Film Review
Dino Risi was perhaps not the obvious filmmaker to direct this dark
fantasy, an unsettling melange of romance and ghost story, but, with
the support of a stunning pair of lead actors, he manages to come to
grips with an unfamiliar genre and delivers the most haunting and
poetic evocation of a romantic passion that refuses to die.
Fantasma d'amore (a.k.a.
Fantôme d'amour or
Ghost of Love) is a far cry from
Risi's better known Italian comedies, one of his more sombre and
introspective works which, despite being pretty joyless, somehow cannot
fail to be both riveting and poignant. For anyone who has had to
bear the loss of a treasured love the film is particularly potent and
brings some measure of consolation with its central message that true
love is eternal and, unlike the stuff we are made of, will not be
devoured and destroyed by time. Love is perhaps the only thing in
creation that is spared by Chronos.
It hard to imagine a better choice of actors for the two lead roles in
this film than Marcello Mastroianni and Romy Schneider, two of the most
charismatic performers of their time, both gifted with an extraordinary
talent for expressing their characters' inner feelings and motivations
with the subtlest of external gestures. When we first see Romy
Schenider at the start of the film she is virtually unrecognisable, so
effectively have the make-up team destroyed her stunning good looks to
age her by about twenty or so years. It is a shock and a relief
when we next see her, not as a bent and withered old crone, but as a
woman in the flush of youth, the fulsome expression of the male
protagonist's most ardent desires.
Extraordinary to think that within two years of making this film
Romy Schneider would be dead, having endured a series of extreme
personal tragedies. Unlike the old woman she plays in the film,
Romy would not be devoured by time - her charm and her beauty would be
preserved in aspic, through her films and her photographs.
Fantasma d'amore almost deserves to
be retitled
Fantasma de Romy,
so powerfully does it arouse our fondest feelings for an actress who,
during her brief life, appeared to have been blessed and cursed by
divine powers and who now, thirty years after her death, haunts our
consciousness like no other. In the film, Marcello Mastroianni
expresses exactly what we feel when his character is confronted with
the spectre of his old love and experiences a fierce rekindling of an
amour fou. Once you fall in love with Romy it is impossible to
get her out of your mind.
© James Travers 2012
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Whilst travelling in a bus in his home town of Pavia, Nino Monti, a
successful lawyer, encounters an old woman who bears a striking
resemblance to Anna Brigatti, a woman he was once madly in love
with. That evening, Nino meets the old woman a second time and
she reveals that she is indeed Anna and that her love for him has not
dwindled. Shortly afterwards, the lawyer witness a horrific
murder. Puzzled by these events, Nino recounts them to an old
friend, a doctor who reveals that Anna died three years ago whilst
under his care. A short while later, Nino receives a telephone
call from a woman claiming to be his former lover. They arrange
to meet up at Anna's luxury villa. When Nino next sees Anna she
is exactly as he remembers her, his one true love...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.