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Buongiorno, Notte
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Directed by Marco Bellocchio
A young couple, Chiara (Maya Sansa) and Ernesto (Pier Giorgio Bellocchio, the director's son), follow a real estate agent through a nicely secluded apartment, which they subsequently rent. They then begin doing some strange renovations. It turns out that they're not a couple at all. They're members of the Red Brigade, and the apartment is going to be used to house a kidnapped government official. Good Morning, Night is established writer/director Marco Bellocchio's take on the kidnapping of Aldo Moro, president of the Christian Democratic Party, which rocked Italian politics in the late '70s. Bellocchio tells the story from Chiara's point-of-view, as her romantic relationship with fellow cell member Primo (Giovanni Calcagno) and her allegiance to their strident leader, Mariano (Luigi Lo Cascio), is gradually shaken as she begins to develop respect and affection for their hapless captive, Moro (Roberto Herlitzka). She also begins to feel attracted to Enzo (Paolo Briguglia), a co-worker at her office job (a front for her more radical activities) who has similar political leanings, but strongly disagrees with the Red Brigade's tactics. Chiara spends hours watching Moro in his "cell" through a peephole, as he defends his political actions in a mock trial conducted by Mariano. As negotiations for Moro's release falter due to the government's hard-line stance, Chiara begins to fantasize about helping him escape. Good Morning, Night (the title comes from a poem by Emily Dickinson) was shown at the 2003 Venice Film Festival, where it won the Little Golden Lion, the "CinemAvvenire," and an award for Bellocchio's screenplay. It was also selected for the 2003 New York Film Festival. ~ Josh Ralske, All Movie Guide
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Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
is neutral about it.
Marco Bellocchio's Good Morning, Night is an interesting study of the Aldo Moro kidnapping, but it's far too restrained and distanced to offer the kind of potent dramatic and political statement the material might have evoked. Audiences unfamiliar with the events depicted in the film will likely be a bit lost. Bellocchio doesn't provide much context, in terms of what the Red Brigade and why they targeted Moro (Roberto Herlitzka), a Christian Democrat leader who was working to forge a unified government with the communists. Good Morning, Night is a fictionalized account, focusing on the one woman who worked with the Red Brigade cell responsible for the kidnapping. In the film, she is Chiara (Maya Sansa), and the film is at its best when Bellocchio attempts to penetrate her subconscious, as she obsessively looks in on the group's captive, and discretely argues with Enzo (Paolo Briguglia), a co-worker at her "day job," about the Red Brigade's tactics. Chiara's dreams and fantasies about the predicament she and her comrades share with their victim are effective in conveying her mindset. Sansa and Briguglia deliver standout performances, in part because their roles are the most three-dimensionally written. Herlitzka brings a great deal of warmth and intelligence to his tragic role, even though he's silent in many of his scenes. He's very credible as a sincere and charismatic politician. As a whole, the film is perhaps too quiet and thoughtful, but it captures the sad spirit of the era, and it achieves its strongest impact in explicitly fusing the personal and the political. ~ Josh Ralske, All Movie Guide
 

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