the end of love
by
Douglas Messerli
Giuseppe
Fiorello (screenwriter and director) Stranizza d'amuri (Fireworks)
2023
His
mother Lina (Simona Malato) is protective but clearly has written him off as
someone unworthy of her full love, still makes sure that her surly and abusive
husband, Franco (Enrico Roccaforte) employs him in the shop where he repairs
mopeds.
On the day when we first enter the story of Gianni’s difficult life, he is commanded by Franco to deliver up one of the fixed mopeds to its owner, quite a distance away. In the meantime, hidden in the dark recesses of the garage, Gianni is sexually entreated by Turi to again provide him with a blow-job; it is clear that for Turi it not just sexual relief but that he is highly attracted to the boy. But when he is refused, he joins another tormentor Emmanuele (Giuseppe Lo Piccolo), the leading homophobe of the group, to go on the chase as Gianni escapes on the moped he has been tasked to deliver.
In
the adventurous chase scene, Gianni basically escapes his pursuers only to
crash into another moped driven by the 16-year-old Nino Scalia (Gabriele
Pizzurro), who has just received the bike as a birthday gift. Gianni, who has
seemed to pass out, is resuscitated by Nino before continuing on his way, Nino,
who believes the crash was his fault, sharing with him that when he returns he
should visit who family who runs a fireworks enterprise.
the
Scalias, primarily to apologize for the accident, which they feel was probably
their son’s fault, inviting Gianni to join them in a joyous outdoor lunch which
introduces us to many of the family members including Totò (Simone Raffaele
Cordinao), Nino’s delightful nephew, his uncle Ciccio (Giuseppe Spata), Pietro
(Roberto Salemi), Isabella (Maria Giuditta), and Nino’s father, Alfred (Antonio
De Matteo), who when Gianni lies, claiming that his father works in Germany and
expresses his work ethic values, is offered a job at Alfredo’s brother’s
quarry.
Gianni is so relieved to be free of his
life in his step-father’s garage, and is so delighted to be accepted by the
friendly Scalia family, that he is actually happy to work at the quarry, where
because of his age of fragile frame is mostly given lighter jobs than the heavy
daily laborers who each day line-up to work there.
But his new rapture is short-lived when he
spots one of the bullies from his village joining up the quarry crew, which
forces him to immediately quit his job. When, as usual, Nino comes to pick him
up after work, he is told that Gianni when home ill, Nino making the voyage to
Gianni’s home town, where now he two is mocked by Emmanuele and others, which
reveals to the young boy not only his friend’s sexuality, but that he has lied
about his father being a worker in Germany. Yet Nino does still seek out his
friend, arguing that he doesn’t care about the rumors, but begging him to never
lie to him again.
If, despite the difficulties that Gianni
faces, we have gotten glimpses in the Sicilian landscape a kind of paradise,
the film now almost takes to a new level of euphoria, as the two boy’s
relationship grows into something other than a mere friendship. As Italy scores
a goal during the 1982 World Cup match in soccer, the two boys run outside in
celebration, suddenly sharing kisses of joy before hiding themselves away in a
storage room behind a closed door to release the passion for one another they
have long been holding in.
As Nino’s father Alfredo’s health begins to
decline, his heart making it difficult to work on the many fireworks
celebrations he has commissioned, Nino convinces him that he, with Gianni’s
help, can take over the setting up, lighting, and performance of the family’s
glorious fireworks displays. And for a while they do just that, luxuriating in
the glow of the fireworks grand explosions, their youthful joy in one another’s
bodies matching the sky-bound wonders that wow small-town local audiences.
But
this is Sicily, a world a small town gossip and always observing eyes, who
witness the boys increasing intimacy, reporting it through a local woman, to
Nino’s mother Carmela (Fabrizia Sacchi), who in turns shares it with her
family. Even Gianni’s mother shares with Carmela her fears that her son will be
destroyed by his association with Gianni. Nino is questioned by both is father
Alfredo and Nino’s uncle until he finally breaks down in tears, denying and
betraying his lover in his insistence that he has any sexual involvement with
Gianni and that gay people disgust him.
The splendiferous world they have inhabited
has turned into a world of dark, hostile shadows. The glow of fireworks no
longer has any meaning.
Separated from love, Gianni once more loses his job and his love,
forcing him to return to work in Franco’s moped shop with the tormentors just
outside his doorstep. Alfredo’s brother hires a couple of thugs to beat up
Gianni on the very street where he lives to serve as an example. The bar boys
watch with silent delight. But in this instance even Franco is shaken by the
violence, as Turi and Guiseppina, a sympathetic female hanger-on—who in fact
may have been the one to see Turi receiving a blow-job from Gianni—help take him home to recover. Despondent he is visited by a priest who can offer him no
consolation.
At the final round of the World Cup, Nino,
now isolated from the rest of the world, escapes his families’ intense watching
of the game, to peruse some drawings of fireworks he once shared with his
beloved friend. His uncle Ciccio joins him, suggesting that Nino might choose
the life he seeks, suggesting himself as an example, if he is only more
secretive and what we would describe as closeted.
Nino
suddenly determines to ignore all the advice and mopeds to Gianni’s home at the
precise moment of the celebrations for Italy’s football victory. And despite,
his mother’s protests, he runs to greet his lover. Together they escape into
the countryside to a secluded spot to where they have previously shared,
kissing and holding hands through the crown of celebrants waving the Italian
flag. The two escape back to their Arcadia, holding and deeply loving one
another is nature. Two gunshots are heard as the screen goes black.
The movie is based on the real-life murders
of two young gay boys, Toni and Giorgio killed in Sicily in 1980 simply because
they were in love.
To me, this film, after it’s delicious
moments of two beautiful boys sharing themselves with one another, has declared
the end of love. Homophobia be damned, wherever it exists, continuing even
today all over the world. Every society might be a utopia but cruelly chooses
to remain as unnecessary dystopias.
Los
Angeles, April 28, 2026
Reprinted
from My Queer Cinema blog (April 2026).







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