Get out of the vicious circle Rino Di Silvestro is a typical Italian representative of the exploitative genre of cinema. Each of his eight paintings dealt with completely different themes. In this picture, the director gave the viewer a strong drama with an erotic component. The picture is a typical representative of Italian cinema of that time.
The plot of the picture is built around an underage girl Hannah from Amsterdam, she was played by Anne-Giselle Glass. Hannah lives with her mother, played by the famous Karin Schubert, without a father. Her mother lives with a young man who looks more at Hannah than his grown-up wife. Hannah is unable to establish contact with her mother, her life is gradually destroyed, life gives a crack and one day she runs away from home. The case brings Hannah to a pimp who lets her try heroin and then puts it on the panel to make money from it. Hannah finds herself in a vicious circle, from which it is almost impossible to escape.
But the director of the film gives her character a chance, she meets a young and respectable man who does everything possible to save Hannah from this vicious circle. Some moments in the picture caused rejection, it is difficult to watch how the heroine breaks down and how people slide down to the level of animals using drugs.
Strong human drama, seasoned with many erotic scenes, is aimed primarily at a male audience. One of the most revealing paintings featuring Anne-Giselle Glass. At the time of filming, she is twenty years old. In this picture, she looks very young, such a little girl. The erotic part is quite strong, there are no quite candid scenes, there is eroticism in its pure form. A good performance of the actors along with a well-built plot keep the film at a decent level. Luigi Ceccarelli composed beautiful musical compositions that give off sadness and nostalgia.
Hannah D. The Vondela Park girl was a powerful picture for me, showing the severity of the situation that a person might find herself in. Severe and somewhere depressive erotic drama.
7 out of 10