Showing posts with label Gabriele Salvatores. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gabriele Salvatores. Show all posts

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.'






Wednesday, February 1, 2012

Io non ho paura




Io non ho paura (I'm Not Scared) is directed by Gabriele Salvatores and based on Niccolò Ammaniti's novel of the same name. The film is set in a fictional Southern Italian town during the anni di piombo, the years during the 1970's where terrorism and kidnapping were escalating. Michele Amitrano (Giuseppe Cristiano) is a young boy who discovers a terrible secret while exploring an abandoned farmhouse; a small child, Filippo Carducci (Mattia di Pierro) is hidden in a hole, and the film follows Michele's discovery of Filippo's story, and the friendship of the two boys. Michele's little sister Maria (Giulia Matturo) is the cutest ever.

This film is tense and vivid, I felt nervous throughout its entirety, but it was beautiful. The cinematography is incredible, the large vistas and expanses of Southern Italian landscape captured on film reflect the innocence of the children, yet also the barren lifestyle the families lead.