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ポンペイ、雲の下に生きる
ポンペイ、雲の下に生きる

ポンペイ、雲の下に生きる

20251h 54m★ 5.9ドキュメンタリー

あらすじ

No synopsis available.

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作品考察・見どころ

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興行成績

興行収入: $130,652 (0億円)

※製作費・興行収入はTMDBのデータを参照しています。収支は(興行収入 - 製作費)で算出したFindKey独自の推定値であり、広告宣伝費や諸経費は含まれません (1ドル=150円換算)。

スタッフ・制作会社

監督: Gianfranco Rosi

脚本: Gianfranco Rosi

音楽: Daniel Blumberg

制作: Gianfranco Rosi / Donatella Palermo / Paolo Del Brocco

撮影監督: Gianfranco Rosi

制作会社: RAI Cinema / Stemal Entertainment / 21 Unofilm / Les Films d'Ici / ARTE France Cinéma

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TMDB ユーザーのレビュー

CinemaSerf
CinemaSerf
★ 6

I shouldn’t have felt misled by the title of this rather dry and repetitive documentary, but I did. Instead of getting something archaeological and historical, I found myself watching something altogether more sociological and anthropic, and I must confess I wasn’t so very interested in that. With Mount Vesuvius making it’s presence felt nearby and with the tectonics beneath them suggesting a degree of planetary indigestion, the good folks of Naples are taking to their phones to ask their remarkably stoic and patience fire and police services whether or not events from the year 79 are about to repeat themselves. Some of these callers are borderline panic-stricken, some more rational but either way they are given polite and confident assurances that all is not going to come tumbling down any time soon. Intermittently, we do stray occasionally into the realms of the mosaic and explore a few of the world famous excavations or visit them in galleries, but as the entire film is presented in monochrome - and frequently during the night - it quickly ceases to be eerily effective and starts to become dingy and affecting. There may well be some beautiful photography here of some ancient and beautiful sights, but the complete lack of structure to this observation left me as rudderless as one of the triremes that got sunk by molten lava. The narrative is fairly all-encompassing and deals with just about every aspect of Neapolitan life, love, pollution, immigration, art and religion and it also clearly intends to draw parallels between the ancient and the contemporary but I don’t know, I just left me feeling a bit short-changed.

Brent Marchant
Brent Marchant
★ 4

Fewer cinematic experiences are more frustrating than movies that fail to live up to expectations. And, regrettably, such is the case with this latest documentary from writer-director Gianfranco Rosi. While the title and billing for this release lead one to believe that it’s a film about the ancient Roman city of Pompeii and the volcanic catastrophe that destroyed it, there’s surprisingly little in this title addressing those subjects squarely on point. Rather, it’s more of a minimalist cinematic essay that would be more aptly titled “A Day in the Life of Naples” (the metropolis neighboring the destroyed city), with end times underpinnings whose elements frequently go underexplained. Admittedly, “Below the Clouds” makes an effort (albeit somewhat underwhelmingly) to address the looming threat posed by Mt. Vesuvius, the monster volcano that obliterated Pompeii and that carries the potential to do the same to its vulnerable neighbor again today, but this is largely done in passing, almost as if the picture is downplaying the significant danger lurking not far away. Similarly, the film’s handling of what happened to Pompeii is somewhat underplayed, told largely through the eyes of investigators looking into the theft of antiquities stolen from buried volcanic tombs and the work of a team of Japanese archaeologists seeking to uncover hidden gems from the lost city’s past. Instead, greater emphasis is placed on comparatively irrelevant footage about everyday contemporary Neapolitan life, including stories of a Syrian freighter crew delivering Ukrainian grain to Naples, an antique store owner who runs an after-school study hall for grade school students and the emergency dispatchers manning the call center of the fire rescue service. However, the relevance of these narrative threads often seems tangential at best, trying to somehow tie them (and not especially successfully) to the aforementioned end times scenario. This ill-considered aim is furthered by various overwrought cinematic elements, such as clearly gorgeous but questionably chosen black-and-white cinematography and dialogue that sounds more “written” than spoken, devices that come across, frankly, as somewhat pretentious and off the mark in light of the subject matter. To its credit, “Below the Clouds” does a fine job in exploring how Naples has throughout history been a cross-roads locale richly influenced by an array of diverse cultures, much of which was lost in Pompeii’s destruction and the recent thievery of antiquities, a narrative thread that adds to the undercurrent of progressive decline that runs through the picture’s overall character. But that’s small comfort in the face of this offering’s other more prevalent shortcomings. While I’m certainly all in favor of pushing the envelope artistically, the attempt here to produce something cinematically poetic seems decidedly overdone, resulting in a tedious mélange of disjointed, unfocused themes and imagery that ultimately do more to bewilder viewers than to clarify the film’s designated intent.

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