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10 - An Avant-Garde Heritage: VITA FUTURISTA

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 December 2020

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Summary

Abstract

The most important movie produced by Italian Futurists was certainly the performance film VITA FUTURISTA (Futurist Life). All known copies have been officially declared lost. Different studies about the testimonials of the film's late audience, the division of the sequences, the further integrations to the original plot, the public screenings, the written sources, and the popular imagery have allowed us to become familiar with and to understand one of the first avant-garde experiences in cinema. All these studies have been made without ever having seen the film: the only sources are archival materials, documents, papers, and critical testimony from the past.

This essay aims to reconstruct the history of this pivotal lost film by quoting diversified sources; through such sources (which include the so-called ‘non-filmic’ elements, such as public indexes, personal letters, press reviews, memorials, posters, etc.), VITA FUTURISTA can be studied philologically.

Keywords: Vita Futurista, Marinetti, Ginna, Film Philology

The first Futurist film was shot in the summer of 1916. ‘Cinematographic translation of the serial (para-tactical) formula of variety theatre or of synthetic theatre’ (Strauven 2006: 162), VITA FUTURISTA was a collective work in which each one of the participating Futurists contributed, although Arnaldo Ginna received the most credit for directing. Arnaldo and Bruno Ginanni Corradini, also known as Arnaldo Ginna (in association with the Italian word ‘ginnastica’, gymnastic) and Bruno Corra (from the Italian ‘correre’, to run) respectively, were two aristocratic brothers from Ravenna, as well as eclectic artists, representatives of the heterodox area of Futurism, and aestheticians close to Cerebrist matrix. In the first decade of the 20th century, their experimental research and their theoretical writings, Musica romatica (Chromatic Music) and Arte dell’avvenire (Art of the Future), explored the expressive possibilities of the new medium in the dynamic relationship between music and colours. The 1912 essay by Bruno Corra, Musica cromatica, furnishes evidence for the experience of the ‘music of colours’, obtained through an organ of 28 keys, each of which was connected to a corresponding coloured light bulb (Corra 1912: 246); the brothers’ experiment anticipated their decision to paint colours on film (Corra 1912: 247-251).

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Futurist Cinema
Studies on Italian Avant-garde Film
, pp. 147 - 162
Publisher: Amsterdam University Press
Print publication year: 2017

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