Luigi is the protagonist of this series from RAI Fiction and Wildside. He's forty years old with a wife, a little girl, and another child on the way, when he suddenly finds himself having to spend a lot of time in the oncology unit of a hospital. Although La linea Verticale (the vertical line) is a work of fiction, it's based on a real story, and we are able to see, through Luigi's eyes, what daily life in an Italian hospital is like.
Difficulty: Intermediate
Italy
This episode begins with the funeral of a patient, in the hospital chapel.
Difficulty: Intermediate
Italy
Amed gets ready to leave the hospital. Luigi gets his stitches removed and talks to a doctor about what he'll have to do in the future.
Difficulty: Intermediate
Italy
It's time for Amed to leave the hospital, but he's not quite ready. There are various types of goodbyes happening.
Difficulty: Intermediate
Italy
Riccardo, the priest, is having a hard time. His mother is trying to help him in her way. Barbieri keeps bothering Giusi. The patient who seems to think he is a doctor gives Luigi some news.
Difficulty: Intermediate
Italy
Luigi has to listen to an interminable list of possible side effects to the drugs he will be taking. Could it be that he is actually going home?
Difficulty: Intermediate
Italy
Two of the doctors meet up in the hall and get into a spat about which job is more noble, that of an oncologist or that of a surgeon.
Difficulty: Intermediate
Italy
Luigi reflects on how so many Italians, though living in a marvelous place, would like to be somewhere else, do something else, etc. But there are exceptions.
Difficulty: Intermediate
Italy
Luigi continues reflecting on how his illness changed his life in various ways, not all of them negative. Un passo alla volta (one step at a time).
Difficulty: Intermediate
Italy
As he leaves the hospital with his wife, Luigi talks about how his perspective changed having had an experience such as he did.
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