sound and fury
by Douglas Messerli
Marco Bellocchio (screenwriter and
director) I pugni in tasca (Fists in the Pocket) 1965, USA 1968
Marco Bellocchio’s Fists in the Pocket of 1965 was one of a
series of films by younger directors such as Pasolini who completely
transformed Italian filmmaking. It had the loose and structure and visual
energy of the French New Wave but expressed its Italian connections with grand
family fictions such as The Leopard,
without any of the latter’s splendor.
This family was far closer to Jean-Pierre Melville’s—himself a precursor
to the New Wave directions—Les enfants
Terrible, with its characters” incestuous glances and pants, focusing on
the weak-willed and spoiled boy who prefers death to life. There is even an
element in this work that might remind one of the wealthy family in Fellini’s La Dolce Vita, of five years earlier,
who near the end of the film are visited by the vulgar Italian superstars and
the raggazi-hangers-on—only this Italian family of former wealth has now become
simply a nest of loonies, who even the course-cut provincials realize are
beyond salvation.
Their middle-aged mother (Liliana Gerace), with the demeanor of a
permanent saint, painfully suffers it all; but then she is both symbolically
and literally blind; she not only cannot see the madness going on around her,
she clearly wishes not to know what is happening. Their meals together might be
described as something close to a ghoulish funeral gathering.
This family of horrors survive through
the unidentified work of Augusto, the only seemingly stable one among them. Yet
Bellocchio reveals him to be a brutal opportunist, a man who regularly visits
the whores, while yet applying his charms to the local beauties such as the
seemingly “normal” Lucia (Jenny MacNeil)—who is startled by the family’s
seeming eccentricities.
Despite this “nest of ninnes,” the sensitive viewer does come to feel
for each of them, particularly for the brightest and maddest of them all
Allesandro, who, as critic Deborah Young, argues, takes on the collective
family guilt, determined to allow the bread-earning Augusto the possibility of
escaping his familial responsibilities and to live a somewhat normal
life—despite the fact that each night, we discover, he and his friends
demonstrate their madness by shooting at rats.
He first pushes his mother off the cliff to her death, then poisons
Leone with extra dose of his medicine, while putting him into a bath. Giulia
almost does herself in by falling down the family staircase in reaction to
Leone’s death, perceiving that her beloved “Ale” has done him in; and, even in
the throes of her recovery, Sandro (another of his family nicknames) is almost
tempted to smother her to death. Is it any wonder that, now married to the
local gentry, Lucia, Augusto wants to move out of the villa into an apartment
in town?
As she recovers, Giulia reveals to Augusto that their little Sandro has
been behind their mother’s and brother’s deaths. But who might believe him if
Augusto took up the matter with the police; and besides, we all know that this
cold-hearted beast is not entirely unappreciative of his younger brother’s
actions.
In the very last scene, having nearly achieved his goals of destroying
those about him, he goes into what can only described as a kind of transcendent
dance of celebration not unlike that of Electra, while listening, in this
version, to Verdi’s La Traviata,
spinning around the room while uttering a strange series of animal cries
unknown to human language. Suddenly he is again struck down by the painful
throbs that emanate from his head, and which only Guilia can calm.
Throughout, composer Ennio Morricone, through an almost ethereal series
of bells and gongs, has made us aware, simultaneously, that we have been
witnessing the final rites ceremony for this unhappy family, none of whom are
truly capable of surviving in the real world.
Orange, California, February 24, 2018
Reprinted from World Cinema Review (February 2018).





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