Videocracy is a 2009 documentary film directed by Swedish-Italian Erik Gandini about Italian television and its impact on Italian culture and politics, and about Silvio Berlusconi's powerful position on all of these. Gandini coined the phrase "The Evilness of Banality" to describe the cultural phenomenon of Berlusconism, thus making a word play on Hannah Arendt's "Banality of Evil".
Videocracy | |
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Directed by | Erik Gandini |
Written by | Erik Gandini |
Produced by | Erik Gandini Mikael Olsen |
Starring | Silvio Berlusconi Flavio Briatore Fabrizio Corona Lele Mora Simona Ventura |
Cinematography | Manuel Alberto Claro Lukas Eisenhauer |
Edited by | Johan Söderberg |
Release dates |
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Running time | 85 minutes |
Countries | Sweden Denmark United Kingdom Finland |
Languages | English Italian |
Soon after its theatrical premiere in Sweden, the film was shown at the 66th Venice International Film Festival where it gained massive attention. The trailer for the film has been banned by most Italian television broadcasters.[1]
Videocracy uses the theme song for Silvio Berlusconi's presidential campaign, and now party theme, Meno male che Silvio c'è! (loosely translated: Thank God for Silvio!). When first hearing it the film's director Erik Gandini thought it was satire.[2]
Videocracy has won awards at the Toronto International Film Festival, Sheffield Doc/Fest, the Golden Graal awards, and the Tempo Documentary Award of 2010. Videocracy was widely distributed internationally, seeing theatrical release in the United States, UK, the Netherlands, France, Poland, and Sweden among other countries. In Italy, where it opened in 90 theaters across the country on the weekend of 4 September 2009, Videocracy came in 4th in box office rankings.
Plot
editThis article needs an improved plot summary. (November 2015) |
The Italian veline phenomenon is explained. We meet young mechanic Ricky who tries to become a TV star, but complains that it is more difficult for a man. TV agent Lele Mora admiringly says that Berlusconi resembles Benito Mussolini. Paparazzo Fabrizio Corona takes embarrassing photographs of celebrities, and asks them for money to not publicize them. He explains that he is a new version of Robin Hood: he steals from the rich, but keeps the money to himself. When he was convicted for extortion, it made him a greater celebrity, and he is now cashing in on this. He is shown full-frontally naked taking a shower.
References
edit- ^ Maria Pia Fusco. "La Rai rifiuta il trailer di Videocracy "È un film che critica il governo"". La Repubblica. Retrieved 7 September 2009.
- ^ Dan Higgins (Pure Movies). "Eric Gandini Interview". Pure Movies. Retrieved 13 August 2010.
External links
edit- Official website
- Videocracy at IMDb
- Videocracy at the Swedish Film Institute Database
- Videocracy, a review by the Wu Ming collective.
- http://filmmakermagazine.com/directorinterviews/2010/02/erik-gandini-videocracy.html
- http://www.guardian.co.uk/film/2010/jun/23/videocracy-review
- http://movies.nytimes.com/2010/02/12/movies/12videocracy.html?em
- http://newyork.timeout.com/articles/film/82822/videocracy-film-review