07-10-2008 09:03
And the tailor Pasquale who has talent, which he feels isn't recognized, and so he goes to work for Chinese competitors - I think that has a fairy-tale quality. I wanted the film to unfold like a silent movie, which connects to people around the world. When we won the Grand Prix at Cannes, I knew we could succeed in doing that.
This was actually a scene that I added to the screenplay while preparing for the shoot. I discovered that the criminals used to visit these tanning salons everyday, and I thought if the clan members started to kill each other there, it would be new interpretation on the classic barbers scene, where somebody has their throat cut.
I think it disorientates the viewer, but it's very atmospheric, and the colours and the machinery are like something out of a sci-fi movie.
I wanted to make Gomorrah like a documentary or like a piece of war reportage. Of course it is all a reconstruction and there are actors, yet I wanted to make the audience forget there is a film-crew behind the camera.
The source material is so real and true and the locations are so powerful,that I didn't need to embellish things visually. When people in Italy said they thought Gomorrah was a documentary, I knew I had done a good job!
I made it clear to people that I was making a movie about the Camorra, not against them. During my research I discovered that not everything is black and white in their world, that there are grey zones.
You talk to people who are connected to the 'System' and you realize how easy it is to get involved in criminal activities. The other thing which helped me is that the Camorra didn't realise that the movie would be so successful.
To show that it is tough, the new government under Berlusconi has sent the army into Naples. To me this is something for show, it is a spectacle, but it is not enough. For me you have to understand the Camorra from the inside.
I tried to show the problems of education, employment and the relationship between the citizen and the state: the Camorra live in these communities and they solve peoples' problems. The Saviano book was really important because in Italy people have started to talk about these problems, and now the government has to do something.
I don't make movies because I think I can change the world - that's a problem for politicians - and I don't particularly like 'message' movies. I tell stories with images, emotions and characters. For me cinema is about expression more than information.
Gomorrah opens in UK cinemas on October 10.
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