One Hundred Steps: Radio Interference on the Neorealist Heritage (Book Chapter)
Abstract
This essay provides a conceptual map of the relationship between One Hundred Steps (2000), its precursors and contemporaries, and in doing so analyzes the innovative nature of Marco Tullio Giordana’s authorship. Giordana brought his crew on location and established a relationship with the citizens of Cinisi, Peppino’s friends, mother and brother, interviewing witnesses to the events and modifying the screenplay accordingly. In this sense, his film displays the legacy of early neorealism (particularly The Earth Trembles, Luchino Visconti’s 1948 ethnographic expedition in Sicily) and that of Francesco Rosi, whose 1963 Hands over the City is openly evoked. In addition, I claim that in order to understand the film, one needs to take into account the American mafia portrayal by directors such as Martin Scorsese and Francis Ford Coppola. While Peppino emphasized the difference between himself and the mafia in his town by refusing to cross a short distance, Peppino’s father travels enormous distances in his attempt to reconcile the situation back at home, a subtle indication in the film of both the mafia’s global reach and how close family ties do not fade across continents. Giordana’s cinematic re-assertion of both Sicilian heritage and US film is consistent with the film’s narrative and with his choice to demonstrate, retrospectively, how the town of Cinisi’s mafia crime trade was an early example of globalization. Not by chance, there is a particular emphasis on the new spatial relationships created by the airport and the mode of exploitation it represents (in some sequences Peppino fights the expropriation of the farmers’ land for the construction of the third runway). It is in front of such modified spatial relationships that Peppino comments upon how such constructions alter the landscape, delivering his famous lyrical monologue: “You can find logic for anything once it’s done, once it exists…it takes so very little to destroy beauty.” One Hundred Steps oscillates between the two poles of documentary and fiction, creating a new hybrid aesthetic that reveals to be seminal in the new millennium.
Book Chapter in The Cinema of Marco Tullio Giordana (Editore Vecchiarelli, 2015)
The work of Italian film director Marco Tullio Giordana has recently become the subject of academic attention. Major scholars in the field of Italian Studies have expressed interest in his work in articles, book chapters and presentations. His films are constantly screened at Italian film festivals. A comprehensive evaluation of Giordana’s work is therefore needed in the field of Italian film studies, if only because his work demonstrates that the claim of a crisis of Italian cinema is not justified. Through the volume we explore and analyze the multifarious nature of Giordana’s cinematic production as well as its critical/crucial role in the representation of Italian cultural history.