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The Inferno (1962)

The Inferno (1962)
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Although the Inferno was made in 1962 for NBC television's prestigious "White Paper" series, the network refused to run the documentary because it was considered too controversial. Director Robert M. Young rescued the film from the discard pile, and after some editing, it was publicly shown for the first time in 1984 at the Museum of Modern Art in New York and then at the Munich Film Festival in that same year. In the early '60s, Young and his co-director and friend Michael Roemer traveled to the impoverished quarter of Cortile Cascino in Palermo, Sicily to record the human deprivation there through the eyes of one mother in the ghetto. A crippled boy makes his way across a garbage-strewn landscape, children dangerously play along the train tracks, and the young mother in her shack talks about her children, especially her talented and intelligent young daughter, hoping that she will someday be able to escape into a better life. In the meantime, children barely more than toddlers are picking rags with their older siblings, boys learn to steal to get what they need, prostitutes roam the area -- born in the ghetto themselves, and the Mafia is ominously present everywhere. Compelling, and offering its images with compassion and empathy, this documentary deserves to be more broadly disseminated. ~ Eleanor Mannikka, Rovi

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Director(s):
Robert M. YoungMichael Roemer, (more)
Format(s):
DVD
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Synopsis of The Inferno

Although the Inferno was made in 1962 for NBC television's prestigious "White Paper" series, the network refused to run the documentary because it was considered too controversial. Director Robert M. Young rescued the film from the discard pile, and after some editing, it was publicly shown for the first time in 1984 at the Museum of Modern Art in New York and then at the Munich Film Festival in that same year. In the early '60s, Young and his co-director and friend Michael Roemer traveled to the impoverished quarter of Cortile Cascino in Palermo, Sicily to record the human deprivation there through the eyes of one mother in the ghetto. A crippled boy makes his way across a garbage-strewn landscape, children dangerously play along the train tracks, and the young mother in her shack talks about her children, especially her talented and intelligent young daughter, hoping that she will someday be able to escape into a better life. In the meantime, children barely more than toddlers are picking rags with their older siblings, boys learn to steal to get what they need, prostitutes roam the area -- born in the ghetto themselves, and the Mafia is ominously present everywhere. Compelling, and offering its images with compassion and empathy, this documentary deserves to be more broadly disseminated. ~ Eleanor Mannikka, Rovi

Theatrical Feature Running Time:
45 mins
Director(s):
Robert M. YoungMichael Roemer
Writer(s):
Robert M. Young
Categories:
Special InterestDocumentary
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Walter S.

According to IMDB the film described here is called Children of Fate: Life and Death in a Sicillian Family. INFERNO from GraIngers World (as pictured on the jacket above) is a documentary on FIRE SAFETY. I will point out this error to BB, however I don't hold out much hope of it being corrected.

Yes   |   No

 
JOHN C.

I ordered this movie and the one they sent was about wildfires in Australia! Something's wrong here. This cover photo is not the one associated with the real movies description. Don't buy this because they don't have the right one.

Yes   |   No

 
Ada R.

They sent me the Australian firefighter video, too.

Yes   |   No

 
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