| Porte aperte | |
|---|---|
|  | |
| Directed by | Gianni Amelio | 
| Written by | Gianni Amelio Vincenzo Cerami Alessandro Sermoneta | 
| Starring | |
| Cinematography | Tonino Nardi | 
| Edited by | Simona Paggi | 
| Music by | Franco Piersanti | 
| Distributed by | Orion Classics (US) | 
| Release date | 
 | 
| Running time | 108 minutes | 
| Country | Italy | 
| Language | Italian | 
| Box office | $252,000 (Italy)[1] | 
Open Doors (Italian: Porte aperte) is a 1990 Italian film directed by Gianni Amelio. Set in Palermo in the 1930s, a judge who is morally against the death penalty is confronted with the case of a man who has murdered his wife and two colleagues in cold blood. Opposed by both the fascist government - endorsing death penalty since it allows people to be safe to the point of "sleeping at night with open doors" - and public opinion, he struggles to do what he believes is right. Based on a 1987 novel, "Porte Aperte", by Leonardo Sciascia. The film was selected as the Italian entry for the Best Foreign Language Film at the 63rd Academy Awards and was nomination.[2]
Plot
The film opens with a Fascist bureaucrat, recently fired, killing the man who fired him, the man who replaced him, and his wife.
Cast
- Gian Maria Volonté as Judge Vito di Francesco
- Ennio Fantastichini as Tommasco Scalia
- Renato Carpentieri as Consolo
- Tuccio Musumeci as Spatafora
- Silverio Blasi as Attorney
- Vitalba Andrea as Rosa Scalia
- Giacomo Piperno as Prosecutor
- Lydia Alfonsi as Marchesa Anna Pironti
- Renzo Giovampietro as President Sanna
Awards and nominations
Won
- 1991 David di Donatello:
- Best Actor - Gian Maria Volonté
- Best Costume Design - Gianna Gissi
- Best Film
- Best Sound - Remo Ugolinelli
 
- 3rd European Film Awards:
- Best Cinematography
- Best Film
- Discovery of the Year Award - Ennio Fantastichini
 
- Italian Golden Globes:
- Best Actor - Gian Maria Volonté
- Best Film
- Best Screenplay
 
- Italian National Syndicate of Film Journalists
- Best Director
- Best Supporting Actor - Ennio Fantastichini
 
- Montpellier Mediterranean Film Festival
- Critics Award - Gianni Amelio
- Golden Antigone - Gianni Amelio
 
Nominated
- 63rd Academy Awards:
- Best Foreign Language Film
 
- 1991 David di Donatello:
- Best Cinematography - Tonino Nardi
- Best Director - Gianni Amelio
- Best Editing - Simona Paggi
- Best Producer - Angelo Rizzoli Jr.
- Best Production Design - Amedeo Fago, Franco Velchi
- Best Screenplay - Gianni Amelio, Vincenzo Cerami
- Best Supporting Actor - Ennio Fantastichini
 
- 3rd European Film Awards:
- Special Prize of the Jury - Gian Maria Volonté
 
- Italian National Syndicate of Film Journalists
- Best Actor - Gian Maria Volonté
- Best Screenplay
 
See also
References
- ↑ Bisogni, Daniela (3 September 1990). "Italo b.o. piccolo". Variety. p. 51.
- ↑ "The 63rd Academy Awards (1991) Nominees and Winners". Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. Retrieved 12 September 2015.
External links