Wednesday, May 30, 2012

Fabergé


Google pays tribute to the legacy of Fabergé today on his 166th birthday. I first came across the beautiful Fabergé eggs when I was about seven, in my history phase. I would find books and videos about the Titanic disaster, the World Wars, the Ancient Roman civilisation, and many other events; but one the things I loved to research most was royalty. Marie Antoinette, Queen Victoria, and Cleopatra were a few of my favourites, and Anastasia. 

Fabergé eggs were created by a Russian jeweller named Peter Carl Fabergé, inspired by Easter eggs, but made with gold and precious jewels; valued for their intricate detail as opposed to carat weightage. Peter Carl Fabergé inherited his father Gustav's jewellery firm House of Fabergé in 1870, when he was only twenty-four. Although the company had been founded in 1842, it wasn't until Peter took over that it became famous. He designed for an elite and aristocratic clientele including the Tsar and the Imperial Court of Russia, Anastasia's family.

The first Fabergé egg was commissioned in 1885 by Tsar Alexander III as a gift to his wife, Empress Maria Fedorovna. So impressed by the delicacy and craftsmanship of the creation, the royal family continued to commission a Fabergé egg every Easter, each containing a mysterious and elaborate surprise. And Peter Carl Fabergé was named ‘Goldsmith by special appointment to the Imperial Crown’. After the passing of Alexander III, his son continued the tradition, gifting Fabergé eggs to his mother now the Dowager Empress, and to his wife, Empress Alexandra Fedorovna.

Terremoto

English news has been slow at reporting the latest earthquake to hit the Emilia-Romagna region of Italy so here is a little summary of what I have translated from Italian news sites Corriere della Sera and la Repubblica. At 9am local time on the 29th of May, there was an earthquake centered 25 miles north-west of Bologna, measuring 5.8 on the Richter scale and with about 10km depth. Further buildings have been damaged and collapsed after the events of last week's earthquake and aftershocks with this latest quake. Reports confirm ten dead, but figures are expected to rise as rubble and ruin is cleared. Schools and offices have been evacuated and cellphone networks are overloading - authorities are calling for the removal of passwords from private wi-fi networks to allow for the widest availability for communication.

Tuesday, May 29, 2012

Breaking News

There hasn't been much proper reporting on it yet, but there has just been another major earthquake felt in Northern Italy - found out through a short Corriere della Sera update on Facebook and currently trying to find out what's going on; nothing on the news sites yet but some posts on their Twitter pages. Praying that all the people and buildings will be unharmed. I'll post again when more information comes up.

Killiney Beach

Killiney Beach, Dublin County, Ireland
James O'Gorman

National Geographic

Autoritratto

Autoritratto

È questa vita tumultuosa per me non altro che suono di flauto, la sottile seduzione della viola o la musica del mare addormentato tra le braccia di una conchiglia nel suo astrarsi nell'eco. Non so neanch'io perché nasce il sangue da un colpo di testa e di spada, il suo sibilo vittorioso ed io con lui.

È strano nessuno me lo aveva mai detto che il cervello dell'uomo potesse racchiudere il cielo del paradiso e quello dell'inferno. Non c'è nulla che io non possa affrontare: il denaro rubato, il silenzio del corpo, il tedio dell'amore, la sua voce. La mia voce è vera sapienza. Petali di loto, canzonetta nel bosco.

Non vi è pace sotto la luce del giorno piena d'altre luci dove anche l'anima vole incerta di ramo in ramo o entra a caso nel calice di un giglio oppure fa oscillare il passo del pastore mentre coglie il tiepido azzurro d'un giacinto. Qui mi pare, in questo nostro mondo che non conosce riposo, quaggiù io feci giuramento.

E benché il rimorso mi segua come un'ombra nell'ombra sempre pronto a colpirmi, io sono felice d'aver amato e penso a tutto il sole e a tutta la luna. Cerco nei miei occhi ciò che ha rivelato la violenza della ragione, l'eccesso delle passioni e di baci mai dati. Di canti mai cantati.

Pugnalare la mia giovinezza con le armi della disperazione, esibire la sgargiante fede di quest'epoca, lasciare nelle mani più abbiette il mio solo lavoro, avere l'anima prigioniera nella rete della bellezza. Giuro che non amo tutto questo. Sei tu che vuoi che diventi più grande e poi più meschino secondo i tuoi insegnamenti. Mi costringi all'uguaglianza all'imitazione del nome. Sazio di smarrimento non voglio invano seguire le tue orme. Così ti vendo al primo che si offre come un'alba di un posto qualunque.

da Caravaggio - Michelangelo Coviello



Self-Portrait

This tumultuous life is nothing for me but the sound of a flute, the subtle seduction of a viola or the music of the sea gone to sleep between the arms of a shell become an echo. Even I don't know why blood is born from the striking of a head or sword, its hissing victorious and I with it.

It's strange no one ever told me that man's brain could contain both the skies of heaven and of hell. There is nothing I can't cope with: stolen money, the silence of the body, the tedium of love and also its voice. My voice is true wisdom. Lotus petals, ballad in the wood.

There is no peace under the light of day full of other light where even the soul flies uncertain from limb to limb or enters by chance in a lily cup or else makes the shepherd stumble while gathering the hyacinth's warm blue. It seems to me that here in this world that never rests, in this world down here I've sworn the pledge.

And though regret trails me like a shadow in the shade, always there to strike me, I am happy to have loved and to think about the whole of the sun and the whole of the moon. In my eyes I look for what has revealed the violence of reason, the excess of passion and of kisses never given. Of singing never done.

Strike my youth with the weapons of despair, exhibit the gaudy faith of these times, leave to wealthier hands my only work, have my soul imprisoned in a beauty net. I swear I don't like all this. It's you who want me to get bigger and then pettier, following your teaching. You force me to accept the sameness, the imitation of a name. Satiated with lost wandering, I don't want to adopt your rules in vain. That's why I'm selling you to the first one who comes along, like dawn somewhere ordinary.

from Caravaggio - Michelangelo Coviello

Monday, May 28, 2012

L'esposizione internazionale fotografica a Torino


La Domenica del Corriere
4 March 1900

L'esposizione internazionale fotografica a Torino: La visita dei duchi d'Aosta: The International Photographic Exhibition in Turin: The Visit of the Duke of Aosta

Chiaroscuro's Neighbour

'The squalor of Rome is certainly a stubborn fact, and there is no denying that it is a dirty place. 'Don't talk to me of liking Rome', an old sojourner lately said to me; 'you don't really like it till you like the dirt.' This statement was a shock to my nascent passion; but - I blush to write it - I am growing to think there is something in it. 'What you call dirt', an excellent authority has affirmed, 'I call colour;' and it is certain that, if cleanliness is next to godliness, it is a very distant neighbour to chiaroscuro. That I have came to relish dirt as dirt, I hesitate yet to affirm; but as I admit as I walk about the streets and glance under black archways into dim old courts and up mouldering palace facades at the coloured rags that flap over the twisted balustrades of balconies, I find I very much enjoy their 'tone'.'

from Transatlantic Sketches - Henry James

Sunday, May 27, 2012

University Graduates


Stopping the Brain Drain: How Venice is trying to keep its university graduates on Deutsche Welle. It seems like many cities have the same problem that New Zealand does; of university graduates emigrating in search of better job security. Perhaps with globalisation has come a stronger compulsion and desire to travel and to experience new things; and moving to a new country for work just seems like a logical way to make this happen. I think that utilizing the English major of my degree will open more doors than the Art History or Fine Arts will; especially for the European education field. Hopefully there will be jobs available when I graduate!

Cologne

Cologne: Ancient City on the Rhine on Deutsche Welle

Botticellis and Berlusconis

'First of all, let's get one thing straight. Your Italy and our Italia are not the same thing. Italy is a soft drug peddled in predictable packages, such as hills in the sunset, olive groves, lemon trees, white wine, and raven-haired girls. Italia, on the other hand, is a maze. It's alluring, but complicated. It's the kind of place that can have you fuming and then purring in the space of a hundred meters, or in the course of ten minutes. Italy is the only workshop in the world that can turn out both Botticellis and Berlusconis.'

from La Bella Figura: A Field Guide to the Italian Mind - Beppe Severgnini

Cortina d'Ampezzo

Via Ferrata Cristobal, Cortina d'Ampezzo
Philip and Karen Smith

Lonely Planet

Saturday, May 26, 2012

Ducks in a Line

London, 1954
Douglas Miller

Ghetto degli Ebrei

'It is lively; it is a gorgeous architectural jumble: Renaissance buildings next to medieval houses, Corinthian columns on sidewalks, in courtyards, even on staircases. And medieval houses gussied up with discreet and beautiful windows... and narrow streets hung with laundry that debouch into sunny small piazzas, some little more than cul-de-sacs; houses draped in ivy, courtyards adorned with succulents and fountains... To walk here is a tactile experience - sun and shadow on your skin as you walk down dark, narrow streets crowded with tall, narrow houses and exit into intimate piazzas. Architecture feels like your skin's skin and this makes a kind of moral sense. Here there are pomegranates among the ruins. Life is within us.'

from Italian Days - Barbara Grizzuti Harrison

Friday, May 25, 2012

Pinocchio


On the 25th of May, the protagonist of Carlo Collodi's book Le avventure di Pinocchio, Pinocchio's birthday is celebrated. Written in Firenze, the first part was released as a serial and then published as a completed book in 1883, with illustrations by Enrico Mazzanti. The famous tale tells of the adventures of a small puppet and his father, the woodcarver Geppetto, who live in Tuscany. In 1940, Walt Disney released an animated film based on the story of Pinocchio, which won two Academy Awards; for the Best Original Score, and the Best Original Song for When You Wish Upon A Star.




That's Amore - Patrizio Buanne


Today I was buying the new Norah Jones' CD as a birthday present and came across Patrizio Buanne's The Italian and Forever Begins Tonight CDs for $2.99 each. I had never heard of him or his music, but thought I may as well give it a listen. Though they aren't incredible, I am glad I bought them; they are perfect for some sappy winter nights writing my thesis. This music video covering That's Amore is hilarious.

Thursday, May 24, 2012

Lavender Fields

Lavender Fields, Provence, France
Shaun Egan

National Geographic

Chandeliers Descend From Pistachio-Coloured Ceilings

'Giolitti looks as if it should be the scene of a thé dansant. Grandmothers and their small charges are there, and young Romans about whose beauty can never cease exclaiming, and foreign cruisers and hustlers, and families... You can eat inside - dismiss all notions of an American ice cream parlour: chandeliers descend from pistachio-coloured ceilings; walls are painted blueberry-blue, raspberry, and cream; tables are marble-topped and hold floral bouquets. You can eat outside, where you will become part of the passegiata... the streets are narrow, Porsches and Alfa Romeo's shriek; the Pantheon rises dark and everlastingly beautiful behind you.'

from Italian Days - Barbara Grizzuti Harrison

La fuga di una leonessa


La Domenica del Corriere
19 July 1914

La fuga di una leonessa: Leonessa che fugge dalla gabbia aperta in alto durante una rappresentazione, in Borgogna, e spaventa un intero paese.

The Escape of a Lioness: Lioness escapes from the cage, open at the top, during a performance in Burgundy, scaring a whole country.

Wednesday, May 23, 2012

Giovanni Falcone, Paolo Borsellino, and Rita Atria


This year is the 20th anniversary of the deaths of Giovanni Falcone and Paolo Borsellino, two brave men who fought against the mafia, convicting more than 300 criminals. The two Palermo prosecutors were childhood friends who grew up to risk their lives bringing the members of the notorious Cosa Nostra to justice. This photograph was taken just months before their murders, in a moment of calm framed by the immense pressure of their situation. This image is now in almost every Italian judicial office, and in many schools and city halls throughout Sicily; reflecting just how influential and inspirational they were.

On the 23rd of May 1992, Giovanni Falcone, together with his wife Francesco Morvillo and three of their bodyguards, were tragically killed on highway 29, between Palermo and the airport. The mafia had planted the bomb to end the life of the man who had jailed so many in the maxi-trials. Falcone had been one of the first to follow the 'money trail' of the mobsters and was a major part of the exposure of massive heroin trade that was disguised by the front of pizza parlours.

Just months after the assassination of his friend Falcone, on the 19th of July, Borsellino and five policemen were killed by a car bomb in Via D'Amelio, near his mother's home. Borsellino left behind his wife, Angela Piraino Letto, one son, and two daughters.

A week after Borsellino's death, on the 26th of July, Rita Atria committed suicide. Atria was a young woman born into a Mafia family who had broken the code of omertà, working closely with Borsellino as she named the men of the rival Mafia who had killed her father and brother. Although she was aiming to bring their murderers to justice, Atria's own mother disowned her; for to her, like to many Mafia families, the police are always the enemy. With her brother's widow, Piera Aiello, and the help of Borsellino, Atria testified against the Mafiosi; and in doing so, endangered her own life, leading to her relocation to a hidden position in Rome. Abandoned by her family, Borsellino had been her father figure, supporting her in her ordeal. But when he was killed, Atria felt overwhelmingly terrified and unprotected; throwing herself out of her apartment window. She was only seventeen.

Salvatore Riina, the godfather of the Corleonesi Mafia was sentenced for life imprisonment for sanctioning the murders of Falcone and Borsellino, alongside numerous other crimes.
'È normale che esista la paura, in ogni uomo, l'importante è che sia accompagnata dal coraggio. Non bisogna lasciarsi sopraffare dalla paura, altrimenti diventa un ostacolo che impedisce di andare avanti.'
'It is normal that there is fear, in every man, the important thing is that it is accompanied by courage. We must not be overwhelmed by fear, otherwise it becomes an obstacle to moving forward.'
- Paolo Borsellino

Pranzo di ferragosto


Pranzo di ferragosto is the directorial debut of Gianni di Gregorio (who wrote the screenplay for Gomorra), who not only wrote the film, but plays the lead character of Gianni. On a cold, wintery night last night I watched this light, sweet Italian film about an unemployed man who looks after his mother in a condo apartment; but suddenly accumulates other elderly women that he must also take care of while everyone else has left the city for the ferragosto celebration. The kitchen scenes of cooking look like so much fun; can't wait to have my own house with my own kitchen some day.

'This gentle charmer follows Gianni, a sixty-something Roman who lives with his tyrannical 93-year-old mother, Valeria, and suddenly finds himself forced to look after three other elderly ladies. As the late summer holiday of Ferragosto approaches, Gianni is blackmailed by his building manager Luigi into looking after Luigi's mother for two nights in exchange for forgiving certain tenant debts. But when Luigi comes to the apartment, he's brought not only his mother Marina, but his aunt Maria as well.

Soon after, Gianni's doctor-friend Marcello pays a call, asking if he can leave his mother, Grazia, for just one night. The aging women, each with her own strong personality, prove a handful while grudging host Gianni attempts to monitor their pill intake and pacify them with food. Debuting director di Gregorio's combination of artistry and humanity avoids platitudes and exaggeration as he spins this warm-hearted, humorous tale.'





Tuesday, May 22, 2012

Baguette

Paris, 1952
Willy Ronis

Palazzi

'We laugh at Italian 'palaces', at their peeling paint, their nudity, their dreariness; but they have the great palatial quality - elevation and extent. They make of smaller things the apparent abode of pigmies; they round their great arches and interspace their huge windows with a proud indifference to the cost of materials... If the Italians at bottom despise the rest of mankind and regard them as barbarians, disinherited of the tradition of form, the idea proceeds largely, no doubt, from our living in comparative mole-hills. They alone were really to build their civilisation.'

from Italy Revisited - Henry James

Amazing Grace - Il Divo


Il Divo performing Amazing Grace at the Colosseum.

For the past few months I've been feeling pretty overwhelmed and stressed with things to get done. Sometimes I need to remember to take a breath and reflect on how truly incredible the opportunities I have been given are. With the upsetting events of Italy over the weekend, this beautifully calming song is perfect to go to sleep to.

Monday, May 21, 2012

Palazzi Diroccati

Palazzi Diroccati a Catania, Sicilia
Lorenzo Grifantini

Constellations

'Do you remember Rome, dear Lou? How is it in your memory? In mine sometimes there will be only its waters, those clear, exquisite, animated waters that live in its squares; its steps, built on the pattern of falling water, so strangely thrusting stair out of stair like wave out of wave; its gardens' festiveness and the splendour of great terraces; its nights that last so long, still and filled to overflowing with great constellations.'

from a letter by Rainer Maria Rilke in 1903

Sunday, May 20, 2012

Terremoto


Earlier today, at 04:04 Italian time 20 May 2012, the Emilia-Romagna region was hit by 6.0 magnitude 5km deep earthquake, about 35km north-northwest of Bologna, claiming at least six lives, and injuring many others as buildings crumbled and collapsed, many of them of historical significance. Together with the recent terrorism in Brindisi, Italy has been making world headlines for all the worst reasons; one of my friends lives near Bologna and I'm anxious to hear from him soon; praying there are no aftershocks or further disaster.













Images sourced from Repubblica.it

Il Calcio

Footballers playing by an ancient aqueduct in Rome, 1957
Anthony Stewart

National Geographic

Il viaggio non finisce mai

Though this was originally written in Portuguese, I quote it here in Italian because my Italian friend just posted it on her Facebook; and in English because my Italian isn't good enough to understand it all.

‎'Il viaggio non finisce mai. Solo i viaggiatori finiscono. E anche loro possono prolungarsi in memoria, in ricordo, in narrazione. Quando il viaggiatore si è seduto sulla sabbia della spiaggia e ha detto: "Non c'è altro da vedere", sapeva che non era vero. Bisogna vedere quel che non si è visto, vedere di nuovo quel che si è già visto, vedere in primavera quel che si è visto in estate, vedere di giorno quel che si è visto di notte, con il sole dove la prima volta pioveva, vedere le messi verdi, il frutto maturo, la pietra che ha cambiato posto, l'ombra che non c'era. Bisogna ritornare sui passi già dati, per ripeterli, e per tracciarvi a fianco nuovi cammini. Bisogna ricominciare il viaggio. Sempre. Il viaggiatore ritorna subito.'

'The journey never comes to an end. Only the journeyers do. But even then they can prolong their voyage in their memories, in recollections, in stories. When the traveller sat in the sand and declared: 'there's nothing more to see', he knew it wasn't true. The end of one journey is simply the start of another. You have to see what you missed the first time, see again what you already saw, see in springtime what you saw in summer, in daylight what you saw at night, see the sun shining where you saw the rain falling, see the crops growing, the fruit ripen, the stone which has moved, the shadow that was not there before. You have to go back to the footsteps already taken to go over them again or add fresh ones alongside them. You have to start the journey anew. Always. The traveller sets out once more.'

from History of Portugal: In Pursuit of Portugal's History and Culture - José Saramago

Voices in the Waves

'And the voices in the waves are always whispering to Florence, in their ceaseless murmuring, of love - of love, eternal and illimitable, not bounded by the confines of this world, or by the end of time, but ranging still, beyond the sea, beyond the sky, to the invisible country far away!'

- Charles Dickens

Un giardino di Rose sull'acqua


I have just come across Venezia: un giardino di Rose sull'acqua (Venice: a rose garden on the water), but unfortunately can't seem to find any photographs of the event. On the 6th of May, Venice's Grand Canal was transformed into a colourful rose garden; a project by Dania Lupi, president of the Rosetieventi association, in collaboration with John Aliata, Gianluca Bisol, and Anna Maria Giannuzzi Miraglia.

All the most beautiful cities in the world have a rose garden, except Venice, and Lupi wishes to promote the initiative through transforming the Grand Canal with flowers. In a press conference, Dania Lupi explains her concept, 'Tutte le più belle città del mondo hanno un roseto tranne Venezia. Per questo a maggio promuovo questa iniziativa con l'obiettivo di far fiorire il Canal Grande. Quattro anni fa mi sono state regalate 2100 piante di rose e ho pensato di dar vita a queste installazioni di fiori sull'acqua. Quest'anno saranno 1100 piante e 2000 le rose recise che sfileranno sull'acqua.'

Saturday, May 19, 2012

Terremoto a Livorno

La Domenica del Corriere, 25 January 1914

Terremoto a Livorno (Earthquake in Livorno)
Scosse di terremoto a Livorno: la popolazione fuggita all'alba dalle case si riscalda ai falò accesi nelle piazze e nelle vie.

A chi trascura il poco manchera pane e fuoco

A chi trascura il poco manchera pane e fuoco: He who disregards the little will miss the bread and fire. (Stop and smell the roses; notice and be grateful for the small things in life).

Hawk, Grape, and Almond

'We rambled over the Campagna on Sunday. I suppose France is all right, and England is all right, but I have never seen anything as beautiful as this is. Figure us sitting in hot sunshine on the doorstep of a Roman ruin in a field with hawk-coloured archways against a clear grape-coloured sky, silvery with mountains in the background. Then on the other side nothing but the Campagna, blue and green, with an almond-coloured farm, with oxen and sheep, and more ruined arches, and blocks of marble fallen on the grass, and immense sword-like aloes, and lovers curled up among the broken pots.'

from a letter by Virginia Woolf to her sister Vanessa

Thursday, May 17, 2012

Chairs

Palermo, 1960
Enzo Sellerio

Harmony

'A peculiar vapour is spread over distinct objects, which takes off their harshness and rounds them. The shadows are never black and heavy; for there are no masses so obscure, even among the rocks and foliage, but that a little light may always insinuate itself. A singular tint and most peculiar harmony unite the earth, the sky, and the waters. All the surfaces unite at their extremities by means of an insensible gradation of colours, and without the possibility of ascertaining the point at which one ends, or another begins. You have doubtless admired this sort of light in Claude Lorrain's landscapes. It appears ideal and still more beautiful than nature; but it is the light of Rome.'

from Recollections - Chateaubriand

Wednesday, May 16, 2012

Francesco's Venice: Death


Francesco's Venice: Part IV (Death)

Dan Humphrey

Gossip Girl's Dan Humphrey learns Italian too.

Accented Onomatopoeia

'Sounds of all sorts take on different accents in Italian. Rather than with a sloppy 'ah-choo', and Italian sneezes with a daintier eccì. Italian distinguishes between the sound of swallowing water (glu glu glu) and chewing food (gnam gnam gnam). Bells ring din don dan. Trains ciuff-ciuff. Motors vrum-vrum. Clocks tic-tac. Guns fire with a pim pum pam. A telephone's busy signal stutters tuu tuu tuu. Over the years I've been awakened by little birds that cip cip cip, dogs that abbaiano, roosters that go chicchirichì, and crickets that cri-cri-cri. In the morning, Bambola, the mangy stray cat who has become my pet at the villa we rent every summer, curls onto my lap and fa le fusa (purrs).'

from La Bella Lingua - Dianne Hales

Tuesday, May 15, 2012

Mediterraneo


Mediterraneo is an Italian film that won the 1992 Academy Award for Best Foreign Film. Directed by Gabriele Salvatores, it has a very 90's aesthetic and feel to it, but is brilliant nonetheless. There were some beautiful framing devices employed while shooting the architecture and landscape scenes, and there was created an atmosphere of calm and tranquility to the fictional island. Certainly a film worth watching if you haven't already.

'[It] is a glorious celebration of life and love in a time of war. Eight Italian soldiers are left to defend a small, seemingly deserted island in the Mediterranean Sea in the name of Mussolini and fascism. Shortly after their transport ship is destroyed, the disconsolate group manages to kill their donkey, shoot some chickens, and demolish their shortwave radio. Only then, convinced that the soldiers are no threat, do the island inhabitants emerge from their mountain hideout and resume their quiet lives. Slowly persuaded that the war has forgotten them, the Italians begin to assimilate into the peaceful community, finding love and laughter in a heaven on earth.'






Firenze

Firenze, 1958
Leonard Freed

Monday, May 14, 2012

Let's Go Fly A Kite


Corriere dei piccoli 27 February 1910

Poetic Mountains

'Of all glorious things here I think a ride on the Campagna in the morning or the evening is the most beautiful. There one has Rome and Italy, the past and the present, all to oneself. There the old poetic mountains breathe inspiration around. There one sees the aqueducts in their grandeur and beauty, and the ruins stand out on the landscape without being wedged in by a dozen dirty houses, or guarded by a chorus of filthy beggars. The whole country lies open, unfenced and uncultivated, and as one rides from hill to hill, the scene changes with the ground and St. Peter's or the Lateran, an aqueduct or a tomb, Mount Albano and Frascati or Soracte and Tivoli almost bewilder one with their different charm. The Campagna is now green and fresh, the flowers are blooming on it and the poppies are redder than blood: the little lizards fly about with their green backs that glitter in the sun, and when one is glowing with the heat after a quick gallop, there's always a pleasant breeze to comfort one. This is the Rome that delights me, and in all Europe as yet I've seen nothing so beautiful and so pleasant.'

from a letter by Henry Adams, 1860

Sunday, May 13, 2012

Mamma

In tribute to la festa della Mamma, Mothers' Day, is Andrea Bocelli's Mamma.

Scioglilingua

Here is an example of an Italian tongue twister, scioglilingua.

Al pozzo dei pazzi c'era una pazza
che lavava una pezza mangiando una pizza.
Arriva un pazzo e butta la pazza, la pezza,
E la pizza nel pozzo dei pazzi.

At the well of the crazies, there was a crazy woman
Who was washing a rag eating pizza.
A crazy man arrives and throws the crazy woman, the rag,
and the pizza into the well of the crazies.

Assisi

Assisi, Perugia, Italia
Justin Guariglia

National Geographic

Onesta con gentilezza, supera ogni bellezza

Onesta con gentilezza, supera ogni bellezza: Honesty and kindness, are superior to every kind of beauty.

Saturday, May 12, 2012

Johnny Stecchino


My friend recommended this film a few months ago; apparently I was watching all the classic Italian films that Italians themselves rarely watch. Directed by and starring Roberto Benigni, who won an Academy Award for the famous La vita è bella, Johnny Stecchino is an earlier gem from the comedian.


'Benigni stars as Dante, a kind-hearted but naive buffoon who is happy driving the school bus for a group of mentally handicapped children but feels he is somehow missing out on life and love.

His fortunes take a dramatic turn when he meets Maria (played by Benigni's real-life wife Nicoletta Braschi), a dangerous driver who seems immediately enamoured of him. Dante is soon invited to her sumptuous Palermo villa, pleasantly unaware that he's being drawn into an underworld plot. He bears an amazing likeness to Maria's gangster husband, who also happens to be a stool pidgeon and it would be very convenient for the couple if the mobster, in the shape of Dante, was seen to be dead and buried.'

Generally, I don't watch comedies, but this film was witty and energetic; and the hilarity translated from the Italian to the English brilliantly. What it lacked in cinematography it made up for in the colour palette and the beautiful glimpses of Italy. Johnny Stecchino may not be a film I watch over and over again, but it is definitely worth a watch.