GOLDEN DOOR


Title   Cast   Director   Year Shown  Other Info    Country  Notes 


Nuovomondo

Italy/France, 2006, 112 min

Shown in 2007

CREDITS

dir
Emanuele Crialese
prod
Alexandre Mallet-Guy, Fabrizio Mosca, Emanuele Crialese
scr
Emanuele Crialese
cam
Agnès Godard
editor
Maryline Monthieux
mus
Antonio Castriganò
cast
Charlotte Gainsbourg, Vincenzo Amato, Aurora Quattrocchi, Vincent Schiavelli, Francesco Casisa, Filippo Pucillo

OTHER

source
Miramax Films, 61 Sixth Avenue, 15th Floor, New York, NY10013. EMAIL: nicolette.aizenberg@miramax.com.

COMMENTS

Opening Night Film. Emanuele Crialese and Vincenzo Amato attended.
Golden Door

Emanuele Crialese’s extraordinary allegorical epic opens in an age of superstition, in a forsaken corner of the Sicilian countryside, as a father and son clamber barefoot up a mountain strewn with sun-bleached rocks toward a sainted shrine, bloody stones held fast in their mouths. And it closes, after an arduous and colorful passage in third-class steerage, in modern times, on Ellis Island, in the shadow of eugenic testing, to the sound of Nina Simone in full-throated glory, at the dawn of the American Century. Crialese’s novel imagining of the journey between these two worlds, from a past left behind to a family transformed, makes for a brilliant reinvention of the emigrant saga, with its heartbreaking themes of hope, sacrifice and forgetting. The steadfast Vincenzo Amato (who starred in the director’s second film, Respiro, SFIFF 2003), an enchanting Charlotte Gainsbourg, luminous here as a lost soul encountered on the Sicilian docks and wryly stubborn matriarch Aurora Quattrocchi anchor a stirring story full of humor and tribulation. Crialese’s genius for capturing large-scale pastoral and urban landscapes as well as intimate, individualized details is ably enhanced by the magnificent cinematography of Agnès Godard, best known for her work with French director Claire Denis. Golden Door is a visionary film, filled with unexpected turns and irrevocable choices. It skillfully brings to life the experience of crossing a momentous threshold, after which nothing will ever be the same.

—Graham Leggat