Gomorrah details
| Formats: | 15 DVD, Blu-ray |
|---|---|
| Starring: | Salvatore Abruzzese, Simone Sacchettino, Salvatore Ruocco, Vincenzo Fabricino, Vincenzo Altamura, Italo Renda, Gianfelice Imparato, Maria Nazionale, Salvatore Striano, Carlo Del Sorbo |
| Director: | Matteo Garrone |
| Genres: | Drama, Thriller - General, Crime, World Cinema - Italian |
| Studio: | ELEVATION |
| Collections: | 100 Hot Hits, Award Winners, Gangs & Cartels, HD Drama, HD Dramatic Movies, I Can't Believe it's Not Fiction, Top Italian Films |
| Name | Discs | |
|---|---|---|
Gomorrah |
15 Feature |
DVD Information
| Run time: | 2 hours 17 minutes |
|---|---|
| Rental release: | 09 Feb 2009 |
| Main languages: | Neapolitan, Italian |
| Subtitles: | English |
Most helpful review
All about the comorra?
By a customer from Dalston , 22 Oct 2008[Highly rated reviewer]
This is *technically* a very good film. However it completely failed to deliver in educating the viewer about the comorra which is kind of the point. There are five or so independent story lines that remained as such. I felt there was a lack of overall story although maybe that won't bother all viewers.
Having read about the comorra since I now realise why the different storylines were relevant but surely the film should have conveyed this, an opportunity missed. There is a definite brilliance in the film making there but it wasn't for me. for example - the film was made with residents of the estate it was set in rather than actors and didn't suffer at all for that.- Was this review helpful to you?
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All reviews
(194)Location, location, location!
By Notmenotmeok (4 reviews) from Glasgow , 28 Nov 2012A gritty look at gangster society in Naples. Captures the pervasiveness and banality of organised crime. Oh, and the locations are brilliant. Not your standard gangster movie, but I would thoroughly recommend it.- Was this review helpful to you?
- (1) Yes |
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A portrayal of the human condition
By HDassassins (2 reviews) , 24 Nov 2012Throughout, the imagery of the environments surrounding Gomorrahs characters depicts their entrapment by their circumstances and illustrates the norm of their futile human condition in an environment controlled by crime, corruption and exploitation. It is a film, which through its themes of despair and nihilism, reveals glimpses of beauty and humanity through its artistic palette of subtle colours and the individual stories of some of its characters yet these serve only to heighten the sense of bleakness for as humanity may try to live out vestiges of human fulfilment this proves fruitless in a world controlled by the worst of human traits.
In the sordid, prison-like structures of the maze of cell-type homes that Don Ciro moves quietly through, a wedding celebration reveals an attempt by humanity to survive its predetermined fate, albeit this may be a pointless attempt it is perhaps an indication of a glimmer of hope for Don Ciros future.
Marco and Ciro in their aspiring to be local leaders, fatally flaunt their bravado, imitated from Hollywood movies. Gomorrah is no Hollywood. The bosses are fat and jaded and live unglamorous lives. It has no heroic gangster plot or action shots and Marco and Ciros attempt to bring this to their world of Camorra controlled Naples is seen as vain from the outset. Hauntingly and strikingly beautiful scenes frame them. They play with guns like small boys on a grey and neutral beach. They walk between trees that slice the screen like innumerable bars of a prison cell.
Conversely to Marco and Ciros playing and fooling around a scene with two young boys, Toto and his friend Simone, barley more than children, is shocking in revealing how their childhood has been stolen from them. Simone calmly and matter-of-factly tells Toto that they were friends but are now enemies and will kill one another. Totos fate is bleak. Barley into his teens he actively seeks Camorra membership. As the camera focuses on his face his emotions reveal his understanding of what his involvement here means yet despite his experiencing inner conflict he carries out his role for the Camorra.
Franco has apprenticed Roberto into his successful Camorra waste disposal business. In a scene at the airport with Robertos father we understand the hopeless prospects for Robertos future without his current position yet Robertos long silent glances throughout the film reveal his struggle to accept the brutal disregard for humanity endemic in all that surrounds him.
When Don Pasquales mentor, in his ongoing attempt at exploiting Don Pasquales talent as a dressmaker, tells him that he has done everything for him Don Pasquales reply is that he has used him since he was a boy. We see the position Don Pasquales talent should have given him when the workers in the factory bow to him and applaud him and we see the exploitation of such talent when the exquisite gown he has painstakingly made and received little for is worn to the Oscars by a Hollywood actress. We see his exploitation in Don Pasquales beaten demeanour and frustrated knowledge of his fate.
Gomorrah is a film whose images and message leave a lasting impression in exposing a culture of intimidation and control common in so many current global situations.- Was this review helpful to you?
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Probably the most disturbing film I have seen in all my life
By a customer , 18 Aug 2012Probably the most disturbing film I have seen in all my 30 years of adult life.
What's most disturbing is the fact that all of this is still happening now, in 2012.
I came here from Gerald Seymour's (romanticised) novel 'The Collaborator' and wanted to learn more.
My thanks to the original writer and the film maker for this.
I have never been to Naples, I think I will go there later this year when the weather is cooler and look around the churches and coffee shops. Not to Scampia.
The real crook (IMHO) is the architect who designed and built those towers ... they shouldn't have been built.
But nothing will ever change in that part of the world. Life goes on ... sometimes life stops ...
There is a thin line between the first world and the third ...- Was this review helpful to you?
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Gomorrah....Best film in years!!
By uniqueness (77 reviews) from Glasgow , 05 Jun 2012Don't miss this film... it's one of the best films i've seen in years.
Don't listen to these reviews that say this film is boring. It couldn't be more from the truth.
If you like your films true to life, factual, violent, and with a good storyline then this is it.
I was mesmerised for the 2 hours and 11 mins of the film and it flew by. A good indication as to how good it is.
Only drawback is the subtitles, but 15 mins into the film i was so into the film i didn't mind reading the subtitles.
I really highly recommend this to anyone who likes dark, violent, but also tense and shocking.
Enjoy the film...i did.- Was this review helpful to you?
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Good film but I'd recommend reading the book first.
By DozyDog (7 reviews) , 16 May 2012Good film which certainly paints a vivid picture of the power & reach of the Neapolitan Camorra, but I would recommend reading Roberto Saviano's book 'Gomorrah' before watching this film as the story may be quite hard to follow otherwise. The book gives a fairly in-depth and methodical overview of Camorra's 'business' interests & methods but this is somewhat confusingly represented in the film and the sheer number of characters introduced in the short space of two hours makes it hard to keep track of who's who. If you've read the book, however, it makes perfect sense & the harsh images of the film reinforce the book's grim story.- Was this review helpful to you?
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