The
Sicilian Mafia’s past and present—and hopefully its future—are
all shown at least in part in Marco Amenta’s excellent 2008 drama
La Siciliana Ribelle, named The Sicilian Girl in
English. It is inspired by the true story of Rita Atria, born in 1974
in Partanna, a town controlled by the mafia.
Rita
turns on the Mafia after her father and brother—both mafiosi
themselves—are killed by rivals. Rita idolized her father, seeing
him as a man respected by all as a benevolent godfather who followed
“the old ways” and provided the protection and order the police
were unable to offer. This was the role of the prototypical Sicilian
clan leader in the 1800s, when bandits were many, police officers
were few, and citizens came to depend on their family leaders to
enforce law and order. These leaders and their operatives came to be
known as Mafia, called Cosa Nostra in Sicily and going
by different names in other areas of Italy.
With
no checks on their power, many clan leaders became bullies determined
to increase their wealth and influence by whatever means necessary.
Rita’s father, however, refused to deal in drugs and preferred to
settle disputes by peaceful means—at least that’s what Rita
believed, although she was only 11 when her father was killed. She
and her brother vowed to avenge their father’s death, and since her
brother and boyfriend were both active in Cosa
Nostra, she took careful
notes and photos of mafia activities in the years following her
father’s execution.
When
her brother’s vendetta plan goes awry, a fiery Rita turns to the
law to avenge her losses. However, she still has little patience for
the police; she is motivated more by hate for her family’s killers
than by a sense of justice and respect for law and order. She is
placed in a witness protection program, chafing under the
restrictions and clashing with prosecutor Paolo Borsellini.
When
the Mafia strikes back violently against the police and justice
department, Borsellini takes it as a sign of recognition that Rita’s
evidence will be damning—and fortunately, it is—although the cost
in lives lost is severe. Rita gradually comes to appreciate
Borsellini’s courage, integrity and humanity. She also has to
realize that her father’s ways were not as heroic as she once
believed, and that there is a difference between justice and revenge.
Unfortunately, Rita’s turning government witness creates a
permanent rift in her relationship with her mother, who is resigned
to the belief that Sicily will always be ruled by the conventions of
the Mafia and that it is futile to buck the tide.
Jugnot and D'Agostino, center |
The
Mafia is still a powerful and persuasive influence in Sicily, but
thanks to the spunk, courage and conviction of people like Rita
Atria, Paolo Borsellini and others in the Italian police and justice
systems, viewers are left with some hope that the way it has been
will not always be the way it is.
You
can watch The Sicilian Girl with subtitles on your computer
for free at The
Internet Movie Database.
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