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Synopsis

Rosi’s return to the political thriller, co-scripted by Gore Vidal, was shot in the U.S. and Sicily and features James Belushi and Mimi Rogers in the leads. Belushi is Carmine Bonavia, an ambitious Italian-American politician running for mayor of New York City on a popular platform calling for the legalization of drugs. Newly married to photojournalist Carrie (Rogers), he makes an ill-advised, politically-motivated decision to honeymoon in Palermo, the hometown of his father — and soon finds himself hopelessly entangled in a Mafia plot designed to make him reverse his position on drugs. The Palermo Connection is loosely based on the 1966 Prix Goncourt-winning novel by Edmond Charles Roux, and features a romantic-cum-sinister score by Ennio Morricone. In the film’s beautiful ball-dance sequence, Rosi pays homage to his mentor Visconti’s The Leopard. The cinematography of Pasqualino De Santis — here using a newly-developed film stock — is, as always, splendid; his Palermo is “a wrenching mixture of magnificence and ruin, and appears to decay while one watches” (Variety). Rosi has stressed that The Palermo Connection, and its representation of Sicily, is metaphoric rather than realist: “The film is metaphysical in the same way as Illustrious Corpses.” —Pacific Cinémathèque

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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Picture of Knut Morte

Knut Morte

22Dec11

to make drugs illegal is morally wrong

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