A Venetian courtesan becomes a hero to her city, but later becomes the target of an inquisition by the Church for witchcraft.

“The life you lead, the freedom you have–will you deny my daughters the same chance?” Not the request every mother would address to a prostitute, but “Dangerous Beauty” makes a persuasive case for the life of a courtesan in 16th century Venice. At a time when Europeans are bemused by our naivete about dalliance in high places, this is, I suppose, the film we should study. It’s based on the true story of Veronica Franco, a well-born Venetian beauty who deliberately chose the life of a courtesan because it seemed a better choice than poverty, or an arranged marriage to a decayed nobleman. – Roger Ebert

Although it was unfortunately ignored during its brief theatrical release, this sumptuously seductive production is that rarest of cinematic breeds, the (barely) respectable guilty pleasure. Combining historical fact with hysterical anachronisms of language and mannerism, it’s been tailored for maximum contemporary appeal but maintains a lush, romantic feel for its factual 16th-century tale of Venetian love, lust, and political repression. Catherine McCormack (Mel Gibson’s ill-fated bride in Braveheart) delivers a star-making performance as the “dangerous beauty” who becomes a skillful courtesan to pursue her forbidden love for a dashing Venetian senator (Rufus Sewell). It’s all rather silly in a high-toned fashion, and the film turns dour when the church intervenes with a Scarlet Letter-like papal inquest. But the movie’s joyously ribald vitality is utterly irresistible, and the casting of McCormack with Jaqueline Bisset (as her mother and courtesan mentor) is a stroke of pure genius. Merchant-Ivory would’ve made a smarter film from this material, but it probably wouldn’t be nearly as entertaining. –Jeff Shannon

Starring Catherine McCormack, Rufus Sewell, Oliver Platt, Fred Ward, Naomi Watts.

Note: ”Dangerous Beauty” is rated R. It has sexual situations and several scenes of nudity.