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CINEMA

Loren leads stars in tributes to late Italian director

A tearful Sophia Loren on Thursday led a string of Italian cinema luminaries paying their last respects to legendary film director Ettore Scola, who died this week.

Loren leads stars in tributes to late Italian director
Sophia Loren was among Italian stars who paid tribute to the late film director Ettore Scola. Photo: Tiziana Fabi/AFP

Oscar-winning director Paolo Sorrentino was also among those who visited Rome's Casa del Cinema, where Scola's coffin was placed to allow mourners to say their final farewells before a funeral restricted to friends and family on Friday.
   
“I'm too choked up to talk,” Loren, 81, told reporters. The veteran actress starred alongside Marcello Mastroianni in 1977's “A Special Day”, one of Scola's most acclaimed films.
   
Scriptwriter Enrico Vanzina told AFPTV that Scola, who died on Tuesday at the age of 84, was a master storyteller.
   
“He explained to us that you can use comedy to tell any story; politics, history, love,” Vanzina said.
   
“Comedy is a very important genre, it is perhaps the most important in Italian cinema. He was one of the most important, among only a handful of real greats”.
   
Fabrizio Luccherini, another Italian scriptwriter, said he would be forever in the late director's debt.
   
“He was someone that gave me a huge amount. He worked right up until the end, on a documentary about (Italian film director Federico) Fellini You could never say no to Ettore.”
   
Antonio Bassolino, a former mayor of Naples and friend of Scola's, added: “A precious part of Italian history is now gone. We have lost one of the last Italian greats”.

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ACCIDENT

German tourists among 13 dead in Italy cable car accident

Thirteen people, including German tourists, have been killed after a cable car disconnected and fell near the summit of the Mottarone mountain near Lake Maggiore in northern Italy.

German tourists among 13 dead in Italy cable car accident
The local emergency services published this photograph of the wreckage. Photo: Vigili del Fuoco

The accident was announced by Italy’s national fire and rescue service, Vigili del Fuoco, at 13.50 on Sunday, with the agency saying over Twitter that a helicopter from the nearby town of Varese was on the scene. 

Italy’s National Alpine and Speleological Rescue Corps confirmed that there were 13 victims and two seriously injured people.

Italian daily Corriere della Sera reported that German tourists were among the 13 victims.

According to their report, there were 15 passengers inside the car — which can hold 35 people — at the time a cable snapped, sending it tumbling into the forest below. Two seriously injured children, aged nine and five, were airlifted to hospital in Turin. 

The cable car takes tourists and locals from Stresa, a resort town on Lake Maggiore up to a panoramic peak on the Mottarone mountain, reaching some 1,500m above sea level. 

According to the newspaper, the car had been on its way from the lake to the mountain when the accident happened, with rescue operations complicated by the remote forest location where the car landed. 

The cable car had reopened on April 24th after the end of the second lockdown, and had undergone extensive renovations and refurbishments in 2016, which involved the cable undergoing magnetic particle inspection (MPI) to search for any defects. 

Prime Minister Mario Draghi said on Twitter that he expressed his “condolences to the families of the victims, with special thoughts for the seriously injured children and their families”.

Infrastructure Minister Enrico Giovannini told Italy’s Tg1 a commission of inquiry would be established, according to Corriere della Sera: “Our thoughts go out to those involved. The Ministry has initiated procedures to set up a commission and initiate checks on the controls carried out on the infrastructure.”

“Tomorrow morning I will be in Stresa on Lake Maggiore to meet the prefect and other authorities to decide what to do,” he said.

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