Yesterday was released in French theaters "Fortapàsc, Marco Risi's film on the history and the murder of Giancarlo Siani, twenty-six journalist precarious Il Mattino, brutally murdered by the mafia because "uncomfortable." The work is scheduled in just fourteen rooms throughout France, but it is always a result. The promotion aims, ça va sans dire, the curiosity that is breathed in Europe on the phenomenon that the Neapolitan underworld, after "Gomorra," a bit 'all have come to know. In the trailer, in fact, reads: "The Camorra has murdered thousands of people. But only a journalist."
Allocine that I read about the criticism he has received well. The famous magazine Positif (the "competitor" of perhaps the most famous "Cahiers du cinéma), suggests four out of five stars. Even Premiere. The average goes down, however, with Le Monde that suppresses: a star. Instead
Fortapsàsc is a good movie, maybe not one of those films to be counted among the masterpieces of Italian civil commitment, but certainly well done and "necessary."
As they say in those parts, courage!
Allocine that I read about the criticism he has received well. The famous magazine Positif (the "competitor" of perhaps the most famous "Cahiers du cinéma), suggests four out of five stars. Even Premiere. The average goes down, however, with Le Monde that suppresses: a star. Instead
Fortapsàsc is a good movie, maybe not one of those films to be counted among the masterpieces of Italian civil commitment, but certainly well done and "necessary."
As they say in those parts, courage!
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