Dillinger Is Dead

Dillinger Is Dead (Italian: Dillinger è morto) is a 1969 Italian drama directed by Marco Ferreri. It stars Michel Piccoli, Anita Pallenberg and Annie Girardot. The story is a darkly satiric blend of fantasy and reality. It follows a bored, alienated man over the course of one night in his home. The title comes from a newspaper headline featured in the film which proclaims the death of the real life American gangster John Dillinger.

Dillinger Is Dead
Theatrical release poster
Directed byMarco Ferreri
Written byMarco Ferreri
Sergio Bazzini
Produced byEver Haggiag
Alfred Levy
for Pegaso Film
StarringMichel Piccoli
Anita Pallenberg
Annie Girardot
CinematographyMario Vulpiani
Edited byMirella Mencio
Music byTeo Usuelli
Distributed byRoissy Films
Release date
23 January 1969
Running time
95 minutes
CountryItaly
LanguageItalian

The film proved controversial on its initial release for its subject matter and violence but is now generally regarded as Ferreri's masterpiece. It was acclaimed by the influential French film magazine Cahiers du cinéma and afterwards Ferreri worked and lived in Paris for many years. Since the mid-1980s the film has been screened only very rarely.

In 2008, the film was included on the Italian Ministry of Cultural Heritage’s 100 Italian films to be saved, a list of 100 films that "have changed the collective memory of the country between 1942 and 1978."[1]

Plot

Glauco, a middle-aged industrial designer of gas masks, is growing tired of his occupation. Having discussed alienation with a colleague at the factory, he returns home. His wife is in bed with a headache but has left him dinner, which has become cold. He is dissatisfied with the food and begins preparing himself a gourmet meal. While collecting ingredients he discovers an old revolver wrapped in a 1934 newspaper with the headline "Dillinger is dead" and an account of the famous American gangster's death. Glauco cleans and restores the gun while continuing to cook his dinner, then paints it red with white polka dots. He also eats his meal, watches some television and projected home movies, listens to music and seduces their maid. With the gun he enacts suicide a number of times. At dawn he shoots his wife thrice in the head as she sleeps. Then he drives to the seaside where he gets a job as a chef on a yacht bound for Tahiti.

Themes

The film, and especially its surreal finale in which the character Glauco leaves home and finds a job on a yacht, has been interpreted variously. Author Fabio Vighi approached it from a psychoanalytical standpoint, suggesting the uxoricide is an attempt to "kill" something inside himself. Glauco repeatedly stages his own suicide throughout the film. The final murder, then, is a means to escape his life by eliminating the primary link to his bourgeois lifestyle, which he would otherwise be unable to leave.[2]

Writer Mira Liehm posits director Marco Ferreri followed in the style of the Theatre of the Absurd and did not apply psychology or logic to his characters but then placed his absurdist creations in a real world context. The home with its many luxuries, such as the gourmet dining and film projector, as well as the cleaning and decoration of the gun, are meaningless diversions which trap Glauco in a metaphorical prison and suffocate him. His isolation leads to death or an "illusionary escape".[3] As Italian film historian Paolo Bertetto explained, "The escape to Tahiti means a total closure of all horizons, the paralysis of all possibilities; we are brought down to zero, stripped of all perspectives, and restored to the original nothingness."[3]

Cast

  • Michel Piccoli as Glauco: a middle-age designer of protective masks which allow people to breathe under inhospitable conditions. Isolated, ennuyed and insomniac, he searches his house for diversion. Piccoli viewed the role as that of an "eternal child or this childlike rebirth of 'mature' man, between despair, suicide, simple insomnia, dream."[4]
  • Anita Pallenberg as Anita, Glauco's wife
  • Annie Girardot as Sabina, the maid

Production

Director Marco Ferreri first met leading man Michel Piccoli when he visited the actor on the set of Alain Cavalier's La Chamade (1968). Ferreri had Piccoli read a few pages from Dillinger Is Dead and hired him immediately. Piccoli has said Ferreri did not direct his performance and only gave simple blocking instructions. He played the character as solitary and volatile, comparing it to his role in Agnès Varda's Les Créatures (1966).

Release and reception

The film was entered into the 1969 Cannes Film Festival.[5] Dillinger Is Dead was the subject of controversy on its release for its violence and depiction of the parvenu set.[4] Critics have also called it director Marco Ferreri's masterpiece.[3] The influential French film magazine Cahiers du Cinéma praised the film, interviewed the director and translated two of his previous interviews from the Italian magazine . The acclaim opened the resources of Paris to Ferreri and he spent much of the next 15 years living there. During that time he made his internationally best known films, including The Last Woman (1976) and Bye Bye Monkey (1978). Ferreri and Michel Piccoli became fast friends and worked together subsequently on films such as The Last Woman and La Grande Bouffe (1973).[6]

According to critic Viano Maurizio, by the mid-1980s Reaganomics' effect on the film market resulted in Dillinger's near disappearance and it has been rarely seen since.[6] It appeared in the 2006 Marco Ferreri Retrospective in London.[7][8] A new print was provided by The Criterion Collection for the 2007 Telluride Film Festival.[9] It premiered on Turner Classic Movies in America on June 26, 2016.[10]

References

  1. "Ecco i cento film italiani da salvare Corriere della Sera". www.corriere.it. Retrieved 2021-03-11.
  2. Vighi, Fabio (2006). "Enjoying the Real: unconscious strategies of subversion". Traumatic Encounters in Italian Film: Locating the Cinematic Unconscious. Intellect Books. p. 67. ISBN 978-1-84150-140-6.
  3. Liehm, Mira (March 1986). "The Glorious Sixties (1961 - 1969)". Passion and Defiance: Italian Film from 1942 to the Present. University of California Press. pp. 206–207. ISBN 0-520-05744-9.
  4. Béghin, Cyril (November 2005). "The Actor and the Secret: Interview with Michel Piccoli". Sally Shafto (trans). Cahiers du cinéma. Archived from the original on 2007-08-10. Retrieved 2007-09-09.
  5. "Festival de Cannes: Dillinger Is Dead". festival-cannes.com. Archived from the original on 2012-03-08. Retrieved 2009-04-05.
  6. Viano, Maurizio (2004). "La Grande Abbuffata / La Grande Bouffe". In Giorgio Bertellini (ed.). The Cinema of Italy. Wallflower Press. p. 195. ISBN 1-903364-98-1. Archived from the original on 2007-10-19. Retrieved 2007-09-11.
  7. "Marco Ferreri Retrospective" (PDF). Ciné Lumière. November 2006. Retrieved 2007-09-08.
  8. "Marco Ferreri". Vertigo Magazine. 2006. Retrieved 2007-09-08.
  9. Kramer, Edith (2007). "32: Dillinger Is Dead" (PDF). 34th Telluride Film Festival. Telluride Film Festival. p. 20. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2007-10-09. Retrieved 2007-09-08.
  10. TCM Forum, Accessed July 6, 2016
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.