[THE GREAT BEAUTY opens in Cleveland on Friday
February 21st exclusively at the Capitol Theatre.]
Review by Milan Paurich
If Marcello Mastroianni’s paparazzi
journalist from LA DOLCE VITA was still alive and kicking--and
grew up to look like an Italian Joe Biden--he’d probably be Jep
Gambardella (Biden doppelganger Toni Servillo), the semi-jaundiced
protagonist of Paolo (2008 Cannes Grand Jury Prize winner IL DIVO)
Sorrentino’s glorious THE GREAT BEAUTY. Along with Matteo
Garrone (GOMORRAH), Sorrentino is one of the leading lights of
the new Italian cinema. Best Foreign Film Oscar nominee BEAUTY
could be his most accomplished work to date. It deserves to earn
Sorrentino the U.S. arthouse following that eluded him with previous
movies like 2012’s wonderful THIS MUST BE THE PLACE which
fell victim to one of the Weinstein Company’s typical hit-and-run
releases.
Impressionistic in the best tradition
of Federico Fellini, Sorrentino creates a vivid, throbbing,
frequently surreal portrait of contemporary Rome the same way Fellini
did 50-plus years ago. (Sorrentino has cited LA DOLCE VITA and
FELLINI’S ROMA as key influences in the making of BEAUTY.)
And Servillo’s Jep is endowed with the same streak of romantic
cynicism/fatalism that made Mastroianni’s characters in DOLCE
VITA and 8 1/2 so iconic to previous generations.
There’s also a soupcon of (Marcel)
Proust in the way that Jep catalogues the minutiae of quotidian life,
present and (mostly) past. “What’s wrong with feeling nostalgic?
It’s the only distraction left for those who’ve no faith in the
future,” Jep opines at one point in the movie. In taking an
inventory of his life and times, Jep--vis-a-vis Proust’s Charles
Swann--searches for his elusive Madeleine. “Remembrance of Things
Past” indeed.
Jep has been living on the success of
his first and only novel, “The Human Apparatus,” published 40
years earlier and hailed by critics as a masterpiece. Although the
odd, increasingly infrequent journalism job (just barely) pays the
bills, Jep’s early fame insures him a standing invitation to the
city’s most exclusive parties. Like many self-absorbed
intellectuals, he also dwells on the past--particularly the grand
amour he lost once upon a time. When he learns of his lost love’s
recent death (her widower breaks the news to him), Jep’s already
precarious existence goes into an emotional tailspin.
THE GREAT BEAUTY opens with Jep
celebrating his 65th birthday. Sorrentino--and Jep-- spend the rest
of the film explaining how he got there, what it all means and
whether he still has any joie de vivre left in his rusty arsenal.
Rediscovering his love of the city he claimed as his own as a young
man--a city he’s grown steadily disenchanted with over the
years--might hold the key.
Leisurely paced and densely novelistic
in texture, Sorrentino’s magnum opus is funny, touching and
ultimately quite profound in what it has to say about the measure of
one man or any man’s life. Jep, unforgettably embodied by the
twinkly-eyed, craggy-faced Servillo, is one of the great movie
characters of recent vintage. He deserves to become as emblematic and
revered a symbol of 21st century arthouse cinema as Mastroianni’s
Fellini archetypes were to the 1960’s. 4 out of 4 stars.
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