It was Pasolini's final film, being released three weeks after his murder. The film is a loose adaptation of the 1785 novel (first published in 1904) The 120 Days of Sodom by the Marquis de Sade, updating the story's setting to the World War II era. (Distributors Oscilloscope Laboratories are concentrating screenings in rural areas where education about grain engulfment is still lagging around: Additionally, they are donating part of the box office to the National Fallen Firefighters Foundation, the Progressive Agriculture Foundation, and the John Bowne Agricultural Program for urban farmers.) With one engulfment death every 30 days for the last half century, that Silo is well-placed to both cut those fatalities and give audiences an insight into farming is admirable.Salò, or the 120 Days of Sodom ( Italian: Salò o le 120 giornate di Sodoma, billed on-screen Pasolini's 120 Days of Sodom on English-language prints and commonly referred to as simply Salò ]) is a 1975 horror art film directed and co-written by Pier Paolo Pasolini. It's also become a tool for educating farmers about the perils of grain engulfment. There's a text-book drama, and even a few narrative conceits (of course Cody's farmhand/firefighter father died in the last engulfment), but Silo also speaks to truths about these communities, about the endless grind and the lack of infrastructure, about how the only jobs are farms, stores, cops, and nursing homes. Sumptuously filmed by Hunter Baker, it's a testament to simple but effective filmmaking. That Silo centers around the people of the town is what differentiates it from a media satire like Ace in the Hole, and places it alongside The Straight Story, God's Own Country, and Minari: films that feel like studies of rural life. There are those that romanticize it as a pastoral idyll, and those that use the setting while telling stories about the urban world. ![]() There just aren't that many accurate films about farming. ![]() The farmer, Junior (Parrack), Cody's best friend, Lucha (Ramirez), Cody's mother, Valerie (Paice), they can only wait for the next tool they need to arrive, because otherwise he'll die, 10 feet away from their fingertips. All those elements are captured in Silo as Cody (DiFalco), a small-town kid in a farming community in the middle of nowhere, gets caught as the grain starts to slip. The person swallowed up, the community that gets lucky if it can save them. It's a horrifying way to die, and one summed up by a raw sense of powerlessness. Basically, it's when someone is in one of those giant grain silos, the grain beneath them shifts, and it just swallows them up. Remember how films in the 1970s taught everyone that quicksand was a leading cause of death? Grain engulfment is the real deal, killing people every year. It's a small disaster movie, built around the terrifying risks caused by grain engulfment. So if Silo feels like an educational drama, that's because it is and with good reason and double intention. ![]() The disconnect between modern Americans and their food is at a terrifying level, because the political and social consequences are part of what has caused such astonishing and devastating division between rural and urban America. And if it sounds like a dig at stupid people, it's not that either. Seven percent of Americans think chocolate milk comes from brown cows.
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