NAPLES '44, A film by Francisco Patierno.
85 minutes, color, 2016.
In 1943 a young British officer, Norman Lewis,
entered a war-torn Naples with the American Fifth Army. Lewis began writing in his notepad everything that happened to him during his one-year stay, observing the complex social cauldron of a city that contrived every day the most incredible ways of fighting to survive. These notes turned into his masterpiece, a memoir titled Naples '44.
With narration by Benedict Cumberbatch, this new documentary based on Lewis's memoir imagines him returning many years later to the city that charmed and seduced him.
Combining archival war footage with clips from movies set in Naples from the 1950s and 60s (featuring Marcello Mastroianni and Ernest Borgnine among others) we see a thrilling and unpredictable parade of unforgettable stories and characters: women in feather hats milking cows in the rubble, statues of saints carried by hysterical crowds attempting to stop Vesuvius erupting and impoverished citizens impersonating aristocrats. But this unusual and riveting evocation of a timeless city is also a powerful condemnation of the horrors of war, whether just or unjust.
"A journey through a city turned upside down and inside out - overflowing with sex and death, violence and ingenuity. Horrifying and thrilling."
- The Guardian
"A feat of editing and research.
Lewis served as a remarkable chronicler of life in the occupied city.
His plain-spoken yet poetic sentences are read by Benedict Cumberbatch,
and the fluid editing skillfully illustrates his words."
- The New York Times
"A highly unusual documentary...this is a film that must be seen more than once."
- Film Journal International
"Atmospheric, involving. Benedict Cumberbatch reads the author's words beautifully."
- The Hollywood Reporter
"A riveting film, a complex portrait of the mystery of Naples."
- Corriere della Sera
On iTunes March 6 | On DVD March 20
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