'The Great Beauty': The film's melancholy and partying both feel forced
'The Great Beauty' is directed by Paolo Sorrentino of 'This Must Be the Place.'
'The Great Beauty'
Janus Films
The Italian auteur Paolo Sorrentino has become a darling of the international cinema circuit for such movies as 鈥淚l Divo,鈥 his helter-skelter portrait of politician Giulio Andreotti, and 鈥淭his Must Be the Place,鈥 starring Sean Penn as a mumbly, scraggly rock star. I found both movies, in their very different ways, borderline unwatchable 鈥 all posturing, little substance. His latest opus, 鈥淭he Great Beauty,鈥 Italy鈥檚 submission for the foreign language Oscar, is a kaleidoscopic phantasmagoria starring Toni Servillo as Jep Gambardella, a famous journalist living lavishly in a Rome that seems to feature at least one bacchanal per evening, with the Coliseum often serving as a backdrop.
Sorrentino has set out to out-Fellini Fellini. There are so many gaping mouths, splayed limbs, and gargoyle grins in this film that Fellini鈥檚 heirs should sue. Gambardella, who wrote a celebrated novel, his only one, years before, is turning 65. This puts him in a ruminative mood, which means he doesn鈥檛 always join the conga line. The melancholy in this film is just as trumped up as the frenzy. Grade: C- (Unrated.)