Little White Lies

Kim Longinotto

Kim Longinotto excels at providing observational portraits of extraordinary women forging their way in oppressive structures across the world. Her usual method is to embed herself within events as they happen, never flinching from pointing her camera at moments of overwhelming emotion. Shooting the Mafia is a departure in that it is a film borne of archival footage and she has a surrogate in the form of Palermo-based octogenarian Letizia Bagglia, who lived many lives before launching her career as a photojournalist in the 1970s for Sicilian paper, L’Ora.

The Sicilian Mafia was at the peak of its powers. As Longinotto puts it, “I feel I’ve been cheated all my life by Hollywood. You see Al Pacino shooting somebody and it’s just fun. You don’t see that that person has a family, or the people who have to scrape the bodies off the ground and put them in a coffin. You don’t see that children are murdered.”

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Little White Lies

Little White Lies2 min read
The Last Year of Darkness
Directed by BEN MULLINKOSSON  Released 15 MARCH ANTICIPATION. An outsider perspective on Chinese alternative youth culture. ENJOYMENT. A wild and unpredictable ride with insane amounts of vomit. IN RETROSPECT.  A gorgeous and bittersweet time capsule
Little White Lies2 min read
Io Capitano
Directed by MATTEO GARRONE Starring SEYDOU SARR, MOUSTAPHA FALL, ISSAKA SAWADOGO Released 5 APRIL The case of Senegalese migrant Ibrahima Bah, who has been found guilty of gross negligence manslaughter after seeking asylum in the UK, has recently mad
Little White Lies11 min read
What We Talk About When We Talk About Movie Star
Nestled next door to The Ritz hotel in London is The Wolseley – a British dining institution that opened its doors in 2003. Although it’s hardly the oldest restaurant in the capital, it’s certainly one that attracts a mighty share of celebrity client

Related Books & Audiobooks