Il Peccato chiama Peccato: l'audiolibro e il filmato
- Redazione
- 3 gen 2017
- Tempo di lettura: 2 min


Italian Novel "Il Peccato chiama Peccato" ("Deep calls deep") becomes a Cult Short Movie and an Audiobook Christmas is fast approaching, which means that the mindless fall fluff is out, and pictures of quality are in. That's right — if you love international literature it's time for a wave of book adaptations to hit our screens and our mp3 players. In 2016 we've already seen a plethora of literary adaptations — Steven Spielberg's "The BFG" was inspired by the Roald Dahl classic, while Dirty Grandpa was based on the Bible — and the last month left in the year will see even more releases ripped from the shelves of the library. From kids' books to Pulitzer-winning plays to yet another Dan Brown novel, there's something coming for just about anyone. While the book isn't always better than the movie or than the audiobook, the movie and the audiobook will definitely have more explosions. Indeed, this is the case of the hit italian thriller novel "Il peccato chiama peccato" ("Deep calls to deep"), written by Isabella Pileri Pavesio. The filmmaker, tv actress and cinematographer, Giovanna Fadda, has appeared in such films as "La staffetta" ("The Relay Race") and the tv fiction "Le donne di Genova" ("The Women of Genoa", TeleGenova/Mortola (Mediaset): "We shot a total of 15 days. I started my career as photographer: indeed the camera for me is a daily must-have. "Deep calls deep" is a black-and-white silent film" . A Short Cult Movie emblematically acted by deaf actors and entirely shooted with the camera, as the old Lumiere brothers movies, in order to "recreate the noir atmosphere in Isabella Pileri's novel, strong contrasts between black and white, dark atmospheres to encrease the anguish in the audience, sublimating the suspence surrounding, generated by creepy characters. In the grunge frames the dominant color is red-blood". But the audiobook director ( a real Renaissance man! Singer, actor and painter) and biomechanical artist Dario Pittaluga too throws us unexpected surprises: " It was a risky thing, turning a novel into a radio play, but this was a unique experience for me. Audiobooks are usually read by a single voice-over and not acted. On the contrary, the audiobook, "Il peccato chiama peccato" is acted by a cast of actors. And that makes the "Il peccato chiama peccato" audiobook exciting like a movie, with real sound effects and a soundtrack that ( I hope!) will carve you". A. M.
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