Tuesday, May 13, 2014

THE GREAT BEAUTY


Original Title: La grande bellezza
Directed by: Paolo Sorrentino
Starring: Toni Servillo, Carlo Verdone, Sabrina Ferilli, Carlo Buccirosso, Iaia Forte, Pamela Villoresi, Galatea Ranzi. 
Running Time: 142 min

Jep Gambardella: This is how it always ends. With death. But first there was life, hidden beneath the blah, blah, blah... It's all settled beneath the chitter chatter and the noise, silence and sentiment, emotion and fear. The haggard, inconstant flashes of beauty. And then the wretched squalor and miserable humanity. All buried under the cover of the embarrassment of being in the world, blah, blah, blah... Beyond there is what lies beyond. And I don't deal with what lies beyond. Therefore... let this novel begin. After all... it's just a trick. Yes, it's just a trick.

Anyone familiar with La Dolce Vita from Fellini will understand that this one is a nod to Fellini's classic. Rome is the city of old and new, full with magnificent buildings and relics of the past. Fellini covered Rome in the 60s with empty hedonism.

Now Sorrentino is releasing a whole new story about Rome and its people. In the middle lies Jep Gambardella (Toni Servillo), an aging journalist who had an apartment near the Coliseum in Rome (I wonder that journalists in the third world country might be jealous. Apparently being a journalist in Italy can make you rich).

He drown himself in meaningless parties and talks of high class socialite in Rome. But he didn't feel any happiness at all. His engagement with high class people only shows the decaying picture of high class people in Rome. 

We can see that these people are jaded and cannot do anything else to overcome their boredom. We also see various character surrounding Jep's existence. There's his editor in chief, his pretentious friend, Rome's hasbeens and religious figures. 

They all mixed up together to show us the diversity of Rome. The visual is beautiful, just like the title. But I have to warn you, if you are not used to La Dolce Vita or Rome, Open City, perhaps you will be baffled and confused by the narrative. 

But if you know those two movies, it is good since it can give you (probably you have never set foot in Rome at all) a glimpse on decaying high class in Rome but told in a warm and beautiful way.

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