Esterno notte

TV Series
Directed by Director's notes
  • Marco Bellocchio
Year
  • 2021
Directed by
  • Marco Bellocchio
Year
  • 2021
Cast
  • Fabrizio Gifuni
  • Margherita Buy
  • Toni Servillo
  • Fausto Russo Alesi
  • Gabriel Montesi
  • Daniela Marra
 
  • Paolo Pierobon
  • Fabrizio Contri
  • Pier Giorgio Bellocchio
  • Antonio Piovanelli
  • Bruno Cariello
  • Gigio Alberti
  • Luca Lazzareschi

Synopsis

1978: Italy is torn apart by a civil war. On one side, the Red Brigades, the main left-wing armed organization, and on the other, the State. Street violence, kidnappings, kneecappings, shootouts, bombings. For the first time in a Western country, a government supported by the Communist Party (PCI) is about to take office, in an epoch-making alliance with the historical conservative bulwark of the Nation, the Christian Democracy (DC). Aldo Moro, the President of the DC, is the main proponent of this agreement, which marks a decisive step in the mutual recognition between Italy’s two most important parties. Precisely on the day the Government he skillfully built was to take office, March 16, 1978, on the road leading him to Parliament, Aldo Moro is kidnapped in an ambush that annihilates his entire escort. It is a direct attack on the heart of the State. His captivity will last fifty-five days, marked by Moro’s letters and the Red Brigades’ communiqués: fifty-five days of hope, fear, negotiations, failures, good intentions, and bad actions. Fifty-five days after which his body will be abandoned in a car in the center of Rome, exactly halfway between the headquarters of the DC and the PCI.


Director's notes
  • An article by Filippo Ceccarelli about Aldo Moro published on 20 September 2017 in the La Repubblica newspaper really struck me, along with the photos that accompanied it: one of President Moro on the beach in Maccarese in 1971, wearing a double-breasted suit and tie while surrounded by mothers, children and fathers in swimming costumes... And the other beneath it, of him on a motorboat driven by his wife, a strong, proud woman who took many a mystery to her grave. They were the exterior view, the counter-view of Moro in 1978, a prisoner of the Red Brigades, later executed by them, on whom I had made my first film on the subject, entirely shot in interior spaces, Good Morning, Night.


    I felt it was important, at least for me (not for Italy, I have no such pretense), after The Traitor, to return to the subject. This time I wanted to create a series to tell the story of what went on in Italy during those 53 days outside the prison, only returning to it at the end, at the tragic epilogue. Exterior Night, because this time the protagonists are the men and women involved in various ways in the kidnapping who acted outside Moro’s prison: his family, his fellow politicians, various priests, the Pope, professors, diviners, the police forces, the secret services, Red Brigade members outside and in jail, even mafia men and infiltrators. Well-known figures, always on TV and in the press, but also unknown characters... And their stories, more private than public, during the kidnapping, their efforts to save him, or pretend to save him, openly or secretly boycotting every possible negotiation, including the tragi-grotesque séances and the trips abroad to consult psychics who may have had precious information on the whereabouts of the prison.


    The great theatre of television during those 55 days, with millions of viewers glued to their screens, on which everyone was making predictions, publicly or in their hearts, with prayers said in churches and appeals made from St Peters for the salvation of the President. And many hoped he would be saved, including myself. Naively. That man, like Christ, had to die. So that nothing could change, not only in politics, but above all in the minds of the Italians. This work marks an exception to my rule of never returning to stories I’ve already told, but with ample justification,namely that the night I wanted to tell in this series was absent from Good Morning, Night.