A gentle, beguiling hymn to a semi-deserted Calabrian countryside and those who stayed behind, Il Dono is a portrait of depopulation in the village of Caulonia (the filmmaker’s ancestral town), which saw a dramatic decrease in inhabitants from roughly 15,000 in the 1950s to just a few hundred people at the time of the film’s making. In mainly long, static, observational takes and with next to no dialogue, Il Dono pieces together the fragments of a place guided by slow rhythms and which could be described as “old world” with traditions, rituals, charm aplenty, and not a few ruins from the relentless ravages of time. Gorgeously shot on 16mm (then transferred to 35mm, and presented here in a recent digital restoration of superlative color), each frame of Il Dono is like a painting, whether a landscape, portraits of great, weather-worn faces, or still lives reminiscent of Giorgio Morandi’s glass bottles.

The Gift (2003)
Directed by Michelangelo Frammartino
Description by Studio
Movie Info
Official Site
Themes
Tags
Culture, Daily Life, Emotions, Human Relationships, Italian Film, Rural Life, Small Village, Southern Italy
Alternate Titles
Dar
RS
Il dono
, IT, ES
Prezent
PL
Το δώρο
GR