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Same
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A
film composed by Ennio Morricone - 007A
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Todo
Modo /
All Mode / One
Way or Another
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Chronology
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The
music page in the site
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Chinese
IMDB
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It
is shown that the film was composed by Ennio Morricone
(00:01:04)
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Director:
Elio Petri
Writers: Berto Pelosso (adaptation),
Elio Petri (screenplay), Leonardo Sciascia (novel)
Stars: Gian Maria Volonté, Marcello
Mastroianni, Mariangela Melato
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Cast
(in credits order)
Gian Maria Volonté ... M.
Marcello Mastroianni
... Don Gaetano
Mariangela
Melato ... Giacinta, Moglie di M.
Ciccio Ingrassia ... Voltrano
Franco Citti
... Autista di M.
Tino Scotti ... Il Cuoco
Cesare Gelli ... Arras, Vice Questore
Renato Salvatori ... Dr. Scalambri
Michel Piccoli
... Lui
Adriano Amidei Migliano ... Capra-Profiri
Giancarlo Badessi ... Ventre
Mario Bartoli ... Primogenito Lombo
Nino Costa ... Prete Giovane
Guerrino Crivello ... Speaker TV
Marcello Di Falco ... Saccà
Giulio Donnini ... Bastante
Aldo Farina ... Restrero
Giuseppe Leone ... Martellini
Renato Malavasi ... Michelozzi
Riccardo Mangano ... Cardinale Beccarisi
Piero Mazzinghi ... Caprarozza
Lino Murolo ... Mozio
Piero Nuti ... Schiavò
Loris Pereira Lopez ... Lombo sr.
Riccardo Satta ... Lomazzo
Luigi Uzzo ... Aldo Lombo
Luigi Zerbinati ... Caudo
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Genres:
Drama |
Produced
by
Cinevera S.p.a.
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Contry
Italy | France |
Language:
Italian |
Original
Music by Ennio
Morricone |
Cinematography
by Luigi Kuveiller |
Filming Locations: |
Runtime:125
min
Sound Mix:Mono
Color:Color |
Release
Date: 30
April 1976 (Italy) |
Second
Unit Director or Assistant Director Umberto
Angelucci .... assistant director |
Also
Known As (AKA)
Todo
modo Argentina / West Germany
Juízo Final Brazil
Mia seira dolofonies Greece (transliterated ISO-LATIN-1 title)
Todo Modo France
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Storyline:
Don Gaetano (Marcello Mastroianni) is a priest who is supervising
a group of Christian Democrats on a religious retreat. The objective
is to help these politicians purify their past wrongdoings, no matter
how large or small, and live closer to God. The retreat takes place
in a concrete bunker with plenty of small rooms for contemplation
and icons set here and there to offer inspiration...(Here)
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002-
More Storyline
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2-1
One Way or Another (1976) Alternate title: Todo Modo
(New
York Time)
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Set at
an indeterminate time in the near future, this routine,
well-acted drama by Elio Petri tackles favorite Italian
topics: religion and politics. A bit of macabre fantasy
is added to the mix, but the end product remains somewhat
muddled. Don Gaetano (Marcello Mastroianni) is a priest
who is supervising a group of Christian Democrats on a religious
retreat. The objective is to help these politicians purify
their past wrongdoings, no matter how large or small, and
live closer to God. The retreat takes place in a concrete
bunker with plenty of small rooms for contemplation and
icons set here and there to offer inspiration. Once the
retreat begins, the politicos alarmingly begin to die off
one by one. Don Gaetano wants them to get closer to God
but did he mean that close? (Here,
here)
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Unclassified
18+
Elio Petri, 125 mins, Italy, 1976, 35mm, Italian with English
subtitles. Courtesy: Cinecitta Luce.
Todo modo A group of leading Christian democrats attend
a religious retreat, turning confessional practices into
tools of power.
Balanced
between political thriller, slightly futuristic fantasy
and metaphysical meditation, Elio Petri's important film,
claustrophobically staged by Dante Ferretti (Salò, or
the 120 Days of Sodom) is based on the 1974 novel by Leonardo
Sciascia. Shelved immediately after its premiere (and
never re-released) for the connections it makes to Italy's
then recently murdered prime minister, the film has only
now begun to attain proper critical attention.
The
cast includes Marcello Mastroianni, Gian Maria Volontè
and Michel Piccoli, while the score was written by Ennio
Morricone.
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Beginning
with the socially-committed films of neo-realism,
postwar Italian cinema became, perhaps even more
than Italian postwar literature, a form that inherently
tended to reflect and refract its own social and
political context. It’s true that the august “founding
fathers” of neo-realism such as Roberto Rossellini
and Vittorio De Sica largely shied away from dealing
directly with politics in their films but many of
the second-generation postwar directors appear to
have soon found themselves moving ineluctably towards
a fully-fledged political cinema. The great Frances
co Rosi is a case in point: an early Rosi film like
La sfida (The Challenge, 1958) is able to explore
the intricate and illicit networks of power that
control the Neapolitan fruit and vegetable markets
with only allusions to the presence and connivance
of politicians but by 1963 a film like Mani sulla
città (Hands Over the City) seems impelled to call
the political spade by its real name.
By
the end of the 1960s the explosion of worker and
student discontent onto the streets in “the events”
of 1968 ineluctably prompted an ever more openly
political cinema. Significantly, in 1970 the Oscar
for Best Foreign Language Film, which previously
had only gone to poetic but politically anodyne
Italian films such as Federico Fellini’s La strada
(1954) and Le notti di Cabiria (Nights of Cabiria,
1957), was awarded to Elio Petri’s Indagine su
un cittadino al di sopra di ogni sospetto (Investigation
of a Citizen Above Suspicion, 1970), a film patently
and transparently about the repressive and quasi-fascistic
reaction of the conservative ruling elites in
the face of the massive demand for real political
change coming from the ranks below. And if 1968,
as Umberto Eco was fond of putting it in later
years, in a comparable country such as France
lasted only a year, in Italy it came to last a
decade, the grim and dark decade that came to
be known as “gli anni di piombo” (the years of
lead). In December 1969 a bomb in Milan’s Piazza
Fontana killed 17 people and wounded 88, thereby
initiating what would become an ever-increasing
spiral of political terrorism perpetrated by a
plethora of often mutually-antagonistic splinter
groups from both the extra-parliamentary Left
and Right.
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By
the mid 1970s the country was on the edge of chaos
as political violence raged in the streets and fears
of a neo-fascist coup d’état commingled with fears
of what seemed like an inevitable electoral victory
for the Communist Party. The Italian secret services
– and there were a myriad of them – continued to
infiltrate radical groups, sometimes creating their
own fake groups in order to draw out the real terrorists,
while the American CIA also intervened covertly
in order to ensure that Italy would not fall into
the Communist camp. The Vatican-backed Christian
Democrats, who had ruled Italy continuously from
1948 through a system of opportunistic alliances
with smaller parties and the corrupt practices of
clientelism and division of state spoils, merely
intensified their factional infighting in desperate
attempts to retain their questionably acquired wealth
and power. They were still at each others’ throats
when, in 1978, Aldo Moro, then President of the
party and leader of one of the left factions, was
kidnapped and summarily executed by the Red Brigades. |
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Made
in 1976 as this pandemonium was reaching fever pitch,
Petri’s Todo modo represents perhaps the most uncompromising
example of Italian political cinema. Whilst dutifully
concluding with a disclaimer to any reference to reality,
the film effectively presents an accurate, if grotesquely-designed
and highly-expressionistic portrait of both the Christian
Democrat Party in particular, and of the Italian situation
more generally at the time.
Mischievously
disingenuous, in typical Petri style, the disclaimer was
justifiable at least to the extent that the film was an
adaptation of a short novel by writer/intellectual Leonardo
Sciascia. Published two years earlier, the novel was a
culturally sophisticated and highly literary experimentation
with the form of the murder mystery. The story is told
in the first person by a painter and sometime writer of
detective novels who one day, while driving in the countryside,
chances upon a strange hermitage cum hotel. With no pressing
engagements, he is drawn to remain at the Zafer Hermitage
in order to observe the annual spiritual retreat about
to be undertaken there by a large number of VIPs under
the spiritual tutelage of the very ambiguous but captivating
figure of a Jesuit cleric by the name of Don Gaetano.
Cultured and well-read but also ominous and enigmatic,
the novel’s Don Gaetano is explicitly connected with the
uncannily bespectacled devil tempting St. Anthony in a
17th century painting by the Italian Mannerist painter
Rutilio Manetti (1). The Loyolan spiritual exercises and
the two murders that occur during the retreat are presented
largely as a backdrop for the intellectual contest that
develops between Don Gaetano and the unnamed first person
narrator, who comes to be responsible (or not?) for the
cleric’s own demise at the novel’s conclusion. Interestingly,
for a murder mystery, the murders themselves are never
solved and the reader is left wondering.
Petri’s
filmic adaptation dispenses with the first person narrator
together with all his refined intellectual musings and
philosophical exchanges with the cleric. Instead, from
the very beginning, the viewer is plunged into the midst
of what appears to be a nation in crisis, visibly gripped
by an unexplained but ever-spreading and highly contagious
epidemic. In spite of the spiritual trappings – and the
hollowness of the religiosity practised here is continually
on show in the guise of the white, ghostly statues that
seem nothing more than empty shells – the retreat for
which the host of powerful prelates and politicians are
gathering soon reveals its true nature as a fractious
reunion of the factions of a ruling party. Don Gaetano’s
ambiguous role as spiritual castigator in the novel is
not only retained in the film but also magnified to the
point of an apocalyptic exterminating angel, although
always one with duplicitous and enigmatic motivations.
Even more significantly, the role of “Presidente” only
hinted at in the novel, is given so much more prominence
in the film as to become, quite transparently, the figure
of Aldo Moro. Moro’s role as both leader of one particular
faction of the Christian Democrat Party and also as the
great mediator and power-broker – the one who knew where
all the bodies were buried, so to speak – takes centre-stage
in the film in a stratagem that allows for both the ad
nauseum factional infighting and the shameless and shameful
division of the spoils of power by the party functionaries
to be clearly shown.
This
is clearly political filmmaking at its most committed,
and Petri’s own left leanings come through clearly as
the spiritual retreat cum party meeting becomes something
of a satanic ritual and a descent into hell – the descent
and dissolution of a ruling class, fighting to retain
its privileges, but by extension that of an entire nation.
Indeed, the ubiquitous and intrusive presence of closed-circuit
television cameras throughout the film metonymically links
the claustrophobic inside of the hermitage with the Italy
outside, a country where by this time everyone is on file,
everyone and everything is under continual surveillance.
All to no avail, of course, since in spite of it all,
the culprits were never caught and Italy remained – and
remains to this day – the country of unsolved mysteries.
As
a sort of anamorphic mirror held up to an entire nation,
the film could hardly please and indeed it received a
rather cold reception on all sides of the political fence.
The film’s parodic portrayal of Moro came back to haunt
it when two years later Moro was abducted in broad daylight
by the Red Brigades and held for 55 days before being
executed for what were deemed to be his political “sins”.
The subsequent surge in public sympathy for him served,
if anything else were needed, to consign Petri’s film
to the dust-heap, and it was subsequently seldom screened.
In
his review of Petri’s film at the time of its release,
writer Alberto Moravia deplored the fact that it appeared
to be motivated by nothing other than hatred for the ruling
Italian political class, presenting it, as he put it,
“in a grotesquely apocalyptic setting, as a clique of
dead souls in bodies only provisionally still alive” (2).
Moravia clearly regarded this as a questionable representation,
and yet arguably he himself may have been remembering
nothing less than Dante’s characterisation of some of
the worst sort of political traitors in the depths of
the Inferno (3). Perhaps it may be an exaggeration to
equate Petri with Dante but, like Dante in the Inferno,
Todo Modo does furnish us with a caustic, expressionistic
socio-political portrait of Italy during some of its darkest
hours. by Gino Moliterno
Endnotes
1.The painting was reproduced on the cover of the first
Einaudi edition of the novel.
2.“[…] il solo sentimento che anima il film è l’odio contro
il gruppo dirigente, oggi al potere in Italia, presentato,
in un’aria grottescamente apocalittica, come una consorteria
di anime morte in corpi provvisoriamente ancora vivi.”
Now in Elio Petri: XL Mostra internazionale del cinema,
Venezia 1983, La Biennale di Venezia, Venice, 1983, p.
80. Author’s translation.
3.See the ending of Inferno, canto XXXIII (Here)
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2-4 Elio Petri from the book
“L’avventurosa storia del cinema italiano”
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In
the last period of my life I made displeasing films. They
are displeasing in a society that asks for agreeableness
to everything, even to commitment; if commitment is pleasant,
and therefore does not annoy anyone, society will accept
it, otherwise it will not. My features, on the contrary,
go even past the sign of disagreeableness.
In Todo Modo there is plenty of unpleasantness and even
a great pessimism. The same is true for Good News, where
one almost trespasses on misanthropy. What is all this
due to? Why do I make such films? Clearly it is because
of a precise feeling that a point has been reached where
all the conditions existing when I was a boy have vanished.
In concert with my producer and G.M. Volonté himself,
I threw away the first two days’ shooting of Todo Modo
since G.M. Volonté’s likeness to Aldo Moro was disgusting,
embarrassing and sickening. (Here)
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A
metaphysical mystery based on the novel by Leonardo Sciascia,
Todo Modo is the most curious and puzzling of Petri’s
films and offers a not-so-veiled criticism of the Christian
Democratic political party. A group of Italy’s most successful
politicians goes on a monastic retreat at the convent
of Don Gaetano (Marcello Mastroianni) to contemplate their
notable careers and to secretly devise a new power structure.
After a series of mysterious crimes, the consortium become
divided and ultimately, depleted. The film’s unabashed
leftish politics are given vivid articulation through
the work of noted production designer Dante Ferretti.
(Here)
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Elio
Petri, his real name Eraclio, was born in Rome on
January 29th 1929 in a modest background , his father
was a coppersmith in Via dei Giubbonari. He was
an only child and grew up in the popular district
near Campo dei Fiori. At school his intelligence
was noticed.
Enrolled
in a famous religious college, the San Giuseppe
de Merode Institute in Piazza di Spagna, he was
expelled for political reasons. He threw himself
into politics, film journalism and cultural activities
within the Youth Federation of the Italian Communist
Party. He writes for l’UNITA’ e GIOVENTU’ NUOVA
and also for the cultural paper CITTA’ APERTA
(he will leave the Party in 1956 after the Hungarian
events).
He
met Giuseppe De Santis and became the assistant
of the author of Riso Amaro. He contributed –
without being accredited – to the script of Roma
Ore Undici (1952) of which he made the previous
interview to the protagonists of the tragedy (this
interview will be published in a volume in 1956).
He continues his activity both as scriptwriter
and as De Santis’ assistant, with Giorni d’Amore
(1955), Uomini e Lupi (1957), La Strada lunga
un Anno (1958), La Gar?onnière (1960). During
these years, Petri writes also screenplays for
Gianni Puccini, Aglauco Casadio, Carlo Lizzani
and will remain attached to “Peppe” De Santis
all his life long.
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The
painter and friend Renzo Vespignani with
Elio Petri
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Jean-Claude
Brialy, Gina Lollobrigida, Alfred Hitcock,
Elio Petri and Francesco Rosi
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After
two shorts – Nasce un Campione (1954) and I Sette
Contadini (1959) Elio Petri made his début directing,
in 1961, The Assassin with a script written together
with Tonino Guerra. The film showed immediately
a great talent in approaching alienated characters
and in describing a Kafkaesque police universe.
For the first time he directs Marcello Mastroianni.
I
Giorni contati (Numbered Days) (1962), his second
film, written again with Tonino Guerra, marks
Petri’s definitive entrenchment in an indirectly
political cinema where the prevailing subjects
are exclusion and the individual’s division. The
main character, vaguely inspired by his father’s
personality, is wonderfully played by Salvo Randone.
After
two features of lesser strain (Il Maestro di Vigevano,
1963 and the sketch Sin in the Afternoon in High
Infidelity, 1964) Petri signs a sci-fiction film
The Tenth Victim written again with Tonino Guerra.
In 1967 he shoots To Each His Own (from Sciascia’s
homonymous novel) one of his most dramatic works
on the intellectual’s incomprehension of reality.
With this film the actor Gian Maria Volonté enters
Petri’s expressive universe and the scriptwriter
Ugo Pirro starts his collaboration with Petri,
which will last till 1973. With A Quiet Place
in the Country - the script written with Tonino
Guerra, it is their last collaboration – he tackles
the topic of the romantic artist’s solitude and
anxiety, starring Franco Nero and Vanessa Redgrave.
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Later
he makes four features which reveal him as one of
the most clear and desperate analysts of contemporary
schizophrenia. They represent a sort of portrait
of Italian society in its plurality and contradiction.
Investigation on a Citizen above Suspicion (1970)
about the police; The Working Class Goes to Heaven
(1971) on the workers’ condition; Propriety is no
longer a Theft (1973) on the role of money and the
individual’s destruction because of it; Todo Modo
(1976) from Sciascia’s homonymous novel, on the
corrupted mental structure of Christian Democracy
power men.
Volonté
is at the centre of these films as Head of the
police, a worker, a Christian Democracy leader.
Actor Ugo Tognazzi will take his place in Propriety
is no longer a Theft.
In
1971 Investigation on a Citizen above Suspicion
wins the Academy Award while in 1972 The Working
Class goes to Heaven receives the Golden Palm
at Cannes.
Heavy
with menaces to political cultural and media conformism
Petri’s cinema meets more and more with production
difficulties. In 1978, giving up subjects more
directly related to the Italian situation, he
shoots for Television an outstanding arrangement
of Sartre’s Dirty Hands, once again exceptionally
well performed by Marcello Mastroianni. Because
of right reasons the film remained unseen outside
Italy.
With
Good News which he produced in 1979 with Giancarlo
Giannini – who starred in the film – Petri gets
to an impasse, that of the lack of communication
where you can find the artist’s distress and the
dismay of his characters. From neurosis to schizophrenia
Petri’s universe is one of the most consistent
and stimulating for a film maker’s commitment
towards his public. Yet after this movie he went
through – just like his heroes – very serious
crises of doubt and existential questioning.
The
last years of his life were dimmed by the difficulty
to start a new film and the attack of the disease
fits. In January 1981 Petri is in Genoa to stage
The American Clock by Arthur Miller – his only
work on stage.
A
new project Chi Illumina la Grande Notte is in
a quite advanced stage: the shooting is planned
in September 1982, Marcello Mastroianni is going
to be the protagonist. In the meantime the disease
has gone terribly ahead: on November 10th 1982
cancer will untimely lead Elio Petri to death.
He was fifty three. (Here)
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Elio
Petri in the 70s in Paris
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004-About
Ignacio de Loyola and spiritual exercises
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Ignatius
of Loyola (WIKI)
Ignatius
of Loyola (Basque: I?igo Loiolakoa, Spanish:
Ignacio de Loyola) (1491[1] – July 31, 1556)
was a Spanish knight from a local Basque
noble family, hermit, priest since 1537,
and theologian, who founded the Society
of Jesus (Jesuits) and was its first Superior
General.[2] Ignatius emerged as a religious
leader during the Counter-Reformation. Loyola's
devotion to the Catholic Church was characterized
by absolute obedience to the Pope.[3]
After
being seriously wounded in the Battle of
Pamplona in 1521, he underwent a spiritual
conversion while in recovery. De Vita Christi
by Ludolph of Saxony inspired Loyola to
abandon his previous military life and devote
himself to labour for God, following the
example of spiritual leaders such as Francis
of Assisi. He experienced a vision of the
Virgin Mary and the infant Jesus while at
the shrine of Our Lady of Montserrat in
March 1522. Thereafter he went to Manresa,
where he began praying for seven hours a
day, often in a nearby cave, while formulating
the fundamentals of the Spiritual Exercises.
In September 1523, Loyola reached the Holy
Land to settle there, but was sent back
to Europe by the Franciscans.
Between
1524 and 1537, Ignatius studied theology
and Latin in the University of Alcalá and
then in Paris. In 1534, he arrived in the
latter city during a period of anti-Protestant
turmoil which forced John Calvin to flee
France. Ignatius and a few followers bound
themselves by vows of poverty, chastity,
and obedience. In 1539, they formed the
Society of Jesus, approved in 1540 by Pope
Paul III, as well as his Spiritual Exercises
approved in 1548. Loyola also composed the
Constitutions of the Society. He died in
July 1556, was beatified by Pope Paul V
in 1609, canonized by Pope Gregory XV in
1622, and declared patron of all spiritual
retreats by Pope Pius XI in 1922. Ignatius'
feast day is celebrated on July 31. Ignatius
is a foremost patron saint of soldiers,
the Society of Jesus, the Basque Country,
and the provinces of Guipúzcoa and Biscay......(More
see WIKI)
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The
Spiritual Exercises are a compilation
of meditations, prayers, and contemplative
practices developed by St. Ignatius
Loyola to help people deepen their
relationship with God. For centuries
the Exercises were most commonly given
as a “long retreat” of about 30 days
in solitude and silence. In recent
years, there has been a renewed emphasis
on the Spiritual Exercises as a program
for laypeople. The most common way
of going through the Exercises now
is a “retreat in daily life,” which
involves a monthslong program of daily
prayer and meetings with a spiritual
director. The Exercises have also
been adapted in many other ways to
meet the needs of modern people.
.(More
see official website)
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Exercitia
spiritualia
1548, First Edition by Antonio Bladio
(Rome) (158x108 mm)
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005-About
the author of the novel Leonardo Sciascia
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Leonardo
Sciascia
(Italian: [leo?nardo ???a??a]; January 8,
1921 – November 20, 1989) was an Italian[1]
writer, novelist, essayist, playwright and
politician. Some of his works have been made
into films, including Open Doors (1990) and
Il giorno della civetta (1968).
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Work
summary |
A
number of his books, such as The Day of the
Owl (Il giorno della civetta) and Equal Danger
(Il contesto), demonstrate how the Mafia manages
to sustain itself in the face of the anomie
inherent in Sicilian life. He presented a
forensic analysis of the kidnapping and assassination
of Aldo Moro, a prominent Christian Democrat,
in his book The Moro Affair. Sciascia's work
is intricate and displays a longing for justice
while attempting to show how corrupt Italian
society had become and remains. His linking
of politicians, intrigue, and the Mafia gave
him a high profile, which was very much at
odds with his private self. This resulted
in his becoming widely disliked for his criticism
of Giulio Andreotti, then Prime Minister,
for his lack of action towards freeing Moro
and answering the demands of the Brigate Rosse
(Red Brigades).
Sciascia
was part of a House of Deputies investigation
into Moro's kidnapping, which concluded
that there was a certain amount of negligence
on the part of the Christian Democrat Party
in their stance that the state was bigger
than a person and that they would not swap
Moro for 13 political prisoners, even though
Moro himself had stated that the swapping
of innocent people for political prisoners
was a valid option in negotiations with
terrorists. However, senior members of the
party conveniently forgot this stance and
even went as far as to say that Moro had
been drugged and tortured to utter these
words.
Sciascia's
books are rarely characterized by a happy
end and by justice for the ordinary man.
Prime examples of this are Equal Danger,
where the police's best detective is drafted
to Sicily to investigate a spate of murders
of judges. Focussing on the inability of
authorities to handle such investigation
into the corruptions, Sciascia's hero is
finally thwarted.
Sciascia
wrote of his unique Sicilian experience,
linking families with political parties,
the treachery of alliances and allegiances
and the calling of favors that result in
outcomes that are not for the benefit of
society, but of those individuals who are
in favor.
His
1984 opus Occhio di Capra is a collection
of Sicilian sayings and proverbs gleaned
from the area around his native village,
to which he was intensely attached throughout
his life.(More
see WIKI)
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Download
Sciascia'
novel “Todo Modo"(Italian and Spanish)PDF-RAR
file 0.6M >>>>
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006-About
Italy
Christian Democracy and "Historic Compromise"
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Christian
Democracy (Italian: Democrazia Cristiana, DC) was
a Christian democratic[3][4] political party in
Italy. It was founded in 1943 as the ideological
successor of the historical Italian People's Party,
which had the same symbol, a crossed shield (scudo
crociato). The DC, a Christian centrist[5] catch-all
party comprising both right-wing and left-wing factions,
dominated the politics of Italy for almost 50 years
from 1944 until its demise amid a welter of corruption
allegations in 1992–1994.
It
was succeeded by several parties, including the
Italian People's Party, the Christian Democratic
Centre, the United Christian Democrats and the
current Union of Christian and Centre Democrats.
However, most former Christian Democrats are now
affiliated to the centre-right The People of Freedom
and the centre-left Democratic Party.
De
Gasperi to Moro [edit]From 1946 until 1994 the
DC was the largest party in Parliament, governing
in successive coalitions with the support of the
Italian Democratic Socialist Party (PSDI), the
PLI, the PRI and, after 1963, the PSI. Basing
its electoral majority largely on the Catholic
countryside, the party originally supported governments
based on liberal-conservative political positions,
then to move into centre-left coalitions by European
standards, despite some disbandaments to the right,
such as the short-lived government led by Fernando
Tambroni in 1960, relying on parliamentary support
from the Italian Social Movement, the post-Fascist
party.
The
party's share of vote was always between 38 and
43% from 1953 to 1979. From 1954 the party was
led by progressive Christian Democrats, such as
Amintore Fanfani, Aldo Moro and Benigno Zaccagnini,
supported by the influential left-wing factions.
Coalitions with the PSI became usual after the
first centre-left government led by Moro in 1963
which saw the participation of the Socialists
in key ministerial posts.
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Major
land reforms were carried out by Christian
Democracy in the poorer rural regions
in the early postwar years, with farms
appropriated from the large landowners
and parcelled out to the peasants. In
addition, during its years in office,
Christian Democrats passed a number of
laws safeguarding employees from exploitation,
established a national health service,
and initiated low-cost housing in Italy’s
major cities.[6]
In
1978 the party was struck by the abduction
and murder of Aldo Moro, who had proposed
a Historic Compromise with the PCI, by
the Red Brigades.
When Moro was abducted, the government,
at the time led by Giulio Andreotti, immediately
took a hardline position stating that
the "State must not bend" on
terrorist demands. This was a very different
position from the one kept in similar
cases (such as the kidnapping of Campanian
DC member Ciro Cirillo a few years later,
for whom a ransom was paid, thanks to
the local ties of the party with camorra)
before. It was however supported by all
the mainstream parties, including the
PCI, with the two notable exceptions of
the PSI and the Radicals. In the second
trial for mafia allegations against Andreotti,
leader of the right wing of the party,
it was said that he took the chance of
getting rid of a dangerous political competitor
by sabotaging all of the rescue options
and ultimately leaving the captors with
no option but killing him.[7] During his
captivity Moro wrote a series of letters,
at times very critical of Andreotti.[8]
Later the memorial written by Moro during
his imprisonment was subject to several
plots, including the assassination of
journalist Mino Pecorelli and general
Carlo Alberto Dalla Chiesa, which involved
Andreotti and some figures of his wing.[9]
(More
see WIKI)
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General
Secretary of the Italian Communist Party
Enrico Berlinguer (1922-1984) |
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Innuendo
in the film had three chiefs of the Christian
Democracy
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Aldo
Moro: September 23, 1916 – May 9, 1978) was an
Italian politician and the 39th Prime Minister
of Italy, from 1963 to 1968, and then from 1974
to 1976. He was one of Italy's longest-serving
post-war Prime Ministers, holding power for a
combined total of more than six years.
A
leader of Democrazia Cristiana (Christian Democracy,
DC), Moro was considered an intellectual and a
patient mediator, especially in the internal life
of his party. He was kidnapped on March 16, 1978,
by the Red Brigades (BR), a Marxist-Leninist terrorist
organization, and killed after 55 days of captivity.(Here)
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Giulio
Andreotti: 14 January 1919 – 6 May 2013) was an
Italian politician of the centrist Christian Democracy
party.[2] He served as the 41st Prime Minister
of Italy from 1972 to 1973, from 1976 to 1979
and from 1989 to 1992.[3] He also served as Minister
of the Interior (1954 and 1978), Defense Minister
(1959–1966 and 1974) and Foreign Minister (1983–1989)
and was a Senator for life from 1991 until his
death in 2013.[3] He was also a journalist and
author.
Andreotti
was sometimes called Divo Giulio (from Latin
Divus Iulius, "Divine Julius", an
epithet of Julius Caesar after his posthumous
deification). During the 16th term of the Senate
in 2008–2013, he opted to join the parliamentary
group UDC – independence.(Here)
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Amintore
Fanfani: 6 February 1908 – 20 November 1999) was
an Italian politician and the former Prime Minister
of Italy. He was one of the well-known Italian
politicians after the Second World War, and a
historical figure of the Christian Democracy (Italian:
Democrazia Cristiana – DC).
Fanfani
and Giovanni Giolitti still hold the record
as the only statesmen to have served as prime
minister of Italy in five non-consecutive periods
of office. Fanfani was one of the dominant figures
of the Italian Christian Democrats for over
three decades.(Here)
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Three
playing actors in the film
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Historic
Compromise
(WIKI)
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In
Italian history, the Historic Compromise (Italian: Compromesso
storico) was an accommodation between the Christian Democrats
(DC) and the Italian Communist Party (PCI) in the 1970s,
after the latter embraced eurocommunism under Enrico Berlinguer.
The 1978 assassination of DC leader Aldo Moro put an end
to the Compromesso storico. Norberto Bobbio was a prominent
intellectual supporter of the accommodation.
Aftermath
[edit]Since the middle of the 1990s until 2008, most communists
and former-communists, many socialists and many former
members of the DC co-operated in the coalitions "The
Olive Tree" and its successor "The Union".
The largest opposition party the Democratic Party considers
itself continuing in the tradition of the compromise.
(Here)
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The
resignation last week of Italian Prime Minister Aldo Moro
means that general elections will be held this June, elections
which may determine the shape of Italy's political future.
The Communist Party (PCI) is likely to emerge as the largest
political force in the country, ending nearly three decades
of Christian Democratic dominance. If it wins a plurality,
the PCI would be able to demand a share of political power
and cabinet representation.
The
Christian Democrats (DC) have proved increasingly incapable
of governing Italy. The past few years have seen an endless
succession of collapsing cabinets; in the face of waves
of strikes and political violence, the DC has been unable
to enact badly needed social reforms. The lira has fallen
drastically and economic growth has come to a standstill.
DC rule has been marked by widespread corruption and scandal.
The recent charge that party leaders accepted payoffs
from the Lockheed Aircraft Corporation is a stellar example.
Furthermore, their conservative position on social issues
has become increasingly unpopular with the electorate,
sixty percent of which defied the DC and the Vatican and
supported divorce in a referendum held last year.
But
the Communist ascendancy is not merely a product of Christian
Democratic weakness. The PCI now participates in five
regional governments and in the municipal governments
of all the major cities north of Rome. There it has been
able to provide effective and honest public administration,
in sharp contrast to the DC's dismal record. More importantly,
the PCI stands for an "Italian road to socialism"
sharply distinct from the Soviet model.
The
independence of the PCI has been evident for some time.
It was graphically demonstrated by the recent confrontation
between its leader Enrico Berlinguer and Brezhnev in Moscow.
The PCI has been strongly committed to democratic institutions
and civil liberties for over thirty years; it favors keeping
Italy in NATO and has renounced the concept of the dictatorship
of the proletariat. In fact, even though the general elections
may well produce a Communist--Socialist majority, the
PCI does not want to form a government exclusively of
the left, fearing that drastic polarization would result,
as it did, for example, in Chile. It prefers the "historic
compromise," a Communist--Christian Democratic coalition
which would provide a broad popular base for the much--needed
transformation of Italian society.
Kissinger
has repeatedly warned that the presence of Communists
in NATO--member governments is unacceptable. The threat
of American intervention, whether diplomatic, economic,
or military, is the most serious obstacle to the potential
success of the historic compromise. In the face of militant
American disapproval and sanctions, menanced by CIA infiltration
and influence, Italians understandably fear that their
country may become another Chile. Their fears are well
supported by the American press, judging from a recent
Newsweek cover. America already considers Italy another
Vietnam.
The
PCI had wanted the general elections to be held after
the 1976 American presidential elections to prevent the
Italian situation from becoming a campaign issue here.
Hence the decision of the DC to hold the elections in
June appears to be designed to intimidate the Italian
electorate with the specter of possible American intervention
in the event of a PCI victory.
Kissinger's
intense opposition to PCI governmental participation is
both shortsighted in terms of American interests and out
of touch with the needs of the Italian people. The PCI's
rise is the product of long term changes in Italian society,
economics, and politics which are unlikely to be reversed.
American interference is unlikely to prevent a PCI victory;
it will only antagonize the electorate. Furthermore, the
historic compromise is the single development most likely
to stabilize Italian politics; it is also the only force
capable of regenerating Italy's stagnating economy.
Nor
would a PCI triumph represent an extension of Soviet domination
into Western Europe; in fact, by legitimating diversity
within European Communism, it would increase the ability
of Eastern European countries to explore alternative socialist
models to that of the Soviet Union. Paradoxically, continued
American intransigence will only weaken the PCI's ability
to maintain its distance from Moscow by undermining its
contention that there is a "third way" between
East and West. American policy makers should abandon their
cold war vision of a monolithic international Communist
movement, and resolutely refrain from interfering with
Italian moves toward the historic compromise. (Here)
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Unfinished
Next page >>>>
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May
3, 2013
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