The fearsome Falco as Olivia
Io e Te (Me and You) (Italy, 2012) directed by Bernardo Bertolucci, 103 minutes
Friday, September 7th, 9.45p, Scotiabank Theatre 3
This is my first film at TIFF
with the lovely Ms. C. We will see about ten films together over the
next ten days. So happy to start with the Italian film director Bernardo Bertolucci, a hero of mine.
Last Tango in Paris.
The Conformist. The Sheltering Sky. Stealing Beauty … he is a true master.
So with reluctance I am somewhat sad to report that Io e Te fails to kindle
that sense of intense pleasure or discomfort or unease that Bertolucci’s films
often elicit.
Lorenzo (Jacopo Olmo Antinori) is a troubled fourteen year
old teenager from an affluent background who seems to have rage issues and a strange
fixation on his mother likely because they are often alone together. He appears
to both loathe and covet her and that makes for some strange dinner
conversations. He is trying to resolve these issues with a therapist paid for
at great expense by his frequently absent rich father.
Perversely, rather than go on a ski trip with his school, he
decides to hide in the basement of his apartment for a week and pretends to go
on the trip. Stocked with food, drink, blankets and his favourite music all
appears to go as planned until his half-sister Olivia (Tea Falco) appears
searching for a gold bracelet that she can pawn to get more drugs to feed her
habit. A heroine addict (probably the most voluptuous and gorgeous addict you
might ever see on film), Olivia enters Lorenzo’s sacred space like a hurricane,
belittling him, threatening and accusing, and heaping scorn on Lorenzo, who
is the son of their father’s second wife whom Olivia once tried to kill buy
bashing her over the head with a rock.
The film initially hints at a possible entanglement between
son and mother and then brother and sister but that fades away with the calming
of the emotional storm within Lorenzo. At the end, we have a sense that Lorenzo
has worked something out of his system and Olivia will try and give up drugs.
The director even ends on a freeze frame of Lorenzo’s smiling face as if to
emphasize the somewhat happy ending.
The acting by all three principals is proficient. Antinori
is convincingly alienated and confused – replete with bad skin, tousled mop and
a hostile manner. Falco is by turns petulant, rage-filled then penitent and
cowed by her attempt to go cold turkey in front of her bewildered half brother.
But the ending disappoints. Has Bertolucci gone sentimental in his old age? Now
72 and confined to a wheelchair he is no longer able to travel and was not at
the screening although his producer was.
Where is the threat of danger and violence that suffused Tango?
The paranoia and tension in Fascist Italy as depicted in The Conformist? Or the beauty of The Sheltering Sky and The Last Emperor? It feels as if Bertolucci’s energy is depleted … the anger
and passion flushed away. I felt the same disappointment in seeing Coppola’s
last offering, Twixt, at last year’s TIFF. As if he had softened and
mellowed.
This was how Last Tango in Paris was once described:
"Obscene content
offensive to public decency... presented
with obsessive self-indulgence, catering to
the lowest instincts of the libido,
dominated by the idea of stirring
unchecked appetites for sexual pleasure,
permeated by scurrilous language ...
accompanied off screen by sounds, sighs
and shrieks of climax pleasure."
It saddens me that old lions don’t leave us with a roar … more like
a comforting purr.
Beatifully written review....I will add that I did think it was nicely shot. But agree on it's being a purr after so many roars.
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