Il Buco

Il Buco

202193 min
6.3/10
Drama

Plot Summary

In August 1961, speleologists from Italy’s booming North arrive on a Calabrian plateau where time stands still. The intruders discover one of the world’s deepest caves, the Bifurto Abyss, under the gaze of an old shepherd, the only witness of the pristine territory.

▶️Watch Now

Official trailer from TMDB

👥Cast (46)

No Image

Nicola Lanza

Zi' Nicola

No Image

Antonio Lanza

Character

No Image

Leonardo Larocca

Doctor

No Image

Claudia Candusso

Speleologist

No Image

Mila Costi

Speleologist

No Image

Carlos José Crespo

Speleologist

No Image

Jacopo Elia

Speleologist

No Image

Federico Gregoretti

Speleologist

No Image

Giovanbattista Sauro

Speleologist

No Image

Angelo Spadaro

Speleologist

No Image

Enrico Troisi

Speleologist

No Image

Denise Trombin

Speleologist

🎬Crew

Director

Michelangelo Frammartino

Writers

Michelangelo Frammartino, Michelangelo Frammartino, Giovanna Giuliani

Producers

Philippe Bober, Michelangelo Frammartino, Clemens Köstlin, Marina Perales Marhuenda, Raha Shirazi

🖼️Gallery (15 images)

Il Buco backdrop 1
Il Buco backdrop 2
Il Buco backdrop 3
Il Buco backdrop 4
Il Buco backdrop 5
Il Buco backdrop 6
Il Buco backdrop 7
Il Buco backdrop 8

💬Reviews (1)

C

CinemaSerf

6/11/2022

With virtually no dialogue at all, this is the ultimate observational documentary - with two strands. The first centres around the recreation of a speleological expedition (from 1961) to explore a cave that stretches deep under the Calabrian plateau. The second features an elderly, weather-beaten, shepherd (Antonio Lanza), whose only means of communication appears to be using sounds similar to those emanating from his herd of cattle. It's not immediately obvious at the start, but gradually - and subliminally - the two stories intertwine with a gentle intensity. The cave has something visceral about it. It's entrance has a kind of primordiality that one could easily imagine being the site of some ancient pagan, mother Earth, rituals. What is also notable from the outset is the technologically basic nature of their work. They attempt to measure the depth of the cave by using burning embers to light their way. Their mapping is all hand (and ink) drawn. Not an iPad or laptop in sight whilst they sleep three in a tent regularly visited by the obliviously grazing residents. Meanwhile the elder gent watches on, seemingly imperviously, until he takes a bit of a turn and is sought by his colleagues before being attended by a doctor who clearly deduces, again without any language, that he is soon to move onto a different plateau. The audio is interesting. The lack of speech allows us to hear the noises of the water, the wind, the animals and that is quite effective. The photography is also pretty stunning, especially down the hole where the rock formations offer all sorts of shadows and textures for what little light the surveyor's helmet-lamps can provide. It is creepy and claustrophobic - I felt that this was just not a place where man belonged. There is a simplicity to this whole production that, though perhaps a little slow at times, offers a glimpse of both nature (natural and human) that has evolved little over many years, and I found it curiously compelling to watch.

Read full review →

Production Companies

RAI Cinema
Essential Filmproduktion