The Bodyguard -rocco Siffredi Here
But the original director’s cut—available now only on obscure Italian Blu-ray releases and certain streaming archives—is a different beast. It runs 98 minutes. It feels like a cross between The Night Porter and Le Samouraï . The color grading is desaturated, making Rome look like a concrete maze. The score, a haunting industrial ambient drone by Claudio Simonetti (of Goblin fame), is masterful.
: The film was released in Italy on January 1, 1993, and later in the United States in 1995. Filming Location : The movie was filmed on location in Cannes, France The Bodyguard -Rocco Siffredi
If you are a cinephile willing to look beyond the marquee, offers a rare glimpse of the dragon in a suit and tie, trying desperately not to breathe fire. It is slow. It is awkward. It is hypnotic. But the original director’s cut—available now only on
What makes the piece solid—and worth examining—is Siffredi’s performance. By 2005, Rocco was already a living god in the industry, known for his aggressive, almost primal energy. But in The Bodyguard , he channels that aggression into genuine acting. There is a scene where his character watches his charge sleep, and his face cycles through confusion, desire, and self-loathing—all without dialogue. It is a masterclass in using physicality to convey the torment of a man who knows only one way to connect with another human being. The color grading is desaturated, making Rome look