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MAFIA

Mafia love story musical shows a different side to Naples

Ammo may be flying but there's always time for a sing-along: in "Love and Bullets," a playful mafia musical premiering at the Venice film festival, the crooks really can croon.

Mafia love story musical shows a different side to Naples
Directors Marco Manetti (L) and Antonio Manetti attend the premiere of the movie "Ammore E Malavita". Photo: Tiziana Fabi/AFP

The latest adventure from Italian brothers Marco and Antonio Manetti is an exploration of the power of love to sway even the hardest of hearts – but also a vibrant homage to Italy's southern city Naples.

“Naples is depicted in the news, in films, books and on TV, as an ugly city gripped by crime,” Antonio told AFPTV. “But just taking a stroll through the streets of the centre shows you the city is not that”.

The coastal city at the foot of Mount Vesuvius is the heartland of the ruthless Camorra organized crime group, which was immortalized in the 2008 bestselling book “Gomorrah” by Roberto Saviano and in a popular spin-off television series.

“Lately there has been what I call the 'Gomorrah' effect, in which Naples is portrayed as a dark place. Yes, there's the Camorra, but it's also a city that can make you smile,” Marco said.

The plot opens with the funeral of boss Don Vincenzo (Carlo Buccirosso) – nicknamed the “King of Fish” – whose grieving, bejewelled widow Donna Maria (Claudia Gerini) appears to just be holding it together.

To  the outside world, the boss is “sleeping with the fishes” after being bumped off in a basin of mussels.

But all is not as it seems. A nurse (Serena Rossi) spots Don Vincenzo alive, and the family rushes to silence her.

Will hired gun Ciro (Giampaolo Morelli) pull the trigger once he realizes the nurse is an old flame?

'Italian capital of culture'

“Love is the motor behind everything that happens,” Gerini said. “Donna Maria comes up with this plan to pretend her husband has died so they can leave and start a fresh life together” beyond the mafia.

“There is crime, but it's also a story about a Naples made of feelings, of families, of colours,” she said.

The film, competing for the prized Golden Lion under its Italian title “Ammore e malavita,” may hope to defend Naples but it also revels in laughing at Neapolitans – who are all too quick to cash in on the mafia cliche.

“We joke that while in Paris the symbolic site is the Eiffel Tower, in Rome the Colosseum, in China the Great Wall, in Naples, it's the Sails of Scampia,” a vast, crime-plagued tower block, Antonio said.

“Instead of complaining, the Neapolitans turn it into a business, inventing a tour for American sightseers.

“And we had fun leaving the pickpocketing of one of the tourists a mystery: was it real or was it organized by the tour operator to make the experience even more 'authentic' for the Americans?” he said.

The brothers acknowledge that while Gomorrah cast the city in a certain light, the film and TV series “also did it good, bringing it attention from outside”.

And it is a city they strongly believe deserves to be known for beyond the shootouts: Forget Rome or Milan, “Naples is the Italian capital of culture, it is up there along with New York, Paris, London,” Antonio said.

By Giovanni Grezzi with Ella Ide in Rome

READ ALSO: 'How I fell in love with Naples, a city full of contrasts''How I fell in love with Naples, a city full of contrasts'

NAPLES

Champions League: Eight arrested after fans clash with police in Naples

Smoke bombs, flares, chairs, bottles and metal poles were thrown at police in Naples' historic centre on Wednesday, as Eintracht Frankfurt fans descended on the city despite a ban.

Champions League: Eight arrested after fans clash with police in Naples

Three German football fans and five Italians were arrested following violence in Naples before and after Napoli’s Champions League win over Eintracht Frankfurt, a local official said on Thursday.

Six police officers were injured in violence on Wednesday evening, according to Alessandro Giuliano, who is responsible for public safety in Naples.

Police were in the process of identifying 470 German fans who arrived in the city, and were scouring images to establish those responsible for the disorder, he told a press conference.

Dozens of supporters of Atalanta also joined forces with supporters of the German side, with whom they are twinned.

The first clashes occurred on Wednesday afternoon in Naples’ historic centre, and continued after the match, an easy 3-0 win for Napoli which took them through to the Champions League quarter-finals for the first time.

Smoke bombs and flares, chairs, bottles and metal poles were thrown at police, who responded with tear gas. Later, Napoli fans were filmed by Italian media throwing objects at buses carrying Eintracht fans.

Naples mayor Gaetano Manfredi condemned the “unacceptable” violence, while opposition politicians have questioned the government’s handling of the situation, notably by Interior Minister Matteo Piantedosi.

Napoli player Juan Jesus said the disorder was “bad for the city, and bad for football”.

“Because people come, then destroy, then leave, it’s not a good thing. It’s not possible to still see this in 2023, we are sorry to see these scenes,” he said.

The German supporters had travelled to southern Italy, with many arriving in Naples by train, even though Eintracht decided against selling tickets for the away section in Naples for the second leg of the last 16 tie.

Eintracht Frankfurt fans clash with anti-riot police after arriving in Naples despite not having tickets for their team’s Champions League decider with Napoli. (Photo by Ciro FUSCO / ANSA / AFP)

The Frankfurt club decided not to take up their allocation after the Naples prefecture decided on Sunday to ban residents of the German city from buying tickets.

A earlier Italian ban on Eintracht fans who lived anywhere in Germany was overturned.

Sunday’s decision came after violence in the first leg that was won 2-0 by Napoli in Frankfurt, which led to nine people being taken into custody.

Eintracht fans have been under close surveillance by European governing body UEFA since the pitch invasion which greeted the club reaching the final of the Europa League, which they won by beating Scottish club Rangers.

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