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| Fists in the Pocket |
Il Cinema Ritrovato gets underway on a Saturday afternoon. That's after a bit of show business involving the festival's artistic direction team in the marvellous Modernissimo cinema under a corner of Bologna's Piazza Maggiore. Last night a few people sneaked off to see Marco Bellocchio introduce a 4K restoration of his debut feature Fists in the Pocket. It was hailed as a masterpiece back in the day and remains so..or at least that was the advice of someone who was there. Two years ago Bellocchio, who is the Chair of the Foundation that manages the Cineteca di Bologna (pardon if my understanding of the governance arrangements is a bit thin) presented his film Slap the Monster on Page One, a brilliant excoriation of the right wing yellow press which Cinema Reborn went after for its 2025 season but to no avail. The rights holder didn't answer our polite email enquiries.
But the real show started today and for me there were three screenings in a row in the Jolly Cinema. Two years ago it was loudly trumpeted that the aircon in the Jolly had finally been fixed but the sad news is that it seems to have, like many Catholics, lapsed once more. The swelter seems to be back.
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| Amma Ariyan |
First up though was Amma Ariyan (John Abraham, India, 1986) from India's Parallel Cinema cohort. The catalogue notes tell us this was "Abraham’s final work before his untimely death in 1987. It is a film that details the history of revolutionary politics in Kerala through the prism of the road movie, adopting an iconoclastic structure in which flashbacks, ellipses and inserts punctuate the narrative with personal and historical reports on social resistance and political disillusionment, including the militant labour riots of Cochin in 1953."
The restored film screened in Cannes Classics just last month and the restoration work was done by Shivendra Singh Dengapur's Film Heritage Foundation. Anti Alanen told me how impressed he was by it, a profound film. I found watching it a slog I have to say. Screened in a superb 4K restoration where a lot of work has been done on the sound.
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| Publicity shot for Easy Living |
Light relief followed with Mitchell Leisen's Easy Living, screening on a 35mm print, the first film in the Leisen strand and kicking off with one of the director's least subtle comedies. There are likely more pratfalls in this movie than in the rest of Leisen's entire career. It's called screwball and the moments when Jean Arthur expresses her incomprehension as to why such privilege and lavish hospitality is being rained down on her are brilliant. Preston Sturges script is either too broad for comfort or Leisen made it so. Who will ever know but it may have been one of those crucial moments that caused Sturges to want to film his own scripts.
Daisuke Ito may well have been a totally unknown (outside Japan) name until the Bologna team announced it was devoting a major retrospective to him. Curator Johan Nordstrom spelt out in detail just how much institutional and corporate assistance has gone into the Daisuke Ito selection - three silent films with Benshi and traditional Japanese instrumental accompaniment, plus a seven film sound period selection.
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| Osho |
Co-curator Alexander Jacoby introduced the first Ito sound film Osho suggesting that it was slightly to one side of Ito's Jidaigeki movies. The catalogue note says Osho is "Arguably the most famous film of Ito’s postwar career, ... a biopic of a master of shogi (the canonical Japanese variant of chess). From a humble background, illiterate and initially selftaught, Sakata Sankichi (1870-1946) rose to rank among the great players of his generation. Ito focuses on his rivalry with Kinjiro Sekine, the leading professional player of his era.
Chess is not a great background for a movie of interest to many. Dont ask me how I know this, I just do. This film doesn't jump that hurdle and the ecstasy of an obsessed man and the agony of those who have to put up with his obsessions is not something that grabbed me. I think I'm going to be even more appreciative of the jidaigeki movies to come.
The excitement of the day wasn't/isn't on the movie screen. As I write this Ivory Coast is putting up a great show in its World Cup match against Germany. The Africans are far more imaginative, elegant and exciting...It's 1/1...who knows...




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