Monday, November 10, 2008

I lift my lamp beside the golden door

Friday night, I found Golden Door in the foreign film section of my
library branch and I must say I absolutely loved it! Emanuele Crialese
brilliantly writes and directs this masterpiece of concept, acting and
cinematography. It is a radiantly touching story of a Sicilian peasant,
Salvatore, who believes he can find a better life in the land of America
where carrots grow taller than men, rivers flow with milk and golden
coins rain from trees. The stunning cinematography and great acting
are laced with wonderfully artistic quirky dream sequences of visions
of the fabled new world. It also depicts a very realistic third class ship
journey, as well as the rigors of Ellis Island. Do yourself a favor and
put this little gem on your library or Netflix list. This film will make
you smile and even shed a tear or two. You will thank me.

45 comments:

  1. Thank you my dear for recommending it. I also want to say I am totally in love with your banner.

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  2. This looks just like the kind of film we enjoy. Thanks!

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  3. Hello Lady Willow !

    I did not know this film before...

    Thank You for this discovery !

    Have a good day !

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  4. I will put it on my glowria.fr list! That is Netflix in France!)

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  5. Love those bottom shelfers. Pappy

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  6. You always find the most interesting films...

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  7. Months ago I posted a vintage postcard featuring huge onions on a flatbed of a train car. Someone commented that some people across the ocean thought the drawings were real and came to America to live because the veggies were as big as houses. Interesting!

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  8. Yes! This film starts out with Salvatore seeing several of those post cards and taking it as a sign from God to go to America. Then he imagines seeing huge vegetables, swimming in milk and being pelted with falling coins! It's really adorable.

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  9. Oooooh, that movie looks good! =)

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  10. Willow,
    Oh that I had time to watch movies. This looks like one I'd enjoy.
    rel

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  11. Was completely unaware of this movie. I wll definitely seek it out.

    Greetings from London.

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  12. Yes, thank you for pointing us in the direction of what you make sound a wonderful film.

    CJ xx

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  13. My list grows with all these wonderful films you tempt me to view, thank you for sharing...

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  14. Ooooh! This sounds perfect. Golden Door is now on my list!

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  15. Sounds wonderful! We'll have to try and find it somewhere. Most of the films we enjoy these days are foreign or the older ones (pre-1970's). We also enjoy the movie Amelie' (French). It's adorable. ♥ ∞

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  16. Didn't Charlotte Gainsbourg play in the more recent adaptation of Jane Eyre( the version with William Hurt as Rochester?)

    I am adding this one to Netflix today...Thanks so much for the suggestion!

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  17. I will definitely look out for this one. Thanks, Willow.

    Have you ever seen "Good Morning, Babylon" with Greta Scacchi? Or "The Legend of 1900" with Tim Roth? I do think you would enjoy both, if you have not.

    Kat

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  18. i'm very intrigued by this movie. is it modern or an older film?

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  19. oh my goodness ... I just found the salmon patties. Yum & wink. xo, S.

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  20. Kat, I love Scacchi and Roth and have not seen either of these. Thanks for the suggestion! I'm adding them to my Netflix queue right now.

    Julie, "Golden Door" was made in 2006, so it's fairly recent.

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  21. That looks fabulous. I'm always looking for good movies to watch, and this is just the kind of movie I love!

    Have you ever seen The Black Book? It's wonderful too.

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  22. A film with Charlotte Gainsbourg that I haven't seen! Thanks!

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  23. One of the films supporting characters was played by an Italo-American actor, Vincent Schiavelli, who died during the filming. His own grandfather had emigrated from Sicily.

    Schiavelli wrote a beautiful book, about contemporary Sicily, including many a recipe
    Many Beautiful Things: Stories and Recipes from Polizzi Generosa.

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  24. Have you seen the movie "Il Gattopardo"?

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  25. Sounds right up my alley, will have to check it out, as well as the others mentioned in the comments...THANKS!

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  26. Willow, your Netflix queue must stretch the length of Hadrian's Wall! I'm sure these films will be right up your alley.

    Btw, your masthead puts me in mind of "Angela's Ashes".

    Kat

    P.S. Pop round to read my latest poem - for Remembrance Day

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  27. I'll add it to my netflix list. Thanks

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  28. Merisi, no, I haven't and must, since I'm now in a Sicilian mode! This one is going on the Netflix, too. :)

    The Schiavelli book looks good, too. And I didn't know about his death.

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  29. Jo, yes, I've seen "The Black Book" and it is well done!

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  30. I don't use NetFlix but that does look like a compelling movie. Thx for the heads up.

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  31. Mr Sponge, I checked it out from my local library branch, so I'm sure you could find it without using Netflix. :)

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  32. I will add Golden Door to my list. It looks like the kind of movie I enjoy very much.

    Take care.

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  33. Thanks, I'm running over to Netflix now!

    Funny, I just recommended a series on my blog.

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  34. Wow--this sounds like a great movie! I'll bet this is one I'd love. Thanks for the recommendation. I'll tell Joe to order it sometime when I get home. I can't wait for long, cold winter nights with a fire in the fireplace and a good movie! Soon...;))

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  35. Any shoot'n and kill'n in it? Wars? Gunslingers? LOL....on roll. Hit poor Lavinia's blog with quips too. Must be the fall air. Yehaw.

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  36. I appreciate very much the choice of this film.
    Charlotte Gainsbourg is an actress especially loved in France, and rightly so, it has a great personality. She sing also, in french and in english.
    She is part of family of artists... His father, Serge Gainsbourg (too quickly disappeared) is one of the greatest contempary french artists:author, composer,interpreter,performer... Poet, dandy, provocative and talented. Her mother Jane Birkin is english, and was the muse and interpreter of Serge G. for a long time, with so much talent and patience, and has subsequently proved that she could also do very well without him,and without be in the "rejection?".
    Ouf, I stop.

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  37. this is list I am making it getting longer and longer ... thanks again for another reco worth following up on !

    :-Daryl

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  38. It looks stunning, just my kind of film willow. Thank you for that.

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  39. Thanks so much for recommending this movie. Once I saw your blog I went straight to the library and got the movie. It was wonderful. While I was at the libary I also picked up the movie called "The Road Home". I cried and cried when I watched this movie.

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  40. Jeannie, so glad to hear you enjoyed the movie! I thought it was so charming and want to watch it again, soon.

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  41. I'm so excited. I went to Netflix to add this to my queue and it is available on instant viewing. I can watch it without waiting. Yippie!

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  42. Keep those movie recs coming...you always come up with things I've not yet discovered (high praise indeed!).
    lol.

    My grandparents came through Ellis Island (though not from Sicily) but this historical perspective would be very interesting to me, since they're no longer here for me to talk to. I'll keep an eye out for this film.

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  43. this movie sounds fantastic! I just discovered your blog via EDI and am a fan! i'm adding you to my blogroll!

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  44. Ooooh, this sounds like a good film. It's fascinating to think what the immigrants went through to get to this continent (I'm Cdn so I'll include my country)and how that one big move changed the direction of families forever. Thank you for recommending this film.

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Inject a few raisins of conversation into the tasteless dough of existence.
― O. Henry (and me)