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One Hundred Steps
Overlook Pick

One Hundred Steps

78
User Score737 ratings
TMDB 7.816+20001h 54mIT
DramaHistory

Synopsis

Peppino Impastato is a quick-witted lad growing up in 1970s Sicily. Despite hailing from a family with Mafia ties and living just one hundred steps from the house of local boss Tano Badalamenti, Peppino decides to expose the Mafia by using a pirate radio station to broadcast his political pronouncements in the form of ironic humour.

Director
Marco Tullio GiordanaFrom TMDB credits
Studio
Titti Film4 production companies
Release
September 1, 2000Released
Box Office
$3M

Top Cast

8 of 16
Luigi Lo Cascio
Luigi Lo Cascio
Peppino Impastato
Luigi Maria Burruano
Luigi Maria Burruano
Luigi Impastato
Lucia Sardo
Lucia Sardo
Felicia Impastato
Paolo Briguglia
Paolo Briguglia
Giovanni Impastato
Tony Sperandeo
Tony Sperandeo
Tano Badalamenti
Andrea Tidona
Andrea Tidona
Stefano Venuti
Claudio Gioè
Claudio Gioè
Salvo Vitale
Domenico Centamore
Domenico Centamore
Vito

Trailers & Photos

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Reviews

From TMDB users
CinemaSerf
Dec 1, 2024

This has quite a poignant underlying message of complicity and compliance as it tells the true story of firebrand young man Peppino Impastato (Luigi Lo Cascio). He lives on a mafia-dominated Sicily in a family led by his acquiescing father Luigi (Luigi Maria Burruano). It's not that his dad is cowardly, far from it, but he has a wife (Lucia Sardo) and another son, Giovanni (Paolo Briguglia), so is constantly conscious that any resistance to the established order could prove perilous. Peppino has all the vigour and irresponsibility of his age and together with some friends sets up a local radio station that mixes a contemporary mix of classic rock music with some fairly direct rantings about the local "don" - comparing him to legendary Sioux chief Sitting Bull holding court over a tribe full of drug users and sleazy hookers. This isn't a gun-toting organisation. It doesn't need to be. It gets it's way by a combination of carrot and stick approaches. If the population co-operate then life can be good, but if they stray from the arbitrary control of "Tano" (Tony Sperandeo) then they might find themselves starring in their own personal version of a Buster Keaton film. Cascio is on strong form here offering us quite a compelling presentation of a young man who genuinely believed that his on-air protestations could elicit change for good and when his family warn him of the risks - to them and to him - that just seems to galvanise him. The conclusion is history; a sad and depressing history that rather well illustrated the extent of the collusion that existed between the authorities and the "authorities" and the disposability of an inconvenient life. Briguglia also contributes well as does Sardo as his strong-willed but increasingly wary mother whilst the writing offers us a lively bedrock for characters that mingled passion with prescience in an entertaining and engaging fashion. The production looks good and it's well worth a watch.

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