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Passion for Scent: the True Story of Perfume 

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Did Patrick Süskind have a true story in mind when composing his bestseller ‘Perfume: The Story of a Murderer’? This becomes one of the central questions of the documentary that tells the story of Giovanni Maria Farina. Farina was indeed the most famous perfume designer of the 18th century, the creator of ‘Eau de Cologne’ - once a unique fragrance, it has become a generic term for a certain type of perfumes. Farina’s client list was virtually the Who’s Who of the 18th and 19th centuries: Louis XV and Frederick the Great, Voltaire and Goethe - all yearned for Farina’s perfume. The obsession eventually led to an international trickery and a lawsuit - the trademark law did not exist back then. The film takes us through the most important stages in the life of the great perfume artist and follows his footsteps from Piedmont to Venice, Grasse, Paris, and finally to Cologne, where Farina’s descendants produce perfume to this day. Time and again, the traces bring us to Venice, at Farina’s time the gate to the Orient and the commercial metropolis for scents, spices and essences. It is here that the young Farina studies the perfume art. He masters his techniques in Grasse and finally becomes a royal court supplier. In 1709, his brother - responsible for the commercial part of the business - opens a shop in Cologne. Farina devotes his renowned fragrance ‘Eau de Cologne’ to his new hometown. Following the traces of the great perfume maker, the documentary discovers ever new parallels with Süskind’s Grenouille and further leads to another trace: Coco Chanel and her way to creating the most famous scent nowadays.
Director: Ina Knobloch

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27 мар 2024

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Комментарии : 201   
@Engelhafen
It’s annoying that this documentary keeps referring to a fictional story that has nothing to do with the story of focus here
@anngray9171
Pity the narrator couldn't be bothered to learn how to say Giovanni properly. To say nothing of that old chestnut 'every one stunk.' Unfortunately one starts to doubt many of the facts presented here. Undergarments were not commonplace!!! How does the narrator explain the widespread presence of the washerwoman or laundry woman? Plenty of laundry lists in the records of the middle-upper classes. Jane Austen mentions them in her works. Also many garments required a stiff starch, shirt collars, lace, ect. How could this be achieved if nothing was washed!!!! While it is true that the elaborate costume of the day could not be washed, they could be unpicked if need be. Clean underlinen every day was the norm in middle -upper-noble layers of society. How many paintings featuring ladies washing themselves can one see in Art Galleries? Watch this programme with care. Unlike the devine perfumes, it is not 100% pure in information, as many will recognise!
@m.entera3196
@m.entera3196 21 день назад
I started watching this and paused it after a bit, and dashed on a few drops of a perfume oil I got in Egypt in 2002. I had learned by reading histories about the country that perfume was invented there in the days of the pharaohs, so I found a perfumer. The fragrance I'm wearing is a mixture called "Five Secrets" and it has lots of notes of Chanel No.5.
@jackiespence
The history of perfume is much older than the 18th century.
@sheenaghmcmahon9665
A documentary about perfume that doesn't realize that smell is what your nose does and scent is what the nose is smelling. One can also use the word odour or fragrance but not smell for what wafts to us on the air!
@angelaberni8873
Unfortunately today's perfumes are made up of chemicals. 😢
@andreeannegenereux
No undergarment is false . Undergarments were always worn to protect outergarments. Most likely linen if you were wealthy . Linens would absolutely get clean . But yes, the silk would not gotting washed but would not have been permeated with body odor.
@MrLUCARAMELLO
@MrLUCARAMELLO 21 день назад
Well, aegyptians and romans were also perfume sort of fanatics. We have written proof of that thanks to some classic roman writers like Appolonio (if I am not wrong...) and some satyres he wrote, mocking some of the romans most narcisistic inclinations...Romans used sents taking directly from plants like lavendel, flowers etc... Although they used them in simple mingles with water. "Alloro" had divine fragrances and was used placed on VIP's heads, but also flower wreaths were not uncommon. Obviously, romans used "perfumes" just seasonally, probably not in winter but they used fresh plants or dried up sents like rosemary and many sents also had medical usage.
@bobperricone2216
@bobperricone2216 14 дней назад
The mention of Chanel was quite a stretch in the beginning and middle of this film..she wasnt even born yet....strange to mention her at those points......and no real attention is given to the various areas of the world that scent production started in...This film is surely a history of perfume from a western European interest...Sad that its title is not accurate.
@TheSilmarillian
If you have never read the book Perfume , give it a read. Patrick Suskind....Perfume The Story Of A Murderer....it is an interesting story and an interesting finish 2 it.
@ENIGMAXII2112
Well, the only perfume that greets my very own nostrils now. Is a fine French Brandy that is enjoyed as I watched this wonderful documentary..
@elizabethdarley8646
@elizabethdarley8646 14 дней назад
“All the perfumes of Arabia will not sweeten this little hand.”
@AngkolJo
The Arabs are the legends of perfumery. im from the Philippines
@luciollelsa
Funny how when they were talking about the bad hygiene habits forced by ignorance by no bathing or clothes washing, it reminded me of the stinkiest person I've ever met. His method of washing was to just soak and dry, so even after he'd take a shower he smelled just as bad as before because his clothes were still impregnated with his stench, too bad because he was smarter than average.
@user-gd4wt6oi7y
exactly my state of being, near any stench odor and it has led me the think about creating natural fragrances not only for self but your offices homes in new way no, not yuccckkky febreezes or others full of chemicals artificial stink harmful for health.
@getevennow
“ All the perfumes of Arabia will not sweeten this hand “ - William Shakespeare. -.Macbeth
@davidescozzi9885
I love perfumes. I saw the movie, I went to Grasse, in France, Fragonard, only for the sake of seeing how perfumes are made, and I was delighted to smell so many "fragrances". I collect them, I actually made my own perfume by mixing a few together, and my nose, enjoys the smell even when I am in the house by myself, and I put them on. My father, used to say, jokinly, that I was just like a sort of a perfumed prostitute 😂😄 I also love incenses.
@Kevin-zz9nc
I thought they were the guys from Blackadder in the thumbnail.....
@leddielive
I believe American grunge icon, now sadly passed, Curt Cobain read about the life of this perfumer but also related & connected with his aversion to people & longing for solitary lifestyle.
@twinflowerfioretta
Smells like a very interesting and brilliant History, wonderful.....
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