Ragazzi fuori | |
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Directed by | Marco Risi |
Written by | Aurelio Grimaldi |
Starring | Francesco Benigno Alessandro Di Sanzo Salvatore Termini Alfredo Li Bassi Maurizio Prollo Vincenza Attardo Roberto Mariano |
Music by | Giancarlo Bigazzi |
Cinematography | Mauro Marchetti |
Editing by | Franco Fraticelli |
Distributed by | Cecchi Gori |
Release date(s) | 14 September 1990 |
Running time | 110 minutes |
Country | Italy |
Language | Italian |
Ragazzi fuori ("Boys on the Outside") is an Italian language dramatic film directed by Marco Risi in the neo-neorealistic style and written by Aurelio Grimaldi. Released in 1990, it is the sequel to the 1989 film Mery per sempre. It stars Francesco Benigno, Alessandro Di Sanzo and Salvatore Termini.
Ragazzi Fuori is the sequel to the 1989 dramatic film Mery per sempre, and features most of the same characters. The film is largely set in ZEN, a bleak, economically deprived quarter on the northern outskirts of Palermo, Sicily, at the end of the 1980s. Its protagonist is Natale Sperandeo (played by Palermo-born actor Francesco Benigno), a young man who has just been released from Malaspina, a juvenile detention centre. Unable to find legitimate work, he takes up with his former gang, consisting of unemployed youths like himself, and perpetrates an armed robbery.
The film also traces the divergent paths taken by his former inmates at Malaspina, such as Mario "Mery" Libassi, the 17 year-old transvestite, who resumes his previous sordid career as a male prostitute while awaiting trial for the assault on a client; Claudio Catalano, while seeking to avoid the vindictive Carmelo Vella (who blames Claudio for the loss of his left eye), obtains work as a mechanic in another neighbourhood, but shortly afterwards discovers his girlfriend, Vita is pregnant; Antonino Patané is forced to push drugs in order to maintain his two small children after the financial police sequester his potatoes which Antonino was selling without a license; and Giovanni Trapani, nicknamed King Kong and a member of Natale's gang, is fatally shot by a plainclothes police officer outside the open-air market of Vucciria after a long chase through the streets of Palermo for having robbed a car radio.
Ragazzi Fuori accurately depicts the social problems faced by Natale and his companions, such as crime, poverty, unemployment, prostitution, teenage pregnancy, and police harassment, which were indelible features of life in the poorer districts of Palermo and other Sicilian cities during that time period. It is a drama with realistic scenes of sex, violence, police brutality, and rape. It ends with the discovery of the body of a young man, burnt beyond recognition, on a refuse tip. It is presumed to be that of Claudio, although the film never reveals its identity. The Italian language is spoken throughout the film mixed with the Sicilian dialect of Palermo.
Francesco Benigno won two awards, the Ciak d'Oro at the Venice Film Festival, and Premio Piper, for Best Actor in his portrayal of Natale Sperandeo. The film also features, among others, Alessandro Di Sanzo as Mario "Mery" Libassi, Salvatore Termini as Giovanni "King Kong" Trapani, Alfredo Li Bassi as Carmelo Vella, Maurizio Prollo as Claudio Catalano, Vincenza Attardo as Vita, Roberto Mariano as Antonino Patané, and Tony Sperandeo as Turris. On 14 November 1990, Mariano was killed in a plane crash en route to Switzerland.[1] Marco Risi won the David di Donatello Award in 1991 for Best Director.
Ragazzi Fuori at the Internet Movie Database