line review

Christiana 2022-07-07 18:05:13

818
01:19:58,604 --> 01:20:01,246
Help yourself. Look.
Here, drink up.
Don't be ashamed.

It'll help.
You're not that young anymore.

This fog rusts your bones.
Screw them if they call us tramps.

Why do you do this?

Who makes you do it?
You don't even know yourself.

You've done it for 30 years
and you're asking me?

It's your fault, you know.

You 're one to talk.

How you end up is your own fault.

Everybody knows that.

The evil you do is like a highway

the innocent have to walk down.

When ettore was born,
he didn't want to walk down this road.

But who put all this garbage
in your head?

A priest.

He was like a living bible.

I didn't want
to start over from scratch.

Maybe i just didn't understand.

Damn you and this cognac!
Now you've got me drunk!

Good-bye .
Do your soul searching by yourself.

God, i've got an awful stomachache.

Like i ate my own heart out.

Hey, ventriloquist.
By fixing and isolating segments of what is visible, Pasolini creates the sense that what we see

is merely one part of reality, and that the truly essential-and sacred-remains unseen.” Like how people

can't see god, Pasolini is attracted by something that is invisible to the audience's eye and the

invisible images carry something mysterious. In the scene of Mamma Roma, the invisible background makes

the scene more mysterious and outstanding than other scenes in the film.
================
965
01:33 :09,689 --> 01:33:13,321
What did you learn today
from the divine comedy?

Today i learned pages 104 to 105.

It took a jail sentence
to educate you.

Come on.
Let's hear that canto.

I dreamed i was in the circle of shit,
and they kicked me out because i stank.

We gonna hear
the divine comedy or not?

Fourth canto.

"Broke the deep slumber in my brain
a crash of heavy thunder,
that i shook myself,
as one by main force roused.
Risen upright,
my rested eyes i moved around,
and searched with fixed ken,
to know what place it was
wherein i stood."

Hey, they put a crazy guy in with us.

Calm down.
A guy like you came in here a month ago,
and the next day he was dead.

Keep on reading.

"On the brink i found me
of the lamentable vale,
the dread abyss that joins a thunderous
sound of plaints innumerable.
Dark and deep,
and thick with clouds o'erspread,
mine eye in vain explored its bottom,
nor could aught discern.
Now let us to the blind world
there beneath descend."
987
01:34:27,779 --> 01:34:32,238
Play only for me, o gypsy violin

perhaps you too dream of a love

help!
I want out of here!
Let me out!
========== =====

1020
01:38:48,145 --> 01:38:49,962
Leave me alone.

1021
01:38:52,739 --> 01:38:57,166
Don't worry.
I spent time in jail as a kid , too.

1022
01:38:57,333 --> 01:38:59,333
You get over it.

When he gets out,
he'll have learned about life.

He'll turn over a new leaf.
Like water under the bridge. '
As the sacrifice is about to end, look straight at his face, what is he looking at, straight, the air hole of the skylight sweeps across the body of the cross, the resentful violin rattles

PianoWhen Ettore dies in a prison hospital, Pasolini recreates Mantegna's 'Dead Christ. Ettore is lying

on the wooden bed. He is stripped down to a shirt and underpants. His body is tied to the bed. The light

coming from the ceiling emphasizes Ettore's pale skin. The camera shoots his body from Ettore's feet

just like the painting.
999
01:36:19,715 --> 01:36:22,739
Help me! My arms hurt!

Why did you put me here?

Help!
Another skylight I got some moms, moms--did you hear the child's cries like a nightmare at night and wake up screaming mama mama sick
dreams Unstrap me.

I swear i'll stop.

I'll be good.

Take me back to guidonia,
where i lived when i was little.

I'm freezing to death.

1007
01:37:17,773 --> 01:37:19,110
I'm sick.

Tell them to unstrap me.
My
poor baby.

My poor little boy.

1011
01:37:57,169 -- > 01:37:59,496
He came into the world alone.

He grew up alone,
like a poor little sparrow,

looking all around,

searching for god knows what.

Alone.
--------
1016
01:38:17,521 --> 01:38:19,272
Mamma, i'm dying.

I've been here all night.

I can't take it anymore.

Mamma, why are they
doing this to me?
========= ==
1025
01:40:18,644 --> 01:40:19,885
Ettore! A mother's love should come out of her heart

1026
01:40:22,154 --> 01:40:23,970
Mamma roma, where are you going?

1027
01:40:31,598 --> 01:40:32,598
Mamma roma, where are you going?

1028
01:40:37,083 - -> 01:40:39,824
- Mamma roma, wait.
- Stop.
-----------------
See the graveyard dead again? ? ? ? ! ! !
What is she staring at at the end of the master? ?
208
00:21:16,413 --> 00:21:18,546
How you like to dance, my son.

What an ugly view.
All you see is the cemetery.

I was planning on moving tomorrow,

but now we'll have to wait
two more weeks.

So what? We'll have fun later.
=============
Secondly, in the beginning of the film, Mamma Roma brings three pigs to the wedding of her old pimp,

Carmine. Carmine calls the pigs “Brothers of Italy.” Then, Mamma Roma calls one pig a whore. In a

contrast to Rossellini's patriotic film, Pasolini brings irony into his film. Ettore dies in an Italian

prison even though he doesn't die from extreme physical torture. Pasolini shows that the corruption of

society is not because of outside forces like Roma under Nazi occupation. The problems are actually

created within the society or the people in it.
There is a shot of the landscape of Rome in the end of Mamma Roma. The dome of a church sticks out from

the rest of the top of buildings. The scene shares the similarity with the aforementioned Rossellini's

film again. In Rossellini's film, the dome of St. Peter's appears as the background when boys are

walking on the street dragging their sadness. They seem like they are walking toward St. Peter's or

“the house of God.” On the other hand, in Pasolini's film, when Mamma Roma finds out Ettore's death,

goes back to her apartment and tries to jump off the window, she sees the dome of a church . She stares at

the dome. The image of her and the dome switches back and fourth. Her stare gets more intense. The film

ends.
Naomi Greene says the use of non-professional actors is the same as what other neo-realist filmmakers do ,

but the philosophy behind it is different. Neo-realist filmmakers believed that using nonprofessional

actors “would add to the realism to their films, Pasolini turned to nonprofessionals because their

acting did not seem 'real.'”Nonprofessional acting obviously interrupts “narrative flow. ” For

example, when Mamma Roma and Ettore dance a tango song together, Ettore's rigid inexpert dance move

causes his mother to fall on the floor. She laughs brightly. Ettore laughs shyly and looks at the camera.

But Pasolini doesn't cut or reshoot the scene. He leaves it as it is.
whore mom street buddies soliciting whore will be wrong is wrong the psychological generation used to it
Pasolini recreates Mantegna's 'Dead Christ. man made man's land man gave sin Ettore took on his own innocent people gave

the sin
Why do people make people suffer, why people make people cry, why people fight against each other, why people follow each other, ah~~ I say fate, survival,

fate, survival~~~~~ ah

~~I say fate , Survival,

fate, survival~~~~~ (Second-hand roses pull the home-grown old lady to count on the stones at the entrance of the alley~~)

Love deceives him 569
00:56:15,488 --> 00:56:17,108
Let me go!

What are you doing?
You'll hurt each other. Leave him

alone.
What are you doing?

Picking on someone smaller than
yourself, eh?

Bye, ettore
. She 387 00:39:41,297 --> 00:39:45,179 Yeah, you lived with the hicks. Did your mother visit you? Who cares about my mother? ==== 538 00:53:50,853 --> 00: 53:52,636











But you love your mother, don't you?

What do i care about her?

Shame on you.

I love her a little, though.

- How do you know?
- Because i'd cry if she died.

- I didn' t expect you'd be laughing.
- Shall we go?
===========
919
01:27:49,317 --> 01:27:51,797
Ettore, listen.

You feeling all right?
You're all flushed.

You've got a fever.

It's over 102.

Why aren't you in bed?

924
01:28:03,099 --> 01:28:04,501
Who gives a shit?

925
01:28:04,661 --> 01:28:08,393
You angry 'cause of what
i told you about your mother?

Everybody knows.
I thought you knew, too.

I've had enough!

Leave me alone!

I don't give a damn
about my mother! He was really

pissed930
01:29:00,486 --> 01:29:02,813
Get a move on.
You're not calling the shots here.
He was born alone, don't care for his mother, slowly cultivated his feelings,
and then the anger at the end was completely broken, but can it be broken, he was thinking about his mother In the end, being on the deathbed
is like a dreaming mother when I was sick when I was a child. Where are you? ? i'm sick i miss you
Pasolini viewed her attempt to find a place in a rapidly changing society as an expression of moral decay, because of this new society's consumerism and spiritual vacancy, he is socially doomed, and the forces that have made her life a bitter struggle for longer moments of joy than the few she gets to experience (teaching Ettore to tango, clinging to him as the motorcycle she'bought him roars along the roadway) are the same that literally doom her son.

The overt Oedipal aspect of this film is a familiar element in Pasolini's work. Strange to say, we never learn whether Carmine is actually Ettore's father (something assumed by many critics), since Carmine never claims to be, and Mamma Roma, in one of her hallucinatory night-world promenades, says that 揾er husband? was Ettore's father; but she also says this husband, presumably a young man, was arrested and taken away right after their wedding, leaving her 揳virgin at the altar. ?Moreover, at an earlier point she describes her forced marriage as a teenager to a man over sixty, who had outlived both her parents. (Where is he? She never tells us.) Carmine accuses her of seducing him when he was a simple country boy and she already forty. One would almost conclude that Ettore has no father and that Mamma Roma is, like the city she's named for, 揺ternal,?the archetype of the mother whose fatherless child is also her lover, if only in her own imagination. (Pasolini, whose sexual tastes ran to street boys like Ettore, loathed his father, who died in 1958, and worshipped his mother, whom he then lived with until the end of his life. He cast her as the Virgin Mary in The Gospel According to Saint Matthew.)
=========================
229
00:23:13,263 --> 00:23:16,635
There was a neighbor of ours,
a rich old man
with loads of money.
He dressed like robespierre.
He had a mustache and cane,
like he was a king.
You know how he made his money?
Under fascism.
Mussolini told him,
"build a district for the working class."
That became pietrarancio .
Your turn!
The walls in the first house
he built were great.
So were the toilets. You could eat
from them, they were built so well.
Mussolini came back and said,
"that's just what i wanted."
The son of a bitch.
As soon as mussolini leaves,
he stops building houses
and just makes toilets.
They called the district "latrinia."
Nothing but concrete tombs
as far as the eye could see.

247
00:24:15,755 --> 00:24:19,736
God, was that old man ugly !
Some disease in africa
had pockmarked his whole face.
He had asthma, rheumatism,
a bad heart, colitis, diabetes.
He stank to high heaven!
Was he a christian at least?
He was 65 and i was 14.
I got married
in a young fascist girl's uniform!
No problems after the fall of fascism?
He was so old! You'd have thought
he only had two days to live.
Foaming at the mouth.
- Look who's here, mamma roma.

257
00:24:53,365 --> 00:24:56,867
He's gonna die on me.
He's gonna die!

He's dying!

- Who's dying, mamma roma?
- The old man they made me marry .

- What an outrage! An old man?
- They made me. He was my husband.

And you didn't fight it?
If they'd done that to me -

oh, sure, you think
you're smarter than me?

I'd have liked to see you in my shoes.

My mother was probably right
in making me marry him.

- What a lousy mother!
- "He's got millions," she'd tell me.

"He's rich. Seventy years old.

He'll die on you.

268
00:25:31,293 --> 00:25:35,078
What's the matter with you?
Don't you want to be a lady?

You can pick the next one."

You slept with him?
Shame on you.

He was probably a sadist too.

You want to know something?

My mother's dead,
and so's my father,

but the old guy's still alive,
damn him!
Critics commented on Pasolini's death: "Death imitates art". He worked for Mario Sudit, Fellini, Bo Rognini and others wrote the script. Among them, Fellini's two masterpieces "Night of Cabiria" and "La Dolce Vita" were co-written with Fellini. Bertolucci, who was still young at the time, wrote to Pa Solini had great respect and asked the former mentor and friend to write him the screenplay for his debut novel, "Reaper."
Death is absolutely necessary because, as long as we are alive, we are meaningless. For all kinds of relationships and The search for meaning.
Death becomes a dizzying montage of our lives.
Thanks to death, our lives express ourselves.
- Pasolini
1960-1965
I Hate Bourgeois
Being Deprived place in bourgeois
so I was deprived of my place in the world

1965-1970

People say I have three idols: Jesus, Marx and Freud, that's just a formula, in fact, reality is my only idol.

1970-1975 The
body was always revolutionary; because it represented something that could not be codified.

The diary

film director has to do a double job:
one, he has to take figurative symbols from the chaotic world, make them available, and try to compile them into a figurative symbol dictionary.
Second, he has to do the kind of work that writers do: to give the figurative signs of pure morphemes a personal expression.
===============

View more about Mamma Roma reviews

Extended Reading

Mamma Roma quotes

  • Mamma Roma: About your father - guess what I dreamt last night? I dreamt we were up in the mountains in Greece. First it was full of mud. Then we came to a hill covered in rosemary, and a voice called out, "Mamma Roma. Mamma Roma, come here." It was your father's voice. Just imagine. Yes, I walked toward's your father's voice, and on the other side of the hill, who do you think I saw?

    Ettore: Who?

    Mamma Roma: You. But you were a policeman.

    Ettore: What did I do?

    Mamma Roma: You wanted to put me in jail.

    Ettore: And what did you do?

    Mamma Roma: I ran as fast as I could. Just look at this rascal, wanted to arrest his mother!

  • Mamma Roma: What an ugly view. All you see is the cemetery.