Well, this is terrific.
I can offer a few very small suggestions of a very nit-picking nature -
At 0.47, what Enzo does is very dramatic and it is effective, but I would suggest that he leaves a marginally larger gap after his reiteration, the octave higher, of the E G# E C# motif, in order to make the point clearer to the ear that the octave higher version is an echo of the previous, louder iteration of the motif.
It seemed that some power was lost at the top of the double glissando. In passing, iirc, von Sauer suggests glissandoing the rh and playing the lh as a fingered scale, claiming this can produce a brilliant effect.
I didn't really feel the tempo was on this slow side, despite the timing, as there was a lot of rhythmic vitality in the performance. My only reason for increasing the tempo - in the outer sections - would be to increase the contrast between them and the more languid seduction scene. I don't like people who bang and rush the whole way through it; Enzo is certainly not guilty of this by any standard. All other things being equal, the more contrast between the outer and middle the better, imo.
I'm not sure whether I am impressed, or concerned, that he seemed to have so much in reserve towards the end! I've always viewed it as if the climax arrives at the passage from 9.48 in this performance, whereas here it seems to arrive at the very end. I would have quite liked to experience the feeling that he was really letting go, whereas it seemed, to me at least, that a hint of introversion remained.
Anyway, regarding these points, it may of course be that he's already thought about such things and decided otherwise - it's quite obvious he's a good enough and intelligent enough pianist to appreciate such issues. By any standards this is magnificent playing and he is a very gifted musician.