Prima Della Rivoluzione
Sog.: B. Bertolucci; Scen.: B. Bertolucci, Gianni Amico, Da Un Soggetto Di B. Bertolucci; F.: Aldo Scavarda; Op.: Camillo Bazzoni; Ass.Op.: Vittorio Storaro; M.: Roberto Perpignani; Cost.: Federico Forquet; Trucco: Michele Trimarchi; Mu.: Ennio Morricone, Gino Paoli, Leandro Gato Barbieri, Brani Da “Macbeth” Di Giuseppe Verdi; Ass.R.: Gianni Amico; Int.: Francesco Barilli (Fabrizio), Adriana Asti (Gina), Allen Midgette (Agostino), Morando Morandini (Cesare), Cristina Pariset (Clelia), Gianni Amico (Cinefilo), Cecrope Barilli (Puck), Goliardo Padova (Pittore), Guido Fanti (Enore), Evelina Alpi (Bambina), Salvatore Enrico (Sacrestano), Emilia Borghi (La Madre Di Fabrizio), Antonio Maghenzani (Il Fratello Di Fabrizio), Domenico Alpi (Il Padre), Iole Lunardi (La Nonna Di Fabrizio), Ida Pellegri (La Madre Di Clelia); Prod.: Mario Bernocchi Per Iride Cinematografica; 35mm. D.: 115’. Bn.
Film Notes
The starting point for this restoration was the original 1964 picture negative and the original 1964 sound negative. The alternation of black and white sequences and brief scenes in colour required two separate image restoration procedures, carried out in different laboratories. The four brief colour shots required digital restoration at the Digital Film Lab. The restoration of the mono sound, of no lesser importance, was carried out at Lobster Films (Paris) and Studio Sound (Rome) and completed with the mastering of the new sound in Dolby SR.
My memory of Prima della rivoluzione is just like someone who while dreaming wants to dream. It’s considered a bit like the manifesto of young cinema. In fact we were very young in ’63 when we shot it and in ’64 when we made the final cut. We had everything that makes up the agony and ecstasy of film d’auteur, of authoriality. The film was made in an Italy that came out of the shock of the Sixties, out the shock of the dead in Reggio Emilia, the shock of the Genoese revolution, of dock workers who occupied the center of town. So it was an Italy full of political energy, an Italy that reacted, an Italy in which Fabrizio, thus somehow moi-même, finds that the guiding party, the Communist party, has given up its role… utopian- revolutionary, and there’s dissatisfaction, a bitterness that is what we would later find in the movements of ’68.
I only realized much later that Prima della rivoluzione was my way of coming to terms with my father’s city, Parma. Coming to terms, I believe, by somehow expropriating it from my father, by making many things that belonged to him mine, starting with the city but including people that had become almost mythic to me because I encountered them during my adolescence, people that would appear in later films.
Bernardo Bertolucci, interview by Giuseppe Bertolucci and Tatti Sanguineti, in “Cinegrafie”, 17, 2004