Mixed Reviews
Thin Acceptance
– Directed by Marco Bellocchio
– More
– Language
English
|
Diavolo in corpo, Il
» more
ENGLISH
Diavolo in corpo, Il
:02:17 ...where you got it,
the white tablecloth,
:02:20 as soon as dinner is finished!
:02:22 Look out, the dead are coming!
:02:24 The sad, pale dead!
:02:26 Later on in the same poem,
TheTablecloth,
:02:29 a little later the poem continues:
:02:31 The little girl's already grown up:
:02:33 She looks after the house, and works...
:02:35 she does the washing and cooking,
:02:36 does everything as it was done then.
:02:38 She thinks of everything,
but not of clearing the table.
:02:42 She lets the dead,
the good, poor dead come.
:02:46 This means that the dead
in Pascoli's poem
:02:49 are never frightening,
persecuting presences,
:02:52 indeed they're the only
presences with whom
:02:56 the poet can have a relationship,
cry and be consoled.
:02:59 They're his own family:
His dad, his mum...
:03:03 childhood happiness.
:03:04 All of this is highly idealised.
:03:06 The dead talk to him:
:03:08 There's a voice in my life...
:03:10 Precisely due to the
goodness of these emotions
:03:13 and the cult of and
attachment to the family,
:03:17 the unavoidable sense of duty...
:03:20 Pascoli became the poet
par excellence in school books.
:03:24 Which, however, are never
concerned enough
:03:27 Fuck off!
:03:28 With emphasising the extreme...
:03:30 Miss! Miss, look at me!
:03:31 What's happening?
:03:32 Don't move.
What's happening?
:03:35 I told you not to move!
:03:36 Don't lean out, don't lean out!
:03:46 Leave me alone!
:03:51 Miss? Miss, look at me!
:03:55 Look at me!
|