Exterior Night
Exterior Night | |
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Italian | Esterno notte |
Directed by | Marco Bellocchio |
Screenplay by |
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Story by |
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Produced by |
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Starring |
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Cinematography | Francesco Di Giacomo |
Edited by | Francesca Calvelli |
Music by | Fabio Massimo Capogrosso |
Production companies |
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Distributed by | Lucky Red |
Release dates |
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Running time | 344 minutes |
Countries |
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Language | Italian |
Exterior Night (Italian: Esterno notte) is a 2022 Italian-language drama film co-written and directed by Marco Bellocchio based on the kidnapping and murder of Aldo Moro. The film is the second feature by Bellocchio based on the Moro case after Good Morning, Night, shot in 2003.
Originally conceived as a RAI television miniseries, it premiered out of competition at the 2022 Cannes Film Festival. It was then given a theatrical release in Italy as two films (titled Act I and Act II), before being aired on Rai 1 and on Netflix.
Plot
[edit]Part 1 – Aldo Moro
[edit]In 1978, Aldo Moro, the president of Christian Democracy (DC), attempted to form a government of national unity with the external support of the Italian Communist Party in what was a first time for a country belonging to the North Atlantic Treaty. During the party assembly, Moro tries to convince the most recalcitrant exponents within the party about the goodness of this operation. Francesco Cossiga, who would be confirmed as Minister of the Interior in the new government led by Giulio Andreotti, privately tells Moro that the Americans will not agree but Moro asks him to reassure them. Moro and Andreotti are working to form the new cabinet and they dissatisfy several members of their party with the role assigned to them. Late in the evening, before returning home, Moro meets Enrico Berlinguer to whom he hands over the list of ministers and undersecretaries.
On 16 March, Moro leaves his home accompanied by his escort. While the swearing-in ceremony of the Andreotti IV Cabinet is in progress, the cars of Moro and the escort are attacked in via Mario Fani by an armed nucleus of the Red Brigades (BR); the agents are killed and Moro is kidnapped. Andreotti, having received the news, goes to the bathroom to vomit. The police forces start looking for Moro who in the meantime, after being drugged, wakes up inside a wooden box transported in a van.
Part 2 – The Minister of the Interior
[edit]Cossiga is in despair over the incident and asks the task force of his department to do everything possible to obtain Moro's release. A photo taken by the BR in the hideout proves that Moro is alive. On 29 March, Moro's private secretary brings Cossiga a letter written by him. Cossiga read the letter to Andreotti and affirmed that it would be better to open a channel with the BR, which made the letter public: the confidential negotiation could not even start. The expert reports carried out suggest that Moro may have been drugged: his condition would therefore be such that the moral value of his letters has lost credibility.
Part 3 – The Pope
[edit]Pope Paul VI asks the crowd of faithful to pray for Moro and makes an appeal that he be returned to his loved ones. Monsignor Agostino Casaroli reports to Andreotti that the Pope has raised 20 billion lire to pay the ransom and that, with the consent of the Italian government, he would like to use a Vatican route to save Moro. The leaders of the armed forces tell Andreotti that if a ransom is paid there will be chaos. Andreotti accepts the yes to the redemption option from the secretaries of the main parties. Cesare Curioni, chaplain of the San Vittore Prison, has the difficult task of mediating with the kidnappers, an attempt that fails because they refuse to provide proof that Moro is alive. The Pope then manifests his intention to contact the kidnappers personally.
Part 4 – The Terrorists
[edit]Adriana Faranda begins her life within the Red Brigades. On 8 March, the BR are training in view of the attack on Moro's escort and Mario Moretti excludes Faranda because she has recently joined the group. On 18 April, divers scour the Duchessa Lake near Rieti in search of Moro's body; Faranda and Valerio Morucci are opposed to the killing of Moro, while Moretti and Barbara Balzerani are determined and do not want to have second thoughts.
Part 5 – Eleonora
[edit]Eleonora Moro arrives at the site of the ambush in via Fani and is immediately concerned that her husband has his medicines with him. Back home, she reunites with her family and welcomes, almost reluctantly, various figures from the political scene, including Benigno Zaccagnini and Italy's president Giovanni Leone. Eleonora is furious because her husband is considered crazy in the newspapers and attacks Zaccagnini for not wanting to start a deal with the BR.
On 22 April, the Pope makes a public appeal asking that Moro be released simply, without conditions. Eleonora tells her children that even the Pope has surrendered. On 30 April, a member of the BR calls Eleonora arguing that she needs a direct and clarifying intervention from Zaccagnini to change the situation, otherwise it will be inevitable for the BR to kill Moro. Eleonora immediately calls Leone asking him to put pressure on Zaccagnini but even the president of the Italian Republic does not seem to want to help her.
Part 6 – The End
[edit]On 8 May, Antonio Mennini is secretly brought to the hideout so that Moro can confess for the last time: the statesman unburdens himself with him, accusing the entire DC and above all Andreotti of having sentenced him to death. The next day, Morucci calls from a telephone booth telling him that he should let the Moro family know that the body is in the trunk of a car in via Caetani. Cossiga rushes to the place being challenged harshly by those present and being shocked. Meanwhile, the hideout where Moro had been kept is cleaned up in a hurry by the BR.
Cast
[edit]- Fabrizio Gifuni as Aldo Moro
- Margherita Buy as Eleonora Chiavarelli, Moro's wife
- Toni Servillo as Pope Paul VI
- Fausto Russo Alesi as Francesco Cossiga
- Daniela Marra as Adriana Faranda
- Gabriel Montesi as Valerio Morucci
- Fabrizio Contri as Giulio Andreotti
- Gigio Alberti as Benigno Zaccagnini
Production
[edit]On 18 January 2020, Bellocchio announced that he would be shooting a series centered on the kidnapping of Aldo Moro; later the episodes were combined into a film divided into two parts.[1][2]
Accolades
[edit]Award | Date of ceremony | Category | Recipient(s) | Result |
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David di Donatello Awards[3] | 10 May 2023 | Best Film | Exterior Night | Nominated |
Best Director | Marco Bellocchio | Won | ||
Best Actor | Fabrizio Gifuni | Won | ||
Best Actress | Margherita Buy | Nominated | ||
Best Supporting Actor | Fausto Russo Alesi | Nominated | ||
Toni Servillo | Nominated | |||
Best Supporting Actress | Daniela Marra | Nominated | ||
Best Original Screenplay | Marco Bellocchio, Stefano Bises, Ludovica Rampoldi e Davide Serino | Nominated | ||
Best Producer | The Apartment, Kavac Film | Nominated | ||
Best Cinematography | Francesco Di Giacomo | Nominated | ||
Best Sets and Decorations | Andrea Castorina, Marco Martucci and Laura Casalini | Nominated | ||
Best Costumes | Daria Calvelli | Nominated | ||
Best Make-up | Enrico Iacoponi | Won | ||
Best Hairstyling | Alberta Giuliani | Nominated | ||
Best Visual Effects | Massimo Cipollina | Nominated | ||
Best Editing | Francesca Calvelli and Claudio Misantoni | Won | ||
Best Sound | Gaetano Carito, Lilio Rosato and Nadia Paone | Nominated | ||
Best Score | Fabio Massimo Capogrosso | Nominated |
Related articles
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ "Bellocchio si confessa: «È stato Camilleri a suggerirmi di fare il regista»". Open.online. 18 January 2020. Retrieved 18 May 2023.
- ^ "Al cinema "Esterno notte", la prima serie di Bellocchio sul caso Moro". Today.it. 17 May 2022. Retrieved 18 May 2023.
- ^ "David di Donatello 2023, tutti i premi assegnati". raicultura.it. Retrieved 18 May 2023.
External links
[edit]- 2022 films
- 2020s French films
- 2020s Italian films
- 2020s Italian-language films
- 2022 drama films
- Drama films based on actual events
- Films about kidnapping
- Films directed by Marco Bellocchio
- Films set in 1978
- Films set in Rome
- Films shot in Rome
- Italian films based on actual events
- Italian-language French films
- Years of Lead (Italy) films
- Films produced by Lorenzo Mieli