Locarno Film Festival


Throughout its history, the festival has tried, in the apt words of Morando Morandini, "to transform its diversity into identity." During the 1970s a screen sixty-five feet wide was set up in Piazza Grande. The idea of architect Livio Vacchini, it marked a turning point, at a moment of estrangement between the general public and the cinema, and gave new energy to the concept of cinema as a spectacle for the masses. It was also the high point of the festival, which became "a festival for the public" at which directors and producers could measure the reactions of viewers right there on the spot, while offering everyone something varied and stimulating. The 1990s brought back to the surface the unresolved dilemma of the border between art and promotion, as critics noted that the principal players at the festival were not the films themselves but rather the "Great Communication Machine" in all its power.
But one critic, Gianni Canova, was the exception: "Locarno evades the rules, avoids the trends, and escapes from the fatuous kingdom of the chatterers....What we take away from Locarno is not one film, but cinema itself, with all its lively, abrasive, throbbing images. There is absolutely nothing of the 'promotional' about it. It is impervious to the temptations of marketing." The sixtieth anniversary of the festival has seen Moleskine notebooks, personalized with the event's spotted logo, play two roles. They are part of the official merchandising, and they also pay homage to the artists. Presented for the second time, having been used the previous year, they are personalized in a new way.
For further information:
on line: http://www.pardo.ch/
in libraries: "Locarno città del cinema. I cinquant'anni del Festival internazionale del film" di Dalmazio Ambrosini, Armando Dadò editore, Locarno 1998.
"Dalle suggestioni del Parco alla Grande Festa del Cinema. Storia del Festival di Locarno 1946-1997"di Guglielmo Volonterio, Marsilio, Venezia 1997.












