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TIME: Almanac 1995
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1995-02-26
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<text id=93TT0456>
<title>
Nov. 01, 1993: The Arts & Media:Cinema
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
Nov. 01, 1993 Howard Stern & Rush Limbaugh
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
THE ARTS & MEDIA, Page 90
CINEMA
On The Run From Terror
</hdr>
<body>
<p>An Italian thriller portrays a 10-year-old's nightmare
</p>
<p>By RICHARD SCHICKEL
</p>
<p> In movies this has been the year (possibly the decade) of the
threatened child. The stories told about such children--abused
or abandoned, in some way forced to cope prematurely with life's
terrors--can be read in a couple of ways. They may represent
a revival of interest by moviemakers in one of fiction's archetypes,
that of the child alone and improvising in a world he didn't
make and doesn't understand. They may also reflect our relatively
new sensitivity to child abuse.
</p>
<p> Whatever the case, no youngster has lately, or perhaps ever,
been placed in more deadly peril than 10-year-old Vito (Manuel
Colao) in Flight of the Innocent. And no director has more vividly
realized the plight of an innocent than youthful Carlo Carlei
(who wrote the screenplay with Gualtiero Rosella). One fine
warm day in Calabria, in southern Italy, Vito's entire family
(and a boy they have mysteriously sequestered in a cave nearby)
is massacred, and Vito narrowly escapes execution at the hands
of a scarfaced man who will stalk him (and his nightmares) for
the rest of the film.
</p>
<p> Neither Vito nor the audience entirely understands what's happening
to him. All he (and we) know is that he must flee for his life.
And therein lies the key to this film's success. For Carlei
wants to thrust us into the mind of this almost completely silent
boy. He gives us no more information than Vito acquires, in
bits and pieces, as he flees to Rome in search of something,
somebody--we're not sure. Carlei's camera is often radically
subjective, seeing through Vito's eyes as the boy rushes panicked
through the streets. Equally often it is radically objective,
tracking a small, lonely figure in landscapes mysterious and
menacing to him.
</p>
<p> These things we learn in due course: that Vito's sole surviving
relative is a small-time crook in Rome; that the dead boy in
the cave had been kidnapped by Vito's family and was being held
for ransom; that the family's slayers were members of a rival
clan (though their precise motives remain obscure). Vito catches
glimpses of the dead boy's parents on TV, making anguished pleas
for his return. Eventually he feels compelled to make his way
to them, and attempts to crawl into their son's bed, into his
very life. The moviemakers note that there have been nearly
700 kidnappings for ransom in Italy since 1986. They also observe
that murderous clan warfare is a continuing fact of life in
Calabria. But Flight of the Innocent is not primarily a sociological
tract nor an exercise in save-the-children sentiment. Little
Vito has no time for such abstractions. His life depends on
the correctness of hasty impressions, silent intuitions of danger.
The result is something much better than sentiment. It is something
quite close to the high emotions classic tragedy is supposed
to evoke--quite close, that is, to pity and terror.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>