Les Unwanted de Europa explained

Les Unwanted de Europa
Native Name:Gli Insdesiderati D'Europa
Director:Fabrizio Ferraro
Producer:Lluís Miñarro, Fabio Parente
Music:John Cage
Cinematography:Giancarlo Leggeri, Simone Borgna
Editing:Fabrizio Ferraro
Studio:Eddie Saeta, Passepartout Cooperativa Sociale
Distributors:-->
Runtime:112 minutes
Country:Italy / Spain
Language:French, Catalan, German

Les Unwanted de Europa (Italian: Gli indesiderati d'Europa) is a 2018 Spanish-Italian historical black and white film directed by Fabrizio Ferraro.

Synopsis

The film depicts the final journey of philosopher Walter Benjamin across the Pyrenees in September 1940, during which Benjamin was guided by Lisa Fittko along a trail (the Route Lister) along which Catalans and internationalist militants had previously fled the Franco regime into France during the Spanish Civil War; six months after, Benjamin was amongst the first of a number of groups of Jews, communists and dissidents fleeing Nazi-occupied France into Spain. Upon arrival in Portbou, the Spanish police threatened to turn back the refugees, and Benjamin committed suicide overnight. The film does not show his death, instead depicting the journey itself in the style of Slow Cinema, with minimal dialogue (selections from Benjamin's writings and conversations between the travellers, as well as between Benjamin and a librarian at the Bibliothèque Nationale, discussing Nietzsche) and sporadic use of music (by John Cage). Benjamin's journey is intercut with a journey along the reverse route by three anti-fascist militiamen in February 1939.[1] The film ends with Benjamin calling out "Blanqui! Blanqui! Talk to me, I'm listening! I hear you" and a long, unmoving shot of Benjamin asleep on the ground.

Production

The film stars Euplemio Macrì as Walter Benjamin and Catarina Wallenstein as Lisa Fittko. Author, musician and artist Pau Riba also features as one of the militiamen. Dialogue is predominantly French, including selections from Benjamin's writings, as well as Catalan and German. Music selections are taken from John Cage's Quartets.

The film was shot in Lazio, Italy; Barcelona, Spain; Banyuls-sur-Mer, Pyrénées-Orientales, France; Portbou, Girona, Catalonia, Spain; and La Vajol, Girona, Catalonia, Spain.

The film premiered on 26 January 2018 at the Rotterdam International Film Festival. It was subsequently released on 24 April 2018.

The film is an Italian-Spanish co-production between Passepartout, Eddie Saeta and Rai Cinema, in collaboration with the Jean Vigo-Cinémathèque Euro-regional Institute of Perpignan.[2]

Cast

Reception

The film has received a relatively limited theatrical release, though it was shown on the streaming website MUBI in January 2019. It has received some critical discussion in Italian-language film journals, notably by critic Valerio Carando, who praises Ferraro's use of "openings, uncertainties, those that for institutional cinema are only imperfections, fragility to be discarded."[3] Meanwhile, academic and critic Roberto Pittaluga discusses the film in the context of the European migrant crisis and the rise of Fascism in the 21st century, as well as Benjamin's own thought, writing: "Les unwanted de Europa is a film about migration and exile at the time they happen, neither before nor after but in that time and that space between, the spacetime of the no longer and the not yet. And Ferraro intends, in a very Benjaminian way, to show that time and that space."[4]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Gli Indesiderati D'Europa – un Film di Fabrizio Ferraro. it-IT. 2020-04-08.
  2. Web site: Les Unwanted de Europa: The exiled. Cineuropa - the best of european cinema. en. 2020-04-08.
  3. Web site: Gli Indesiderati D'Europa – un Film di Fabrizio Ferraro. it-IT. 2020-04-08.
  4. Web site: Les unwanted de Europa (2018) de Fabrizio Ferraro. Roberto. Pittalgua. 2019. En Memoria Académica.