Open Letter to the Evening News
Open Letter to the Evening News
| 13 March 1970 (USA)
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Open Letter to the Evening News Trailers

Hoping to shake up the complacent Italian Communist Party, a group of leftist radicals sends an incendiary letter to a major evening newspaper declaring their intention to volunteer to fight American troops in Vietnam as a political statement against the war.

Reviews
Hellen

I like the storyline of this show,it attract me so much

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Sharkflei

Your blood may run cold, but you now find yourself pinioned to the story.

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Dirtylogy

It's funny, it's tense, it features two great performances from two actors and the director expertly creates a web of odd tension where you actually don't know what is happening for the majority of the run time.

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Micah Lloyd

Excellent characters with emotional depth. My wife, daughter and granddaughter all enjoyed it...and me, too! Very good movie! You won't be disappointed.

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Eumenides_0

Francesco Masselli's movie is dominated by an hypothesis. It's not a character movie in which a personality stands out and is burned on the viewer's memory forever. In fact, the movie is so full of characters, neither takes center stage and and it becomes confusing after a while.It's an idea-driven movie. The filmmaker merely suggests the following: what if a bunch of middle-class intellectual communists sent a letter to an evening newspaper claiming they're ready to join the Vietnamese in their fight against America? They don't expect repercussions, they don't even expect the letter to be published; it's merely showing their position.But then the letter gets published. And slowly events conspire to force them to own up to their own words. And the filmmaker poses the question: what will they do now? Will they abandon their comfortable lives to go fight and possibly die in Vietnam? Will they go back on their word and look cowardly and uncommitted to their political beliefs? I watched this movie just an hour ago so I'm still thinking about. Is Maselli attacking communism here or just using them as an example to tell a story about the importance of defending one's convictions? his communists are hardly the working-class heroes of tradition: they're mostly well-off intellectuals, have good jobs at Universities and companies. They speak mostly in pseudo-scientific verbiage, going on about Freud and Sartre and Marx and collective psychoses and social-historical contexts, and seem completely disconnected from reality. But this is when they're not having sexual crises.There's an atmosphere of inertia and conformity in these people that make you think writing pointless letters to newspapers is what they've been doing all their lives, instead of engaging in actual changes. Perhaps this is what Maselli is getting at: for real change people must act. When his communists are confronted with this reality, they're terrified. The ending is a sequence of genius and worth the movie alone, as we see the reality of their endeavor sinking in their brains at last.As a slice of Italian and European history, this is a good movie. It could have been better if the movie had had less characters with stronger personalities instead of one-dimensional walking ideas. trying to cover as many different types of people in society, he sort of lost track of all the conflicts in the movie. But this can be excused and the movie can still be enjoyed in spite of it.

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