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From The Times
June 14, 2008
Il Divo and Gomorra Mafia films reinvigorate Italian cinema
New wave of film-makers incenses the Right
Filmssuch as Matteo Garrones Gomorra depict a lawless and corrupt nation but their
critics on the Right say that this is not an accurate portrayal of Italy
Richard Owen in Rome
A sudden revival of Italian cinema after half a century in the doldrums has engendered a
heated political debate, with Italy's resurgent Right attacking a new wave of films for
showing the world only the country's dark heart.
The success at the recent Cannes Film Festival ofIl Divo, directed by Paolo Sorrentino,
and Gomorra, directed by Matteo Garrone, both under 40, has been greeted by critics as
proof of a return to the glory days of Italian cinema in the 1940s and 1950s. Both films,
which deal in different ways with endemic corruption and the Mafia, are showing to
packed houses.
Il Divo, which looks at Italy's often troubled post-war history through the career of Giulio
Andreotti, who was Prime Minister seven times, won the Cannes Grand Prix; Gomorra, a
gritty, violent depiction of life in Naples under the Camorra, the local Mafia, won theJury prize. They are twin films, two children carried in the same womb, with a common
theme of what is lurking behind the facade of a Western democracy, Sergio Castellitto,
an actor who was on the Cannes jury, said.
The screenwriter Giancarlo De Cataldo praised the new wave of theatre and film
directors for not being afraid to depict Italy as an immobile and reactionary country
riddled with crime and corruption and saddled with dark mysteries from the past.
Marrone and Sorrentino were emulating the great Italian directors of the past such as
Roberto Rossellini, Federico Fellini and Luchino Visconti.
The films have arrived at a time of deep divisions in Italian politics. The new right-wing
Government, led by Silvio Berlusconi - serving his third term at the age of 71 - is seeking
to blame Italy's ills on illegal immigrants, Roma Gypsies and the Mafia. But the reality as
depicted by the new films is that not only the ruling class but many ordinary Italians are
complicit in a corrupt system. Yousometimes have to do evil in order to do good, Mr
Andreotti is made to say in Il Divo. God knows this, and so do I.
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For Luca Barbareschi, one of Italy's leading actors and now a centre-right deputy, this
was outrageous. Gomorra andIl Divo were good films, he acknowledged, but for every
film of this kind we should export another ten which show our country in a positive light.
Instead we are only good at showing the world our black side. It's a kind of self-
laceration.
Mr Andreotti himself, now 89, was also incensed byIl Divo, in which he is played by the
actor Toni Servillo - who is also a Mafia boss in Gomorra. This is too much, he was
heard to protest during a private screening in Rome - at the point where the film shows
him confessing to involvement in a series of scandals.
They include the murder of the journalist Mino Pecorelli, who allegedly was about to
reveal Mr Andreotti's ties to Cosa Nostra; the hanging of God's banker Roberto Calvi
under Blackfriars Bridge in London after the fraudulent collapse of his Vatican-linked
bank; the 1978 kidnap and murder by the Red Brigades of Aldo Moro, a Christian
Democrat leader who favoured bringing the Communists into government; the killing of
Salvo Lima, Mr Andreotti's right-hand man in Sicily; and Mr Andreotti's meeting with
the Godfather Toto Riina, during which they were said by Mafia pentiti, or supergrasses,
to have exchanged a kiss of honour.
Mr Sorrentino said he madeIl Divo despite obstacles put in his way by the many
powerful people who are still very grateful to Andreotti. A devout Roman Catholic
known variously as Beelzebub, The Black Pope, The Fox, The Hunchback and The
Prince of Darkness - as his character observes wryly in the film - Mr Andreotti's career
began to falter in the 1990s as Christian Democracy imploded in a series of scandals. Hisbid to become President failed, and allegations mounted of connections to the illegal P2
masonic lodge and the Mafia. He went on trial for alleged Mafia ties and involvement in
the Pecorelli killing, but eventually acquitted. He remains a life senator and an influential
figure.
Mr Garrone said he, too, had problems making Gomorra, which is based on a bestselling
account of the Naples Mafia by Roberto Saviano. The story shows how Mafia clans
operate in areas from drugs to high fashion and the profitable waste-disposal business -
the prime cause of the Naples rubbish crisis - but also how it permeates everyday life in a
crumbling, once magnificent city.
Camorra members even co-operated in the making of the film, allowing Mr Garrone to
use the real Scampia backdrop and advising him on detail. Some Mafiosi had walk-on
parts. I didn't have any problems with the Camorra, even though it was like shooting in a
war zone, the director said. But he added that the darkness of GomorraandIl Divo was
a coincidence. It's not like we got together and agreed to look at Italy from a certain
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perspective this year, he told Hollywood Reporter. I think good films tend to reflect the
current reality.
In any case, once the initial shock of the films had passed there was a sense that what
really matter is that Italian cinema is back. Sandro Bondi, Minister of Culture, who
attended the Cannes screenings, said that althoughIl Divo andGomorrawere
uncomfortable to watch, they marked the renaissance of a strong and engaged Italian
cinema, with masterly directors. The job of the Berlusconi Government, he said, was to
tackle the ills they depicted.
Even Mr Andreotti has come to terms withIl Divo, withdrawing his accusation that the
film-makers were malicious blackguards - and even confessing that he rather likes the
scene in which he tells an interviewer that the reality of exercising power is more
complex than simple judgments about good and evil suggest.
And he added: For anybody in politics, to be ignored is worse than being criticised.