MODALITÀ DI OCCUPAZIONE E INTERVENTI DI RIEDIFICAZIONE AI MARGINI DEL TERRITORIO ABELLANO IN ETÀ FLAVIA. NOTE PER UNA RIFLESSIONE TOPOGRAFICA

Written by  Paola Carfora Dic 05, 2019

The results of a topographical research carried out in the northwestern territory Abella’s "agro" show the type of population during the first century AD, the distribution of productive settlements in its "agro". While a first revision of the archaeological data deriving from the ancient Abella’s city seems to mark, despite the epigraphic documentation, a lack of historical evidence of the first imperial age, apparently the topographical data collected in the countryside do not seem to suggest the abandonment of the productive sites between the 1st century BC and the early Augustan age, but rather their vitality and persistence over time. Some archaeological data seem to demonstrate not only the continuation of production on the sites, but also a renovation activity of the buildings following the earthquake of 62 AD and of the eruption of 79 AD which certainly struck the territories of Abella as documented epigraphically in the nearby town of Nola.

Paola Carfora

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    Joker: Folie À Deux (15, 138 mins)
    Verdict: Bold, brilliant sequel 

    Rating:

    A Different Man (15, 112 mins)
    Verdict: A touching satire  

    Rating:

    Venice, a city long associated with masks and masquerades, was the perfect place to unveil
    Joker five years ago; and last month, at the venerable film festival there,
    it was followed by the sequel, Joker: Folie À Deux.


    The director is again Todd Phillips, with Joaquin Phoenix once more
    in the title role, this time joined by Lady Gaga
    as what I suppose we must call the love interest,
    although that would undervalue her wonderful performance.


    We've known since A Star Is Born in 2018 that she can act, but she really is terrific in a bad-girl role.
    They'd have loved her at St Trinian's.

    This film is audaciously different in style from the original,
    not as electrifying, but bold and brilliant all the same.


    Arthur is now behind bars, waiting to see whether he will be
    judged sane enough to stand trial for murder, and in the
    meantime enjoying his celebrity status with fellow prisoners and even the warders, one of whom, a sadistic Irishman played by Brendan Gleeson, feeds him cigarettes in return for jokes.





    Joaquin Phoenix and Lady Gaga in sequel Joker: Folie À Deux





    Joaquin Phoenix in Joker: Folie a Deux - an American musical
    psychological thriller film directed by Todd Phillips





    Joaquin Phoenix reprises his role as the Joker, with Lady Gaga joining the cast as his love interest,
    Harley Quinn

    Lady Gaga plays Lee, a fellow inmate on her way, we suppose, to becoming Joker's girlfriend Harley Quinn.
    The pair hit it off at a music therapy class, and are soon mutually smitten, but Lee makes it clear that she loves the
    dangerously charismatic Joker, 'clown prince of crime', not the
    gloomily introspective Arthur.



    Read More

    Megalopolis review: Coppola's self-indulgent comeback may be a MEGAFLOPOLIS


    Which is more real: the psychopath wearing the mask or the vulnerable fellow behind it?

    Either way, identity confusion is the theme of this film, which keeps being billed
    as a musical. 

    It's not, really, although music looms large as an expression of Arthur and Lee's burgeoning love for one
    another. And there are a couple of swooning dance routines that
    make them look like psychotic versions of Ryan Gosling and Emma Stone in La La Land
    (2016).

    Moreover, it is while watching Vincente Minnelli's 1953 classic The
    Band Wagon that Lee, who claims to have been imprisoned for arson, sets fire to their prison wing.


    The ensuing chaos provides an excellent opportunity to escape, yet Phillips and his co-writer Scott Silver skilfully toy with our expectations throughout; each time we anticipate which way the narrative is going to
    go, it confounds us by wheeling off in another direction.




    Joaquin Phoenix in Joker: Folie a Deux - an American musical psychological thriller film directed by Todd Phillips





    For me, Joker was a near-masterpiece, and while this sequel doesn't
    scale those heady heights, it is still a gripping film about mental illness,
    writes Brian Viner 

    Eventually, after Arthur's high-profile TV appearance with a smug interviewer played by Steve
    Coogan, it is time for the trial, with all of Gotham gripped by the
    subject of multiple personality disorder. Is the defendant
    accused of five murders Arthur, or is it Joker? His kindly lawyer (Catherine Keener)
    strives to show it is the former; Lee just as urgently wants him to identify as his demonic alter ego.




    Read More

    His Three Daughters review: Savour this exquisite elegy to death and sisterhood, writes BRIAN VINER


    For me, Joker was a near-masterpiece, and while this sequel doesn't scale those heady heights, it is still
    a gripping film about mental illness; not quite comparable with all-time greats such as Psycho (1960) and One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest (1975), but not too far off.



    - Joker's Gotham, of course, is a lightly fictionalised version of New York City.
    The real thing is the backdrop to A Different Man, another absorbing story, splendidly
    written and directed by Aaron Schimberg, about an urban loner struggling
    with life.

    In the case of the troubled, self-conscious Edward (Sebastian Stan),
    an aspiring actor, that's apparently because he has a disfiguring craniofacial condition. Instructional corporate videos seem to be about as far as he can get
    in the acting world.

    There are obvious echoes of The Elephant Man (1980), and for that matter of recent release
    The Substance, in which Demi Moore's character,
    a former movie star 'disfigured' by a few wrinkles, finds a way of transforming into her own younger self.





    A still from the film A Different Man directed by Aaron Schimberg

    Here, Edward is told by a doctor that 'an alternative path has presented
    itself'. In other words, medical science has found a way to reverse his condition, turning him into a perfectly attractive middle-aged man.

    But Schimberg's point, made with great satirical swagger, is that Edward, despite his radical change in appearance, is
    still the same person underneath that he always was.

    In his former condition he was befriended by his pretty, charismatic neighbour,
    Ingrid (Renate Reinsve), a playwright. Now he is able to fall into bed with her, and to star
    in a play she has written about their relationship, little though she knows
    of his real identity.

    I was even reminded of Tootsie (1982) and Mrs Doubtfire (1993) as Edward's new persona fundamentally fails to
    alter who he actually is. This is illuminated by the arrival of Oswald, an Englishman with the same condition Edward once had,
    but popular, witty, confident, and gloriously played by Adam Pearson (who really does
    suffer from a disfiguring condition called neurofibromatosis).


    Pearson is probably best-known for his debut film, Jonathan Glazer's brilliant Under The Skin (2013).
    Which is apt, because this picture, too, is about what's under the skin.

    -A longer review of Joker: Folie À Deux ran a month ago.
    Both films are in cinemas now.


     



    Paul Weller's film debut? That's entertainment!
    The 68th London Film Festival opens next week with the world premiere of Blitz, director Steve McQueen's
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    Saoirse Ronan, for my money one of the most talented actresses
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    It sounds intriguing even without the casting of
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    I'm also very much looking forward to another world premiere, Joy, the story of the three brilliant British medical pioneers whose work on IVF led to the world's first
    'test-tube' baby, Louise Brown, in 1978.




    Saoirse Ronan, Elliott Heffernan and Paul Weller in the film 'Blitz'

    It is directed by Ben Taylor, best-known for his TV work on shows such as Sex
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    I have heard great things about Conclave, the adaptation of Robert
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    Furnish, so… we'll see.

    For more details, visit bfi.org.uk/lff.


    Lady Gaga

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