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Neapolitan Diary

Diario napoletano

Italy

1992

89 Min
Color
1.78:1
Italian
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DIR Francesco Rosi

PROD Mario Vecchi

SCR Francesco Rosi, Raffaele La Capria

DP Pasqualino De Santis

CAST Francesco Rosi

Synopsis

Thirty years after making Hands Over the City (1963), Francesco Rosi returns to Naples, the much-troubled city of his birth, to make this fascinating documentary “sequel.” Neapolitan Diary explores how much things have — and haven’t — changed in the interim, and follows Rosi as he attends a screening of Hands Over the City at the local school of architecture. Rosi records the transformations his city has undergone in three decades of change, shady dealings, and criminal violence. With overwhelming beauty and honesty, his cinematic diary investigates history, current events, memory, ancient architecture, and hope. —Film Society of Lincoln Center

Director

Original

Francesco Rosi

The films of Francesco Rosi stand as an urgent riposte to any proposal of aesthetic puritanism as a sine qua non of engaged filmmaking. From Salvatore Giuliano to Illustrious Corpses and Chronicle of a Death Foretold, he uses a mobilisation of the aesthetic potential of the cinema not to decorate his tales of corruption, complicity, and death, but to illuminate and interrogate the reverberations these events cause. If one quality were to be isolated as especially distinctive and characteristic it would have to be the sense of intellectual passion, of direction propelled by an impassioned sense of inquiry. This can be true in a quite literal way in Salvatore Giuliano, in which any “suspense” accruing to Giuliano’s death is put aside in favour of a search for another kind of knowledge; and The Mattei Affair, in which the soundtrack amasses evidence that is presented virtually in opposition to the images before us; or, in a more metaphoric sense, Christ Stopped at Eboli, which represents… read more

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