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Salvo (2013). 1h 50m | Not Rated

“Itu0026#39;s certainly original. Name me another Mafioso hit-man movie that has at its centre a blind heroine whose traumatic experience at the hands of a killer seems to reverse the effects of her blindness. If we are in the territory of miraculous cures Fabio Grassadonia and Antonio Piazzau0026#39;s movie never stresses the fact but proceeds to take us down roads we may not be used to. A mostly silent Saleh Bakri is Salvo who, on a job to kill the man who has set him up, encounters the victimu0026#39;s blind sister, Rita, and rather than kill her takes her along for the ride. However, it would appear the shock has restored Ritau0026#39;s sight, at least partially, which seems as devastating to her as being kidnapped by a hit-man. Sara Serraiocco is excellent as Rita and Bakri is highly effective in the title role, particularly in view of the fact that he hardly ever opens his mouth.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eEven leaving aside the blind girl scenario, u0026quot;Salvou0026quot; is unusual in other ways. Salvo is fundamentally an existentialist character who hides away from the world and is waited on hand and foot. His encounter with Rita opens his eyes as much as it does hers, awakening in him a tenderness he may not have realized was there. Itu0026#39;s also a film that takes its time. Salvo and Rita are often the only characters we see and the conventional thrills of the Mafioso movie are conspicuously absent. Nor is it a conventional love story; the relationship that develops between captor and captive doesnu0026#39;t go along conventional lines and, like much else in the picture, is mostly conducted in silence and in darkness. Like I said, itu0026#39;s certainly original.”

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