Vicino al Colosseo c'è Monti (2008) Poster

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6/10
That's it?
MaxBorg898 November 2008
Apparently, there's an area of Rome, near the Colosseum, called Monti. Given famous Italian director Mario Monicelli, though born in Tuscany, has lived there for years and wanted to show the world age has yet to cripple him (he was 93 when he made this), he filmed hours of footage which were eventually turned into a 22-minute documentary that was screened Out of Competition at the 2008 Venice Film Festival. The effort itself is laudable, but next to the latest works of another European filmmaker pushing 100 (Manoel de Oliveira), the logical question is: why did Monicelli bother doing this in the first place?

Don't get me wrong: the 22-minute tour of Monti isn't exactly boring, but it doesn't provide much information either. Since he lives there, one would expect the director to record a voice-over explaining what's so special about the area. Alas, that never happens, as the short proceeds narration-free and pretty much without any direct contributions by Monicelli, who shows up only a couple of times to crack jokes with his neighbors or things like that. As such, the "film" is really nothing more than a celluloid postcard.

Why does it get a 6, then? Well, partly because Monicelli's original idea wasn't probably that bad, and also because the editor, whom the director himself cited as the real maker of the finished product, has done a pretty decent job piecing the unrelated bits together. Overall, though, even die-hard Monicelli fans will find very little to chew on.
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10/10
Life in a little quarter of Rome
lynda-albertson5 November 2008
Mario Monicelli, captures the flavor, the heart and the soul of Monti perfectly. Encompassing three of the oldest streets in the city, Monti was once the area for brothels in the time of gladiators and plebes.

Today the city is a mix of ages and ethnic diversity juxtaposed against a backdrop of some of the worlds most important cultural Icons.

Monicelli's camera spans random moments in the day to day life of the Rione and its inhabitants, a place where he has lived for most of his life. Each of the places he captures give voice to the colour and diversity that make up this vibrant quarter, a mixture of old and new, deeply Roman and old world Italian.

Here we have churches and art, music and filmmakers, streetwalkers and politicians, but somehow everyone seems to find their own way, rambling along...just like this little film does. Why are there so many old people in the film? I don't know...but perhaps its because its a good place to grow old.
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