ARTURO (Valerio Colombaioni) is another boy who is very easy to identify. He is small and wiry and dressed in a dark blue V-neck sweater and baggy black pants, his black hair falling in waves over his forehead. He has a hard little face, nut-brown skin, and intense dark grey eyes that echo the colour of his sweater. His overall aura is of toughness and deadly efficiency.
He is one of the demolition swimmers. In a shot just before the team begin their descent of the cliff, you see him, along with the bigger Umberto (Gaetano Danaro) manually ripping German uniforms into pieces that will protect their hands from rope burns. The ease with which he does this attests to his amazing physical strength. As they install the plastique explosives, Arturo is the boy highest up on the dam and directly below Turner (Rock Hudson), which means he is the last boy down, skittering the final suspenseful meters before making a clean dive into the water as searchlights rake the darkness above him. At this moment when I saw the film in 1980, the girls in the audience let out a collective “Eeeek!!” By that point it seemed everyone was invested in silent, diminutive Arturo.Arturo is one of the rooftop gunners in the Reanoto vengeance
massacre. As he and Aldo and two other boys prepare to climb up a tiled rooftop,
he hunkers down in wait by some bales of hay, and at Aldo’s signal, turns to
scuttle up a tree, moving with utter confidence, like a cat or a squirrel. Though
in this sequence he crouches in the same position as the two other boys as he
fires his weapon, there is considerably more drama in the tense lines of his
body. Then, running to the army truck in triumph, mouth wide open in a yell of
delight, he leaps over rubble without even looking at the ground. A few moments later he is kneeling by the
tailgate of the truck as it roars away, hanging onto the frame above with one
relaxed hand, laughing and impervious to danger.
He is a lookout, perched high in a treetop. In the scene
where the boys are having their rudimentary breakfast, you notice Arturo rappelling
down his tree to silently join the group, as the small boy Romeo leaps up to
take his post. And he, Romeo and another boy, Mikko, form the pyramid at the
beginning of the film, utilizing their acrobatic skills to distract the German
soldiers as their comrades recover the unconscious Captain Turner. In every scene
he is in, he acts with his physique: notice the movement of his shoulders when
Turner thunders at the boys to shut up their whistling, and his body bends into
interesting angles as he sits or reclines.
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Valerio grew up to be handsome. He continued to work in circuses, and appears to have
retained his childhood professional name, Ercolino, throughout his life.
(Google tells me that this Italian word means a child who is robust or sturdy).
He also appeared in films: L'arciere di
fuoco (Long Live Robin Hood), 1971, Squadra antifurto, 1976; Roma a mano
armata, 1976; La Banda del Gobbo, 1977. He was a stunt performer in Cemetery Man (1994) and Pinocchio (2002).
With several members of his family, he appeared in Federico Fellini's I Clowns(1970). This documentary, or mockumentary, was made for Italian television and opened in the same month (December 1970) as Hornet's Nest/ Il Vespaio.
Could the little hammer-wielding clown at the end sequence of I Clowns (1970) be Valerio? |
Valerio appears on the poster of Sempre Piu Difficile |
Valerio and Nani Colombaioni in La Maschera, 1988 |
As Ercolino, with Iris (Helena Bonham-Carter) in La Maschera |
“In the treetop above the locale of the cave, a boy named Arturo, aged eight, saw the procession coming. He immediately put his fingers to his lips and imitated the song of a bird.