![]() ![]() Thursday, September 3, 2009
"Baarìa",
(Nick name for Bagheria), a Palermo suburb, is a sentimental sweep through
20th century Sicily.is billed as one of Italy’s most expensive ever movies
costing $36 million.
Venice Kicks Off With Italian Epic VENICE, Sept 2, (Agencies): The Venice
film festival opens on Wednesday with big-budget Italian movie “Baaria”,
a sentimental sweep through 20th century Sicily taking in Fascism, war,
Communism and the mafia.
Director Giuseppe Tornatore, whose
1988 movie “Cinema Paradiso” won a foreign film Oscar, said the story of
a poor family living through the upheavals of the last century was partly
based on his own memories of life in Sicily.
Passionate And so Peppino, the central character
played by Francesco Scianna, is swept up by the Communist movement, travels
to the Soviet Union where he sees first hand what it really means for citizens
there and lives briefly in France seeking work.
Tornatore recalled a saying that young men should leave Sicily before they turn 17 to void absorbing the island’s distinctive flaws. “I went away at 27, so I absorbed all the flaws of the Sicilian, even those I know nothing about.” While Venice organisers would welcome
an Italian hit on the Lido after home-grown films have generally flopped
in recent years, the success of the festival will be judged as well by
how many Hollywood stars and US movies it attracts.
The cinema complex on the Lido waterfront
is being re-built in a 100-million euro makeover designed to drag the world’s
oldest film festival into the 21st century and help it compete with other
festivals, notably Toronto, which it overlaps.
Favorite Clooney, who has a home in Italy and is a local favourite, appears in “The Men Who Stare at Goats,” about a reporter who stumbles across a US military unit in Iraq which employs paranormal powers on its missions.... “Sounds, people, frustrations, dreams,
happiness, challenges — I thought all of these themes could be turned into
a movie,” Tornatore told a news conference after the press screening at
the 66th Mostra in the lagoon city.
Ennio Morricone, who scored the spaghetti westerns of Sergio Leone, wrote the soundtrack for “Baaria” more than 20 years after that of “Cinema Paradiso,” which won the Oscar for best foreign film in 1989. Noting that he spent the first 27
years of his life in Sicily, Tornatore said: “That’s how I see things.
It’s my take on life.”
Since both leads are Sicilians — Francesco Scianna was born in Bagheria (nicknamed Baaria) itself — they are native speakers of the island’s dialect. Appearance With a cast of many homegrown stars, including Monica Belluci who offers a cameo appearance as a prostitute, Italians will feast on a red carpet bonanza at the gala opening Wednesday evening.Organisers could not confirm press reports that Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi would be on hand for the official screening, but his son Piersilvio is expected to attend.In all more than 80 films will be presented at the prestigious festival, which has a strong American presence both in and out of competition.... One of the chosen films is Michael Moore’s “Capitalism: A Love Story,” his first Venice entry after winning the top prize twice in Cannes. By many measures, landing Moore’s film is a coup for Venice. It is one of 24 films, including a surprise film to be announced later in the week, in competition for the coveted Golden Lion.“I think Michael has had a terrific time in Cannes. He needed a change. And we needed a different Michael Moore film. This one is incredibly symphonic,” said Mueller, who has known Moore for 20 years and premiered 1999’s “The Awful Truth,” at the Locarno Film Festival when he was director there. http://www.arabtimesonline.com/client/pagesdetails.asp?nid=36689&ccid=13
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