IMDb-BEWERTUNG
6,8/10
3277
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Die Geschichte dreier Brüder, Söhne eines Ziegenhirten, die der Ndrangheta nahestehen, und ihrer zerrissenen Seelen.Die Geschichte dreier Brüder, Söhne eines Ziegenhirten, die der Ndrangheta nahestehen, und ihrer zerrissenen Seelen.Die Geschichte dreier Brüder, Söhne eines Ziegenhirten, die der Ndrangheta nahestehen, und ihrer zerrissenen Seelen.
- Auszeichnungen
- 23 Gewinne & 18 Nominierungen insgesamt
Empfohlene Bewertungen
Last Saturday I went to see "Anime nere" at the London Film Festival with great expectation. In fact in August I had read a very positive review on La Repubblica newspaper. I must say it met completely my expectations, the movie is very well done, convincing and the light, the light is absolutely sublime. I like all the actors performances. The director told us, after the projection, that they were a mix of professional and not professional ones (very difficult to distinguish for the high quality of their performances). The plot is very intense, but not in a bad way. The most disturbing scenes are not shown on screen, but left to the audience imagination. The movie is set in a rural village in Calabria, south of Italy, where the three brothers were born and where Luciano, the elder, is still living with his family. The two younger brothers, instead, had moved to Milan in the north of Italy few years back.
Highly recommended, a potential candidate to next year foreign Grammy awards!!
Highly recommended, a potential candidate to next year foreign Grammy awards!!
ANIME NERE boasts some of the best acting that I have seen in any film from anywhere in the world over the last 10 years. Perhaps only SICARIO (US 2015) can bear comparison with this extremely high standard of acting.
Francesco Munzi's direction is also first rate, aided by excellent stark photography.
Dialogue is extremely credible, and the script builds up to an unbearable tension point without much physical action.
So why do I rate this film only 7/10? Because I expected more reaction from the target family, and I find the open ending frustrating.
PS - I decided to rewatch ANIME NERE and I have to admit that the ending makes more sense than I initially surmised. The point, trite but valid all the same, is that death is supposed to be a deterrent among crime-pursuing families, but once a crime is committed, even a minor one like stealing goats, revenge will follow, and death is no longer a deterrent but an objective.
Interesting aspect: as in THE GODFATHER, there are three brothers here, and you know instinctively that the brother who wants to stay out of crime is the one most likely to be the action man. The other two are Hamlet-like figures, who hate Barreca for killing their father but talk rather than do something about it. And any distraction carries the ultimate price, as Luigi and Leo find out.
In crime, as in life, there is always someone stronger and more lethal than you. What I initially saw as an open ending is in fact the only ending to criminal life. I change my rating to 9/10 and recommend this film.
Francesco Munzi's direction is also first rate, aided by excellent stark photography.
Dialogue is extremely credible, and the script builds up to an unbearable tension point without much physical action.
So why do I rate this film only 7/10? Because I expected more reaction from the target family, and I find the open ending frustrating.
PS - I decided to rewatch ANIME NERE and I have to admit that the ending makes more sense than I initially surmised. The point, trite but valid all the same, is that death is supposed to be a deterrent among crime-pursuing families, but once a crime is committed, even a minor one like stealing goats, revenge will follow, and death is no longer a deterrent but an objective.
Interesting aspect: as in THE GODFATHER, there are three brothers here, and you know instinctively that the brother who wants to stay out of crime is the one most likely to be the action man. The other two are Hamlet-like figures, who hate Barreca for killing their father but talk rather than do something about it. And any distraction carries the ultimate price, as Luigi and Leo find out.
In crime, as in life, there is always someone stronger and more lethal than you. What I initially saw as an open ending is in fact the only ending to criminal life. I change my rating to 9/10 and recommend this film.
BLACK SOULS is an unusual Italian gangster film that portrays the subject matter in an art-house style. Thus, it's a slow and sedate movie with exemplary realism throughout that goes for a very low key approach. It feels like very little happens in this film, yet at the same time the production has the same kind of realism as a documentary.
It's certainly a well-shot piece with some fine cinematography. The acting is of a solid standard with the actors giving mannered and restrained performances rather than going over the top as in an American gangster movie. The plot, about innocent lives being drawn into the criminal underworld, is a familiar one, but the slow-burning approach works well and builds up some powerhouse moments.
It's certainly a well-shot piece with some fine cinematography. The acting is of a solid standard with the actors giving mannered and restrained performances rather than going over the top as in an American gangster movie. The plot, about innocent lives being drawn into the criminal underworld, is a familiar one, but the slow-burning approach works well and builds up some powerhouse moments.
Greetings again from the darkness. Avoiding the flashiness of GOODFELLAS or the complexity of another Italian crime family drama, 2008's GOMORRAH, this reserved-on-the-surface film from director/co-writer Francesco Munzi takes us to a small rural village located outside of Milan. In fact, this slow-burner has much in common stylistically with the 2010 Aussie gem ANIMAL KINGDOM.
Luigi (Marco Leonardi), Rocco (Peppino Mazzotta), and Luciano (Fabrizio Ferracane) are three brothers who have settled into life after the murder of their father by a rival crime family. Luigi is the hands-on leader of the family's drug business, and even though he thrives on the power and intimidation, he maintains a relatively low profile. Rocco is the behind-the-scenes businessman of the family enterprise. He and his fashion-forward wife live in a swanky Milan apartment and mostly avoid the front lines. Oldest brother Luciano has forsaken the family biz, and instead spends his days farming and working his goats.
Luciano's commitment to hard work and a straight life have not rubbed off on his son Leo (Giuseppe Fumo) who is drawn to the danger, money and power of his uncles' business. It's young Leo's fool-hearted actions that kickoff a chain of events putting the family smack in the midst of a possible war of mafia families.
This is no guns-blazing thrill ride of violence. Instead it's the type of movie that features countless scenes of men huddled in small groups mumbling details of the next important deal. Also, crucial are the non-verbal nods and raised eye-brows – signs that are interpreted as calls to action. We also learn that expressing hope someone lives to 100, is not just a personal insult, but such crass behavior that it brings a group dinner to an awkward halt.
Leather jacket abound, and the threat of violence looms over most scenes. However, it's the subtlety of the conversations and the quiet nature of the leaders that cause the well-meaning, but immature thirst for revenge from Leo to stand out. Until the twist of the final act, the only two moments of violence are almost surgical in their precision, leaving us with the impression that one's negotiating skills and loyal friends are every bit as crucial to success as one's expertise with a gun.
Mr. Munzi's film is very well directed and photographed, and features some terrific acting that generates the tension necessary to drive the story. It's a nice addition to the crime family genre, even if it's not at the level of the three mentioned in the opening paragraph above.
Luigi (Marco Leonardi), Rocco (Peppino Mazzotta), and Luciano (Fabrizio Ferracane) are three brothers who have settled into life after the murder of their father by a rival crime family. Luigi is the hands-on leader of the family's drug business, and even though he thrives on the power and intimidation, he maintains a relatively low profile. Rocco is the behind-the-scenes businessman of the family enterprise. He and his fashion-forward wife live in a swanky Milan apartment and mostly avoid the front lines. Oldest brother Luciano has forsaken the family biz, and instead spends his days farming and working his goats.
Luciano's commitment to hard work and a straight life have not rubbed off on his son Leo (Giuseppe Fumo) who is drawn to the danger, money and power of his uncles' business. It's young Leo's fool-hearted actions that kickoff a chain of events putting the family smack in the midst of a possible war of mafia families.
This is no guns-blazing thrill ride of violence. Instead it's the type of movie that features countless scenes of men huddled in small groups mumbling details of the next important deal. Also, crucial are the non-verbal nods and raised eye-brows – signs that are interpreted as calls to action. We also learn that expressing hope someone lives to 100, is not just a personal insult, but such crass behavior that it brings a group dinner to an awkward halt.
Leather jacket abound, and the threat of violence looms over most scenes. However, it's the subtlety of the conversations and the quiet nature of the leaders that cause the well-meaning, but immature thirst for revenge from Leo to stand out. Until the twist of the final act, the only two moments of violence are almost surgical in their precision, leaving us with the impression that one's negotiating skills and loyal friends are every bit as crucial to success as one's expertise with a gun.
Mr. Munzi's film is very well directed and photographed, and features some terrific acting that generates the tension necessary to drive the story. It's a nice addition to the crime family genre, even if it's not at the level of the three mentioned in the opening paragraph above.
"Dark Souls" or "Anime Nere", as the original title is, is a movie about a feud between two mob families, triggered from an act of recklessness perpetrated by a young man who desires to step into the "glorious", but sleazy and risky world of mafia, and defies his rural origins and the agricultural works his father is doing for a living. It benefits from silence (and total absence of soundtrack and sounds, in general) in certain scenes, a fact that amplifies the intensity which pervades them, or simply steers clear of sounds when silence is required. Marco Leonardi, Peppino Mazzotta and Fabrizio Ferracane deliver solid performances as the three brothers, the two first deeply involved in mafia's trade (mostly drug dealing), and the latter one as the seemingly innocent and uninformed (although he is the eldest brother), whose performance is extremely layered and he, as an actor, is exceptionally expressive and encapsulates every single emotion. Giuseppe Fumo stands out as the bold, careless, vengeful Leo who wants desperately to get engaged into the Mob's ruses, and acts without processing his ideas or following the instructions from his experienced uncles. The scenery is beautiful, the dialogue is equally witty and true to life, the storyline, although it steps in familiar ground, manages to keep the audience's interest during the whole runtime of this motion picture. Soundtrack perfectly matches every shot of this film, and it successfully integrates some Mediterranean customs concerning deceased family members, and grief is portrayed (and expressed) frankly and realistically. There are twists and turns near the end, that make it grim, but also credible. A flaw of this picture, though, is the abruptness of the ending, and the fact that makes no sense, but the final scene's ambiguity gives food for thought to the viewer. Apart from its defects, this is a well-made crime drama that, even though it's not a masterpiece, it honours its Mafia genre and it's recommended to the fans of it, and to the ones who would like to watch a dark European mob film, and have a good time too.
Wusstest du schon
- SoundtracksMany Lifetimes (Covered In Sand Interpretation)
Written by Ruaridh Law
Performed by TVO
Remixed by Guy Alexander Brewer
Originally released on Broken20 / Broken60_2.5
© Broken20, 2013
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Details
Box Office
- Bruttoertrag in den USA und Kanada
- 101.088 $
- Eröffnungswochenende in den USA und in Kanada
- 6.286 $
- 12. Apr. 2015
- Weltweiter Bruttoertrag
- 1.278.360 $
- Laufzeit
- 1 Std. 49 Min.(109 min)
- Farbe
- Sound-Mix
- Seitenverhältnis
- 2.35 : 1
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