There should be a sure degree of tension that comes with dwelling in Naples, within the shadow of Vesuvius. It’s not simply that it’s an energetic volcano that may blow its high at any minute, but additionally that it’s finished so repeatedly all through historical past, and that essentially the most well-known eruption — the one which destroyed the Roman cities of Pompeii and Herculaneum in 79 CE and preserved them in ash — is now a world-famous vacationer attraction. Guests can flee from the houses and our bodies of historical ancestors who died in terror, suffocating on ash and poisonous gases, nevertheless it may occur to you and yours tomorrow.
Filmmaker Gianfranco Rosi skillfully captures that unease in Beneath The Clouds, taking pictures in elegant black and white that provides the movie a dreamlike high quality (he even opens with an epigraph by surrealist Jean Cocteau). The director darts between numerous folks and locations within the Southern Italian metropolis, capturing a large swathe of civic establishments and experiences.
Town’s particularities floor within the course of. The native carabinieri examine unlawful tunnels used for breaking into historical tombs. The hearth division screens seismic exercise emanating from the volcano. An after-school language tutor instructs college students in French by evaluating it with the Neapolitan dialect. Painterly pictures are interspersed like pillow photographs: commuter trains rambling down their tracks, ocean waves contrasted with lava flows, Greco-Roman statues languishing on the backside of the ocean.
Naples emerges as one thing of a microcosmic metaphor for cataclysm knocking on the door of the remainder of the world. At no time is that this extra obvious (and typically comedic) than when locals name the hearth division after an earthquake tremor — an indication that Vesuvius could erupt. The callers vary from hysterical (“What loss of life do they need us to die?” says one girl) to the amusingly miffed (an irritated man complains, “I used to be cooking a pleasant ragù”). Not often has Marx’s well-known saying about historical past weighing “like a nightmare on the brains of the dwelling” felt so literal.
At sure moments, the knocking turns into extra pressing. The director nods to his latest movies, Fireplace at Sea (2016) and Notturno (2020), addressing the European migrant disaster and battle within the Center East, respectively, in a scene involving a Syrian-staffed freighter transporting grain to and from Odessa in Ukraine, below bombardment from Russia. The crew watch information experiences about different ships getting bombed, but are unperturbed: “We Syrians are used to conflict and bombs.”
Historical past feels notably heavy in scenes that takes us into the catacomb-like storage of one of many metropolis’s museums. Audiences peer into rooms stuffed with statues and historical artifacts, some shelved and sorted, others thrown into a large pile of stone heads and our bodies from dozens of eras: Greek, Roman, Bourbon, fashionable. The weird or notably vital ones get photographed, equivalent to a statue of Lakshmi (“the Indian Venus,” a researcher remarks) discovered at Pompeii that proves an historical hyperlink to Japanese cultures.
These scenes, during which historic artwork merges with Rosi’s elegant visuals, function a type of memento mori for all of the civilizations and rulers left within the mud. They remind us that borders and nations are up to date innovations: Naples, in any case, is older than Italy, a nation state solely fashioned in 1861. Pompeii is older than Naples. And Vesuvius, older than any nation, will outlive us all.
Beneath The Clouds screens on the New York Movie Competition (144 West sixty fifth Avenue, Lincoln Sq., Manhattan) on October 5 and 6.

