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Le complicazioni tra i poteri del governatore, il partito di indipendenza e la mafia nella Sicilia degli anni '40 culminano con la morte di Salvatore Giuliano.Le complicazioni tra i poteri del governatore, il partito di indipendenza e la mafia nella Sicilia degli anni '40 culminano con la morte di Salvatore Giuliano.Le complicazioni tra i poteri del governatore, il partito di indipendenza e la mafia nella Sicilia degli anni '40 culminano con la morte di Salvatore Giuliano.
- Regia
- Sceneggiatura
- Star
- Premi
- 6 vittorie e 4 candidature totali
Frederico Zardi
- Pisciotta's Defense Counsel
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Pippo Agusta
- Minor Role
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Sennuccio Benelli
- Reporter
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Giuseppe Calandra
- Minor Official
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Pietro Cammarata
- Salvatore Giuliano
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Max Cartier
- Francesco
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Nando Cicero
- Bandit
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Pietro Franzone
- Seperatist
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Giovanni Gallina
- Bit Part
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Vincenzo Norvese
- Bit Part
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Carmelo Oliviero
- Don Nitto Minasola
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Renato Pinciroli
- Pinciroli
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Francesco Rosi
- Narrator
- (voce)
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Giuseppe Teti
- Priest of Montelepre
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Cosimo Torino
- Frank Mannino
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Recensioni in evidenza
Francesco Rosi's elliptical film about the notorious Sicilian gangster is quite stunning. This is not, however, a typical gangster film. This film is more about the lives of the people affected by Giuliano than about the gangster himself and this is given extra resonance by the casting of the real villagers in almost all cases. The fact that we never see Giuliano's face makes the director's intentions quite clear.
Giuliano began his professional criminal career when he was caught stealing at a young age and chased out of his village into the surrounding hills where he formed a gang and made a living from robberies and standover tactics. He became feared and respected by the locals and was eventually recruited by regional officials to help in the fight for independence from Italy. The first half of the film explores these events and manages to convey an extremely strong feeling for the time and place. The second half of the film deals with the trial of the surviving members of Giuliano's gang after his death and in doing so illuminates much of what has come before.
It is remarkable how well the film holds together considering the amount of different styles and techniques that were combined in its creation. There are elements of docudrama, courtroom drama, Italian neorealism, crime story and political tract. It is also surprising how well it holds up over forty years later.
Giuliano began his professional criminal career when he was caught stealing at a young age and chased out of his village into the surrounding hills where he formed a gang and made a living from robberies and standover tactics. He became feared and respected by the locals and was eventually recruited by regional officials to help in the fight for independence from Italy. The first half of the film explores these events and manages to convey an extremely strong feeling for the time and place. The second half of the film deals with the trial of the surviving members of Giuliano's gang after his death and in doing so illuminates much of what has come before.
It is remarkable how well the film holds together considering the amount of different styles and techniques that were combined in its creation. There are elements of docudrama, courtroom drama, Italian neorealism, crime story and political tract. It is also surprising how well it holds up over forty years later.
Francesco Rosi's cinema are around political matters, a tough subject too swallow for usual cinephiles, due the hard life which we lives are enough to stand, but some facts needs a better understanding as this picture suggests, how Sicily gets his independence from Italy is plentiful explained here, each facts were expose in this overlong picture, but Francesco wisely put forward a cursed triangle of forces, the mob, the separatists and the dangerous outlaws who help them in hope to get their crime's amnesty, after they got Sicily's autonomy starts another hard issue, the communist, such thing was totally inconceivable to Italian standards at it's time, a mass killing was prompt provides by the rich farmers and also by the mob, the Giuliano the leader almost didn't appears on the movie, his second on command and your fellows conrades in-arms were charged by the massacre, interesting picture over this dry land on Italy's south, the mountainous island Sicily !!!
Resume:
First watch: 2019 / How many: 1 / Source: DVD / Rating: 8
Resume:
First watch: 2019 / How many: 1 / Source: DVD / Rating: 8
Filmed in the actual Siciilian locations, this film is a fair attempt to strip away the myth surrounding bandit-cum-revolutionary Giuliano. In fact, he doesn't appear except as a gunned-down corpse at the beginning. The film winds back to unravel the events leading to his death, and forwards to its consequence. This is a clever method of achieving objectivity while at the same time subtly emphasising the man's elusive and mysterious qualities. To show Giuliano would have either been either hagiography or iconoclasm. The film rose above that and broadened its inquiry into the wider social and political context, effectively belittling him as the puppet of various forces jostling for position in Sicily after the war: bandits, police, local aristocracy, the Italian government, communists, and the Mafia.
This sets quite a challenge for itself, partly because of the vacuum at its centre, partly because of the obscurity and complexity of the real events. We are delivered to a chaotic courtroom to try to piece it together. The film finally latches onto Giuliano's lieutenant the only one who seems to know something of what is going on - but even he is silenced. It's all the more disturbing for the confusion.
Rosi is one of the best directors of crowds scenes and he gives raucous energy to any gathering of men, especially in the courtroom. He induces a kind of group hysteria in his actors; they are totally unaware of the camera and the result is an almost disturbing hyper-real feel (real crowds are dull in comparison) it's really something to appreciate. To get into this film, you need to invest something in the passions of the various parties involved - if not sympathise with them, then at least understand them. Without this, the danger is that it all boils down to so much petty bickering. The same might be said of the Godfather, which clearly owes a huge debt to Rosi's style.
Influential then, somewhat brave, with some fine directorial moments, and an interesting history lesson. Hard to actually like, but hard not to admire.
This sets quite a challenge for itself, partly because of the vacuum at its centre, partly because of the obscurity and complexity of the real events. We are delivered to a chaotic courtroom to try to piece it together. The film finally latches onto Giuliano's lieutenant the only one who seems to know something of what is going on - but even he is silenced. It's all the more disturbing for the confusion.
Rosi is one of the best directors of crowds scenes and he gives raucous energy to any gathering of men, especially in the courtroom. He induces a kind of group hysteria in his actors; they are totally unaware of the camera and the result is an almost disturbing hyper-real feel (real crowds are dull in comparison) it's really something to appreciate. To get into this film, you need to invest something in the passions of the various parties involved - if not sympathise with them, then at least understand them. Without this, the danger is that it all boils down to so much petty bickering. The same might be said of the Godfather, which clearly owes a huge debt to Rosi's style.
Influential then, somewhat brave, with some fine directorial moments, and an interesting history lesson. Hard to actually like, but hard not to admire.
The first time you experience this film is rather like going to an opera without knowing the plot: there are some grand scenes of murder and passion, some incredible scenery, but it's long and you're in a suspended state of confusion much of the time--and it's a two-hour film, almost a documentary.
The second time you watch this film (and you should!) it can be enjoyed on so many levels, and you begin to appreciate Rosi's genius for mixing various kinds of truth, for exposing the sorts of lies governmental bodies can develop to protect their flanks, for demythologizing the idea of the folk outlaw whose ideals are supposedly those of the people. At heart this is a film about Sicily, about an island's struggle to find it's heart and it's heritage--not easy to watch, but magnificently photographed at every turn.
The second time you watch this film (and you should!) it can be enjoyed on so many levels, and you begin to appreciate Rosi's genius for mixing various kinds of truth, for exposing the sorts of lies governmental bodies can develop to protect their flanks, for demythologizing the idea of the folk outlaw whose ideals are supposedly those of the people. At heart this is a film about Sicily, about an island's struggle to find it's heart and it's heritage--not easy to watch, but magnificently photographed at every turn.
Interesting neo-realistic, quasi-documentary film with notable editing. But did the film deserve the Best Director award at Berlin over Bergman's "Through a glass darkly"? The Swedish film was superior. Martin Scorsese likes it because he can identify with the Italian politics and sociology of that time. The Rosi film is good but overrated.
Lo sapevi?
- QuizMartin Scorsese credits this film as being one of his many inspirational sources for the look and style of his Taxi Driver (1976).
- BlooperWhen his mother comes to view and identify his corpse, Salvatore's stomach clearly moves as the actor struggles to control his breathing.
- ConnessioniEdited into Il sasso in bocca (1970)
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Dettagli
- Data di uscita
- Paese di origine
- Lingua
- Celebre anche come
- Sicilia 1943-60
- Luoghi delle riprese
- 98 Via Serafino Mannone, Castelvetrano, Trapani, Sicily, Italia(Giuliano's body)
- Aziende produttrici
- Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro
- Tempo di esecuzione2 ore 3 minuti
- Colore
- Mix di suoni
- Proporzioni
- 1.85 : 1
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By what name was Salvatore Giuliano (1962) officially released in Canada in English?
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