Tag Archive: Paolo Sorrentino


YOUTH directed by Paolo Sorrentino (Italy, 2015)

1youth3“Youth is wasted on the young”, quipped Oscar Wilde, or was is George Bernard Shaw?

Whoever made this observation, knew something of the poignancy and sadness of growing old.

All Paolo Sorrentino’s films to date have featured elderly characters struggling to come to terms with the realisation that the best years of their lives are almost certainly behind them. Youth , despite its title, is no exception.Paradoxically, it is more about facing up to the inevitability of dying than the carefree pleasures of our ‘salad days’.

At its heart is the friendship between a retired composer Fred Ballinger (Michael Caine) and Mick Boyle (Harvey Keitel) a film director who believes that he still has at least one great film in him. Continue reading

LA GRANDE BELLEZZA directed by Paolo Sorrentino (Italy, 2013)

Just as Marcello Mastroianni became synonymous with the films of Federico Fellini, Toni Servillo is a perfect match for Paolo Sorrentino.

Following from Le Consequenze dell’amore (2004) and Il Divo (2008) this is the third movie the gifted Neapolitan director has made with this brilliant actor.

The Fellini connections are also obvious both in the richly visual style of filmmaking and, here, with the setting. Yet, although this movie is rooted in similar themes of hedonistic excess, the Rome of La Grande Bellezza is a very different one from La Dolce Vita of 1960.

Servillo plays Jep Gambardella, a 65 year-old journalist who wrote one acclaimed novel in his twenties but nothing of note since. He seems largely content to amble around the city as a wry observer of the high and low cultural scene. Continue reading

2011 IN REVIEW : MOVIES

I had fun compiling a list of best British cult movies but putting together a year’s best of list is a taller order as I don’t actually go the cinema that much these days.

I tend to be a little over dependent on DVDs and downloads which often means I miss stuff or see things late.

I just about managed to put together a top ten, however, although keen-eyed buffs will note that some of these were actually released in 2010.

1. Tree of Life. 

Terrence Malick’s epic was panned by some and booed at Cannes but for ambition, scope and sheer beauty movie experiences don’t come much better than this. Continue reading

THE MAN WITH A SUITCASE

LE CONSEQUENZE DELL’AMORE (The consequences of love) directed by Paolo Sorrentino (2004).

Titta Di Girolamo (Toni Servillo) is a man with a secret. A solitary, taciturn, poker-faced man – rich but sad. A chain smoker and who takes heroine once a week but who gets no pleasure from either  habit. He watches an attractive woman who works in the hotel where he lives. He’s like a character from Kafka.  His secret is one he dares not confess but the woman is his downfall and the consequences are inevitable.

Sorrentino creates a chilly mood of mystery and suspense with a kind of slow motion thriller. Servillo’s performance is  a master class in understatement.  To gain something you must sometime be prepared be lose everything.

THIS MUST BE THE PLACE

Paolo Sorrentino’s Il Divo, a masterly film portrait of the ultimate political survivor Guilio Andreotti, so impressed Sean Penn at the 2008 Cannes Film Festival that he told the Italian director he would be happy to consider appearing in any future film he made.

Taking the bull by the horns Sorrentino went away and wrote the part of a former Goth-rock star with Penn in mind. To his delight and amazement, Penn accepted immediately.

Sean Penn plays Cheyenne, a 50-year-old adolescent with the slow, awkward gait of an intense teenager carrying the weight of the world on his shoulders.

Cheyenne is described by  Sorrentino as “childish, but not capricious. Like many adults who remain anchored in their childhood he has a knack of maintaining only the limpid, touching and bearable qualities of kids”.

For the role, Penn adopts a camp, emotionally detached voice yet despite his apparent boredom , bordering on depression,  he is always fully engaged with those he speaks with. There are some great one liners that would have fallen flat if he had played the part in a more extravagant manner.

Robert Smith – the other Cheyenne.

The general look of the character, with bright red lipstick and a ‘pulled through the hedge backwards’ hairstyle is, unsurprisingly, based on The Cure’s Robert Smith.

The movie’s title is taken from a track by The Talking Heads and we hear various versions of the song during the course of the movie. The best of these is a live rendition with David Byrne and band at a New York hotspot.

Byrne plays himself in as an old friend of Cheyenne’s. The contrast between the two is stark with the uber-cool DB looking like a fallen angel all in white (hair included) while the lost Cheyenne, dressed from head to toe in black, seems cursed to live out his days frozen in a vague memory of his past glories.

The death of his estranged father reluctantly takes Cheyenne from his retirement mansion in Dublin back to New York. He discovers his father, a holocaust survivor, had an obsession to seek revenge for a humiliation he had suffered in Auschwitz. Intrigued by this story, Cheyenne embarks on an unlikely mission to seek out his father’s persecutor, partly to relieve the tedium of his life and also to belatedly discover something of his estranged father’s past.

Sorrentino said that he took some inspiration from another offbeat road movie , David Lynch’s A Straight Story, and it seemed to me to that he also borrows ideas and themes from David Byrne’s True Stories in that it views quirkier aspects of American life in the same way that an enthusiastic tourist engages with a foreign country. The Holocaust related quest also make me think of the novel and movie Everything Is Illuminated.

The soundtrack is exceptional. It’s always the sign of a director on top of his game when the music works to enhance the visuals rather than serving as some vague, tuneful backdrop. Sorrentino could easily have taken the soft option of a late 70s Goth-Rock mix of Siouxsie & The Banshees, Bauhaus, The Cure, The Mission etc. which might have reflected Cheyenne’s tastes but wouldn’t have fitted in with the story at all. Instead he shows immaculate taste by including songs by Will Oldham (Bonnie ‘Prince’ Billy), Vic Chesnutt, Iggy Pop, Jonsì & Alex and Julia Kent.

Great though the movie is, it is by no means flawless.  As a portrait of modern America there’s freshness and humour while the serious parallel plot of the Nazi criminal is far less convincing.

Still, it is easy to overlook such weaknesses in a fresh and humane movie that is by turns touching, funny, sad and unpredictable.