Film Review
For his second feature after
Pourquoi pas moi? (1999), director
Stéphane Giusti draws on his own personal experiences and delivers an enchanting visual
elegy tracing the lives and loves of an Italian family across three generations.
It is a film that is both poignant and intensely uplifting. The seductive beauty of the
film's narrative form - which skilfully weaves images of the hard reality of life in the
1930s with surreal flights of fancy - makes it easy for all but the most puritanical of
spectators to overlook its rather obvious failings. If you can forgive its artistic
excesses and some moments of absurd sentimentality, you cannot fail to be moved by this
lovingly crafted portrait of one Italian immigrant family's struggle to survive and hold
on to its identity in a rapidly changing world.
The film is most effective in its first half, and this is largely down to the stirring
performances from Jacques Gamblin and Yaël Abecassis. These two actors' portrayal
of a married Italian couple brought to the edge by events over which they have no control
is both convincing and sympathetic. The cast are generally excellent
and Isabelle Carré has a striking presence as the symbol of Liberty - she
would later star along side Gamblin in Bertrand Travernier's
Holy Lola (2004).
The film, like Gamblin's character, attempts
to put a brave face on things, using comedy rather deliberately to mask the less pleasant
sides of life. After all, when there is nothing else, a sense of humour is
all that keeps human beings from descending into abject misery. These forced attempts
at looking at the brighter side merely emphasise the hardship and anxiety experienced
by this immigrant family as they attempt to rebuild their lives from nothing. Nowhere
is this better illustrated than in the hugely symbolic scene in which Orféo tries
to force his family to eat the soil of their native Tuscany during one grim Christmas
evening. Grotesque in both its concept and its execution, this scene is so loaded
with pathos that it is an ordeal to watch, yet it masterfully encapulates the film's underlying
themes of family unity and the need for a racial identity.
Once the Mancini family have settled in France, they are subjected to a series of devastating
tragic events, a development which instantly weakens the film's poetry and send the film
in a new direction. At this point, the film loses its focus and direction, and its
appeal begins to wane. This is partly becomes it attempts to cram too much into
the remaining fifty or so minutes, but mainly because the story is less interesting.
With Gamblin hastily bundled out of the picture, the film loses some of its impact and
charm - although the acting talent of Jalil Lespert and Océane Mozas somehow manages
to keep the film going as it moves onto the next generation.
Towards the end, the film drifts further towards wishy-washy sentimentality which would
have been almost risible had it not been for the consistently high quality of the acting
and beautiful camerawork.
Bella ciao may not be a faultless piece of
cinema but in its candid, albeit idealised, portrait of family life, it contains some
powerful images and messages, many of which leave a lasting impression.
Giusti followed this rich and involving work with a more conventional film on the theme of mid-life crisis,
Made in Italy (2008).
© James Travers 2003
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Next Stéphane Giusti film:
Made in Italy (2008)
Film Synopsis
As Italy falls under the control of the Fascists, Orféo Mancini, a life-long supporter
of the Communist party, decides to leave his country, with his wife Nella and their two
children, Oreste and Bianca. The family take a ship which they believe is
bound for North America but which actually ends up in Marseilles. Disappointed but
not defeated, the young family decides to settle in the lively immigrant district of the
French port and Orféo gets a job as a manual labourer - working for a fellow countryman
(and one-time rival) who has profited from fascism. Although life is hard, Orféo
is optimistic about his family's future, little knowing what tragedies lie in store...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.