In una piccola comunità rom in Calabria, Pio Amato, un quattordicenne, vuole crescere velocemente. Beve, fuma ed è uno dei pochi a scivolare tra le fazioni della regione: gli italiani del po... Leggi tuttoIn una piccola comunità rom in Calabria, Pio Amato, un quattordicenne, vuole crescere velocemente. Beve, fuma ed è uno dei pochi a scivolare tra le fazioni della regione: gli italiani del posto, i rifugiati africani e i suoi compagni rom.In una piccola comunità rom in Calabria, Pio Amato, un quattordicenne, vuole crescere velocemente. Beve, fuma ed è uno dei pochi a scivolare tra le fazioni della regione: gli italiani del posto, i rifugiati africani e i suoi compagni rom.
- Regia
- Sceneggiatura
- Star
- Premi
- 13 vittorie e 31 candidature totali
Recensioni in evidenza
As you can tell from another review here, the attitude towards Sinti and Roma is to this day extremely racist and completely ignorant of the fact that they have been living in Italy for 600 years (Pio's surname is Sinti, i.e. his family has not migrated from the East). In Italian film, gypsies are always thieves and / or murderous psychopaths, "Suburra" and "Jeeg Robot" being the most notorious recent examples. By just reenacting Romani life, "A Ciambra" succeeds in showing how this racist exclusion of Roma (and refugees) creates exactly what it justifies itself with: a marginalized sub-society which perceives the law as hostile, and therefore resorts to crime as a means of survival and defiance. And in this dog-eats-dog world, family is both the only reliable safety net, and the biggest hindrance to an honest living - the film does a good job showing that.
If it's not a masterpiece, then because Carpignano adds nothing to this bleak outlook. There's not a shred of hope for Pio's future, and while this is realistic, it also doesn't give the audience much to work with.
A soundtrack and score vibrating with the power of life. An authenticity rarely seen and felt. Friendship, dreams and desperation.
The second feature by Italian-American writer-director Jonas Carpignano, "A Ciambra" (2017) is shot with amateur Romani actors, more or less portraying themselves. In 2014, he made a 16 minutes short with the same title and main character/actor, depicting one night in his life.
Realism is what made Italian cinema its reputation as far back as Rossellini in the first half of the 20th century. This iteration dares to place the camera almost on Pio's shoulder to give the sense of everything Pio is seeing and if his decisions are good ones. It doesn't get more than this.
That's the rub of this powerful, seemingly documentary capture of small-life in Calabria, modern with cells and cars and anything the gypsies can steal and sell. Because his father and brother are imprisoned, Pio becomes responsible for his family, and he pursues the gangster life with natural instincts, and, well, relish.
Moreover, his 15 family members are actor Pio's real family, providing an unparalleled feel of the real. His mother, Iolanda, is a piece of Italian motherhood work that by now could be "central casting."
The writer/director's treatment is consistent and relentless: an unwavering close up of impoverished gypsy life, at odds with the "Italians" who surround them and at odds with a society that considers them outsiders, thieves, and liers. The streets are uniformly strewn with garbage, and when a building experiences arson, you are almost ready to say "good riddance."
Although so many close-ups of Pio become tiresome, no doubt can exist that you will forget this camera-ready actor whose eyes tell you the combat within his soul.
Are you surprised Martin Scorsese is a producer? I'm not. These are the streets he loves to narrate, and they are mean.
Lo sapevi?
- QuizThe director and his crew had a Fiat Panda full of film equipment stolen while filming the short film A Chjàna (2011). They went to the Romani community in the Ciambra to negotiate for their car. This is how the director first met the Amato family, who he depicts in this film.
- Citazioni
[to Pio]
Nonno Emiliano: I was born in that thing.
[pause]
Nonno Emiliano: Pio, come here. Come.
[pause]
Nonno Emiliano: Once, we were always on the road. On the road. We were free. We didn't have bosses. We answered to no-one. We were free, always on the road. Now, we are here. Remember, It's us against the world.
Pio: Against the world.
- ConnessioniReferenced in KVIFF Guide: Episodio #1.9 (2017)
- Colonne sonoreChiudo gli occhi e salto
Written by Fabio Clemente, Alessandro Merli, Federica Abbate, Mogol (as Alfredo Rapetti Mogol) and Claudia Nahum
Performed by Claudia Nahum (as Baby K) feat. Federica Abbate
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Dettagli
- Data di uscita
- Paesi di origine
- Siti ufficiali
- Lingue
- Celebre anche come
- La Ciambra
- Luoghi delle riprese
- Aziende produttrici
- Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro
Botteghino
- Lordo Stati Uniti e Canada
- 41.934 USD
- Fine settimana di apertura Stati Uniti e Canada
- 6330 USD
- 21 gen 2018
- Lordo in tutto il mondo
- 104.808 USD
- Tempo di esecuzione1 ora 58 minuti
- Colore
- Proporzioni
- 1.85 : 1