague and the Inquisition.
Hey, but what about the costumes? This is a beautifully photographed film, and the costumes do justice to the cinematography and setting. Courtesans, having more freedom than well-bred and "respectable" Venetian ladies, also had considerably more license in their dress: gowns were more colorful, with increased décolletage, and platform shoes, or chopines (a style originating in Italy and which reached its height,so to speak, in Venice), allowed the courtesans to really stand out. Some rather amusing scenes in the movie, when Veronica is being trained in the courtesanly arts by Paola, demonstrate these fashions.