Dante Alighieri (1265-1321) |
The show opened last week and runs to the end of January. Reviews, so far, have generally focused more on the special effects that were created by Carlo Rambaldi, who has two Oscars to his name for the visual effects in "Alien" (1979) and "E.T.: The Extra-Terrestrial" (1982), than on the content. But audiences have been enthusiastic. "What I like most is the plot, watching Dante's interior voyage from false love to freedom," said Sister Maria, one of some two dozen nuns from the Daughters of the Church Order, who attended a recent matinee. "And it's very forceful because of today's technology, though the music is a little loud."Dante is as popular and relevant as ever, as shown by Roberto Benigni's improbable stand-up act about the Commedia. Now there is real money involved: a company called Nova Ars has invested €10 million ($14.8 million) to defray production costs. You can listen to a clip at the flashy Web site: it sounds like Howard Shore.
Indeed, the special effects are so spectacular - including a triumphal march of golden-winged angels, acrobats, flower-strewing damsels, and a gigantic griffin pulling a golden cart - that a special theater measuring 40 meters by 150 meters, or 130 feet by 492 feet, was built in Tor Vergata, a Roman suburb about 14 kilometers, or 9 miles, from the city center. There are red-LED-eyed demons writhing acrobatically in various spheres of Hell against a backdrop of sets inspired by Gustave Doré, whose 19th-century engravings of "The Divine Comedy" are arguably the most famous. There are dramatic smoke-machine-propelled entrances and apocalyptic battles between Good and Evil played out on invisible trapezes.
About Dante, yesterday Roberto Benigni token a good show on Raiuno, speaking about Inferno and Virgilio.
ReplyDeleteHe is a great man!
Bye. CST
I've also seen the show yesterday CST mentions... Benigni did a minor exegesis of Inferno V, explaining all sorts of things about the text itself, highly enthusiastic, which got me hooked (and reading along) although I must have read the canto a dozen times. Glad I stayed, though, because his performance (towards the end) was quite intense, with tears not only in the eyes (and voice) of the actor (vv. 139ff.: "Mentre che l'uno spirto questo disse,/ l'altro piangea; sì che di pietade/ io venni men così com'io morisse;/ e caddi come corpo morto cade.") but also of the spectator. He closed with joking about how the public now knew that he "really likes the book".
ReplyDeleteI'm amazed, Benigni or no, that such a show is possible on TV; quite unthinkable in Austria. But then, we don't have a Dante in German literature either.