
There are only so many strategies for filming and talking about cities, I guess, so it’s not too surprising that Mauro Bolognini’s profile of Palermo for 12 REGISTI A 12 CITTA’ repeats a few tropes, notably the opera music and helicopter shots we’ve just heard and seen in Francesco Rosi’s episode. However, these are joined by a voice-over which does what I’d been wishing the earlier narrations had done — it brings a poetic sensibility, or at least an emotional approach, to the recitation of facts —



There’s immediately a refreshing sense that our response to the voice-over man’s musings will not be “Right, uh-huh, okay,” but “What? Oh? Really?” We are stirred out of our passive tourist consumption of information. I use the Royal Pauline We here, and I must stop myself.
Helicopter shots are a little hard to edit, since they don’t have natural starts and finishes. Some of Bolognini’s cuts are a little ragged. The best thing you can do is keep the momentum of one shot going in the next — this little movie, like Antonioni’s installment, kind of resembles MARIENBAD in the way it does this — and I note that Alain Resnais made his masterpiece off the back of short documentaries like this one which often profiled particular locations. So it’s easyish to cut from one chopper view to another, but how do you get out of that cycle? Assuming you don’t want the whole film to be whirlybird stuff.
“The bell tower of Martorana, the Saracen domes, reminds us of the great conquests of a forgotten Sicily.” Now Bolognini’s narration is using the “we” too. An easy and manipulative trap to fall into. In the talk of torture chambers and the auto-da-fe, the VO does seem to echo Resnais’ conjuring of past horrors with unoccupied location shots in NIGHT AND FOG.





Some of the Steadicam glides through colonnades here are extremely beautiful. The Steadicam is a bit like the helicopter except you can bring it to a halt, so long as you cut away fast before it starts floating up and down…
Unlike his predecessors, Bolognini references the cinema in his VO — the locations have found their way into Visconti’s THE LEOPARD, and have thus acquired an additional, shadow existence, a narrative significance unintended by their architects. Fellini said he was often surprised that the Trevi Fountain continued to exist after fulfilling its role in LA DOLCE VITA. He expected it to be torn down like his other sets at Cinecitta.
Like Rosi, Bolognini gets some nifty effects from juxtaposing art and life, showing how the city’s activities, which inspired the work of painters from the renaissance to the twentieth century’s Renato Guttuso (who had just died back in 1987), are still going on today, with the soundtrack of market cries blending art and life together.
But Bolognini, like Antonioni, seems happier in the past (and avoiding the football), so the thread he follows takes him back to magnificent architecture.





























