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"Pagine
corsare"
Restoring Pasolini
Thirty years later, new questions
arise about
who murdered the Italian cultural
giant
by Doug
Ireland
Published on August 04, 2005
This is an expanded version
of an article I wrote for the L.A.
Weekly
Ostia,
the harbor city of ancient Rome, is noted for its ruins of temples, baths
and palaces, constructed in the centuries before Christ, which dot its
sprawling landscape. It was on a deserted vacant lot, hard by an obsolete
seaplane base in Ostia just 20 miles from modern Rome, that the mutilated,
bloody body of Pier Paolo Pasolini, a giant polymath of postwar Italian
culture - a filmmaker, poet, novelist, playwright, literary critic, political
columnist and painter, who frequently celebrated homosexuality in his writings
and films - was discovered on November 2, 1975. In the wee hours of that
November morning, a carabinieri patrol spotted a gray Alfa Romeo speeding
and careening wildly down the highway.
The
police gave chase and ran the car off the road. Inside was a 17-year-old
boy, Giuseppe “Pino” Pelosi - a hustler and delinquent known as “Pino
the Frog” - who’d been released from prison for auto theft only two
months earlier. Pelosi jumped out of the car and tried to run, but was
caught and arrested. The Alfa Romeo, it turned out, belonged to Pasolini.
After Pasolini’s martyred remains were discovered later that day, Pino
the Frog confessed to having killed him. As a minor, he was given only
an eight-year sentence for the crime.
Thirty years later, at the
beginning of May, Pino the Frog recanted his decades-earlier confession
in a headline-making, exclusive interview with the Italian television network
Rai 3. In the wake of this development, the openly gay Italian deputy Franco
Grillini (of the Party of the Democratic Left) led a group of 30 deputies
demanding, during the Italian parliament’s question time, that the Berlusconi
government examine the Pasolini murder anew, the left-wing mayor of Rome
put his weight behind a new investigation - and the case was officially
reopened. Pino the Frog was deposed by the Roman investigating magistrates
freshly charged with re-examining Pasolini’s murder, and he reiterated
his new statements to them under oath. The investigation is ongoing.
The
impact of Pino the Frog’s recantation on Pasolini’s future reputation
cannot be over-emphasized. For years, Pasolini’s enormous body of work
has been allowed to be dismissed and compartmentalized because of the alleged
cause of his murder in Pino the Frog’s first confession - a fictive S&M
adventure gone bad, in which Pasolini supposedly tried to sodomize his
putative murderer with a large piece of wood. That improbable version of
the assassination, so out of character with Pasolini’s legendary gentleness
toward the lower-class youth to whom he was attracted, is now definitively
debunked. But one cannot grasp the significance of this revelation without
understanding: Who was Pasolini?
Pier
Paolo Pasolini was born in 1922 into a family of modest means, and spent
his first 20 years in the impoverished region of Friuli, whose mountains,
plains and valleys are in the northeastern corner of Italy, just above
Trieste. Pasolini’s father was a Fascist and a noncommissioned officer,
moving from one garrison to another. (Pasolini later said that, in his
1967 film Oedipus Rex, he told the story of his own Oedipus
complex: “The boy in the prologue is myself, and his father, the infantry
officer, is my own father. The mother, a governess, is also my own mother.”)
Drafted
against his will by the Germans, Pier Paolo escaped, and became an active
member of the Communist-led resistance to fascism and Nazi occupation as
World War II came to a close. Pasolini - who started writing poetry at
the age of 7 - began winning poetry prizes at 19, and published his first
volume of poems at the age of 20, while teaching elementary school and
writing political reportage (especially on the postwar peasant rebellions)
and literary criticism for the local newspapers to support himself.
Actively
gay from an early age, Pier Paolo, when he was 26, was blackmailed
by a country priest, who told him to abandon his left-wing political activities
and journalism, or face exposure as a homosexual. Pasolini refused to give
up his political commitments, and as a result was arrested by the police
for “corruption of a minor” in a case involving a 16-year-old lad,
after the priest informed on him. He was acquitted of that charge in a
trial that got a lot of ink in the local press, but found guilty of “lewd
acts” (in the occurrence, mutual masturbation) and fined. Following that
conviction, the homophobic commissars of the Communist Party, fearful for
its reputation, expelled him for “moral and political unworthiness”
(he also lost his teaching job). But Pier Paolo’s love-hate relationship
with the Communists, then Italy’s largest political organization, continued
until his death (to the end, Pasolini called himself a “Christian Marxist”).
Having
already published four volumes of poetry, Pier Paolo moved to Rome in 1950,
continued to write for newspapers and literary reviews, and accumulated
more poetry prizes, of increasing prestige. With his reputation as an extraordinarily
talented writer already burgeoning in cultivated circles, Pasolini burst
onto the public stage in 1955, winning an instant and widespread notoriety
that would not end even with his death, by publishing his first novel,
Ragazzi di Vita (“The Boys in the Life”), which became a best-seller.
Set in the crushing poverty of the shantytowns that surrounded the Rome
of la dolce vita and saturated with literary elegance, it is the
story of the uneducated teenager Riccetto and his friends, who hustle “queers”
for a little money to make their pointless, wasted lives a tad more bearable.
This scorching mirror that Pasolini held up to Italian society’s willfully
ignored ills had enormous political resonance, but it was easier for the
political establishment to deny the ills by trying to ban the mirror, rather
than try to cure them.
On
a complaint to the public prosecutor in Milan (where the book was published)
by the office of Prime Minister Antonio Segni, Pasolini was indicted in
December 1955 for “publishing obscene material” and “pornography,”
and the book was seized from bookstores by the police. “What pornography?”
asked Pier Paolo’s friend Enzo Siciliano, co-editor of the prestigious
review "Nuovi Argumenti", in his superb study of Pasolini’s life and
work (Pasolini: A Biography, Random House, 1982). “A few ellipses:
Vaffan... (‘up your...’), a few pederasts depicted like silhouettes
against the partition walls of certain little neighborhood cinemas, or
else the word cazzo (‘cock’), never fully uttered but
allowed to run lightly across the surface of the story. What was pornographic,”
wrote Siciliano, “was the odor of truth that circulates throughout this
picaresque book - the sick, oozing vitality of the characters, their outspoken
frenzy, the ludicrously brazen plasticity of their bodies.” Six months
later, Pasolini was acquitted, Ragazzi di Vita was returned to bookstores
after having been sequestered for months, and its sales soared. Pasolini
was to be brought to trial many times for his work as a writer and film
director - and organized gangs of homophobic fascist youth frequently attacked
the cinemas showing his films (and the cinema-goers).
It
was at this time that Pier Paolo became friends with an 18-year-old working-class
house painter, Sergio Citti, who helped him with the Roman slum dialect
that peppered Ragazzi di Vita and its 1959 sequel, Una Via Violenta,
or A Violent Life. (Sergio eventually became an assistant director
and co-scenarist on many Pasolini films, and a successful scenarist and
film director in his own right - today he’s considered the only legitimate
heir of Pasolini’s cinematic style.) Pasolini also enlisted Sergio Citti’s
help when he wrote the Roman dialogue for Fellini’s classic 1957 film,
Nights of Cabiria, the story of an aging prostitute.
Pier
Paolo firmly established his reputation as one of Italy’s most important
writers with those two novels and two stunning books of poetry - The
Ashes of Gramsci, published in 1957, whose magnificent, long
political-sexual title poem was written in reaction to Khrushchev’s revelations
of Stalin’s crimes, and the Soviet invasion of Hungary (Antonio Gramsci,
the founder of the Italian Communist Party and an important social theorist,
spent a dozen years in Mussolini’s prisons, where he died in 1937; and,
in 1959, The Religion of My Time. By the end of the decade, he’d
also turned out 13 film scripts, been the founder and guiding spirit of
the influential poetry review "Officina", and translated Aeschylus’
Oresteia, which Vittorio Gassman was to stage. But “Pasolinian”
had also become an adjective used by the press to indicate everything in
Rome relating to the subproletariat, or lowlife and homosexuality in general.
This adjective was cemented
in the public mind by Pasolini’s first film as director as well as scenarist,
the 1961 Accattone, the story of a lazy, underclass pimp starring
a nonprofessional, Franco
Citti (Sergio’s brother). And by his second, the 1962 Mamma Roma,
about a Roman prostitute and her teenage son, starring Anna Magnani, unforgettable
in the title role. Pasolini’s 26 films also included The
Gospel According to Saint Matthew (1964); the 1968 Teorema ("Theorem”),
starring Terence Stamp as a bisexual, Christ-like figure who transforms
the lives of a bourgeois family by sleeping with them all (one of the earliest
sympathetic portrayals of homosexuality in a major film; the 1969 Medea,
starring Maria Callas; and Pasolini’s pansexual “Trilogy of Life”
- The Decameron (1971), The Canterbury Tales (1972) and Arabian
Nights (1974). Pasolini used very few professional actors in most of
his films.
In
1963, Pier Paolo met the great love of his life, Ninetto Davoli. Ninetto
was then 15, the son of Calabrian peasants who’d moved to Rome, a skinny
kid, “a madman, with soft and merry eyes, dressed like the Beatles ...
an innocent barbarian,” as Pasolini wrote in a poem about their first
encounter. Pier Paolo made Ninetto, who turned out to have real talent
as a comic actor, the star of his 1966 film The Hawks and the Sparrows
(a medieval fable about religion), opposite the great Italian character
actor Toto.
Even
though their sexual relations lasted only a few years, Ninetto continued
to live with Pasolini and was his constant companion, as well as appearing
in six more of his films. Even after Ninetto left Pasolini’s home (kept
by Pier Paolo’s mother and female cousin) to get married and have children
(in 1973, putting Pier Paolo into a profound depression), their deep friendship
continued. And it was Ninetto, with whom Pier Paolo had dined the night
of his murder, who, on behalf of the Pasolini family, went to Ostia the
next day to identify the horribly battered corpse for the carabinieri as
that of his mentor and friend.
In his recantation of his
“confession,” Pino the Frog told Rai 3 that Pasolini was killed by
a gang of three men in their 40s who surprised Pino and Pier Paolo having
sex and shouted “dirty communist” and fag-baiting Sicilian epithets
at Pier Paolo as they beat him to death. Pino insisted that this gang and
their friends kept him silent by intimidation: “I was terrorized, they
had threatened my father and mother. But now my mother is dead of cancer,
and my father died 10 years after her. And these people are either dead
or old, about 80 now. I am no longer afraid.” The well-known journalist
Oriana Fallaci - in an article published a couple of years after the murder
- articulated a theory of the murder as a political crime (the view always
held by most of Pasolini’s writer friends, like Alberto Moravia and Italo
Calvino).
Pasolini's politics, central
to his identify, were unabashedly left-wing but idiosyncratic. This prolific
writer made time to pursue his engagement with the issues of the day as
a columnist for several left-wing newspapers and magazines, and in the
last two years of his life as a front-page columnist for the influential
daily "Corriere della Sera". In these columns he had what one may call
a Gramscian, interactive relationship with his readers, particularly those
in the working and under-classes, who recognized their lives in many
of Pasolini's sympathetically realist films - often groups of exploited
workers or workers on strike would familiarly address "Pier Paolo" as a
friend, and he would respond directly to them in his columns, not only
drawing attention to their plight and showing solidarity with their struggles,
but placing their concerns in a larger political and cultural context.
A collection of these columns of dialogue with his readers, published in
both Italian and French, makes for moving reading. But Pasolini's political
idiosyncracies fit into no neat categories -- in his columns he was quite
critical of the petit-bourgeois "infantile leftism" so in vogue in the
1970s Italy of the violent Brigate Rosse and similar groups.
Because these columns gave
Pasolini a high political profile as a man of the left who was considered
dangerous by the right, Fallaci's theory of Pasolini's murder as a political
crime was no surprise -- and she unearthed proof that Pino the Frog’s
family had extensive ties to the neo-fascist party MSI (Italian Social
Movement), which hated “Pasolini the fag” as the embodiment of left-wing
“decadence” (and which had a record of violently disrupting his films
and plays). After the Rai 3 interview, Sergio Citti said he had proof that
the murder was committed by a gang and knows their identities - and the
judge in Pino’s original trial gave an interview to the daily La Stampa,
saying, “I always thought he was not alone,” adding that the possibility
of the crime’s having been committed for political reasons was never
examined by the police at the time. “The fascist angle? No one has ever
investigated a motive,” the judge said. Could the “Sicilian epithets”
Pino heard indicate Mafia involvement? (Pasolini was investigating the
Mafia and prostitution for a documentary at the time of his death, and
ties between neo-fascists and elements of the Mafia have been well-documented.)
Moralizing
Pasolini critics have always insisted on seeing his murder through the
prism of his last, posthumously released film, Salò, or 120 Days of
Sodom, in which he took passages from the Marquis de Sade and transposed
them to the fascist Salò Republic that Mussolini (supported by German
troops) briefly established in the North of Italy after he was deposed
in Rome by the king and Marshal Pietro Badoglio. Pasolini, as the screen
credits indicate, based this film on the interpretations of Sade by such
renowned writers as Roland Barthes, Pierre Klossowski and Maurice Blanchot.
But the morbid and sadistic images with which Pasolini painted fascism,
including coprophagy, make for difficult viewing.(For an intelligent discussion
of Salò, see my former Village Voice colleague Gary
Indiana's essay on the film for the British Film Institute - which
has also reproduced, in English, Pasolini's own trenchant commentary on
Salò).
The moralizers have combined
Salo’s death obsession with the original Pino confession - “he
tried to sodomize me with a wooden stake” - to dismiss Pasolini as a
masochist who sought his own death by provocation, and thus trivialize
the great artist’s enormous body of work. But Siciliano’s biography
(which also recounted the huge contradictions between the forensic evidence
and Pino’s confession) noted that even the final Appeals Court sentence
of Pino the Frog held that (as the court's written opinion put it), “one
finds nothing to make one believe that the defendant’s sexual freedom
or his physical integrity had been truly endangered or could have seemed
to him seriously threatened... No attempt at the violent subjection of
the boy to [Pasolini’s] wishes emerges from the story.” Pino’s recantation
now makes it irrefutable that the version of Pier Paolo’s death that
has reigned in the cultural and literary world for three decades was always
a complete fabrication. And that revision of history may, in time, lead
to Pasolini’s restoration to his proper place in Western culture
as one of the 20th century’s most valuable, inspiring, groundbreaking
and multitalented geniuses.
A Pasolini Bibliography
While nearly all of Pasolini’s
26 films are available on DVD, only a handful of Pasolini’s 50-plus published
works have been translated into English - the ones that are, below, are
easily obtained through Amazon.com:
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PIER PAOLO PASOLINI: POEMS |
Translation by Norman MacAfee and Luciano Martinengo | Foreword by Enzo
Siciliano | Farrar Straus Giroux, 1996 | Paperback (This truly splendid
translation, in a bi-lingual edition, contains Pier Paolo's most important
poems, including "The Ashes of Gramsci" and "The Religion Of My Time").
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THE RAGAZZI (Ragazzi di Vita,
novel) | Translation by E. Capouya | Paladin Books, 1989 | Paperback.
-
A VIOLENT LIFE (Una Via Violenta,
novel) | Translation by William Weaver | Carcanet Press, 1996.
-
PETROLIO (novel) | Translation
by Ann Goldstein | Pantheon Books, 1997,
-
LETTERS, 1940–54 | Translation
by Stuart Hood | Quartet Books, 1992
And the essential biography:
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PASOLINI: A Biography
| By ENZO SICILIANO | Random House, 1982. For those who read Italian, there's
an excellent online Pasolini Archive established by Angela
Molteni and the Library of the Bologna Cinematheque, which you
can access by clicking here. An online
collection of Pasolini's paintings, gouaches, and drawings is viewable
by clicking
here. And an intelligent critical essay on Pasolini's film work
- by Gino Moliterno, a professor of film studies who is also editor of
the Routledge Encyclopedia of Contemporary Italian Culture - can be read
by clicking
here.
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See also the blog "Pagine
corsare" [ndr]
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INVITO
ALLA LETTURA
BRANI
DI PIER PAOLO PASOLINI
TUTTI
GLI AGGIORNAMENTI
A
"PAGINE CORSARE"
DA
OTTOBRE 1998
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