Friday, September 7, 2012

VENICE REVIEW: Dormant Beauty (Bella Addormentata)



Dormant Beauty (Bella Addormentata) 
Venice Review
5:56 AM PDT 9/5/2012

By Deborah Young
Maya Sansa and Pier Giorgio Bellocchio in Dormant Beauty

The Bottom Line 
Marco Bellocchio reaffirms the dignity of life in another film of sparkling intelligence, set around a real-life euthanasia case.

Italian master Marco Bellocchio's tale of a modern-day Sleeping Beauty features a top cast top-lining Toni Servillo, Isabelle Huppert, Alba Rohrwacher and Maya Sansa.

With typical intelligence and complexity, director Marco Bellocchio weaves three stories around the politically hot topic of euthanasia, turning a real-life Italian national drama into engrossing narrative for sophisticated audiences. Refusing to offer easy answers or perspectives, Dormant Beauty is directed in such a way it doesn’t need to take a clear-cut position on the question, because like all the director’s work it has no concern with convincing people of anything, but a great deal of interest in illuminating contemporary Italian society. Its unqualified success in doing so should make it a full-fledged contender for a major prize at Venice and help it to closely imitate the international sales of his recent work.  

Like Bellocchio’s film about the Aldo Moro assassination, Good Morning, Night, the story takes off from real events that obsessed Italians in 2009 when Beppe Englaro decided to take his daughter Eluana, in a coma for 17 years following a car accident, off mechanical life support. The most remarkable thing about the case was the father’s insistence on seeing Italian law applied rather than taking the easy route of doing it quietly on the sly (the film shows two examples). The case of Eluana became a cause celebre that pitted pro-life activists against the girl’s family; prime minister Silvio Berlusconi also got involved and politicians, seeing fertile ground for cashing in on voters’ strong feelings, turned the sad case into a parliamentary vote.
The case is still a hot topic as shown by the fact that the Northeast province and region of Friuli-Venezia Giulia, where the film was shot, took the almost unbelievable step of cancelling their active Film Commission, theoretically for budget reasons but most probably to block financing to this film and avoid controversy. The Film Commission logo does appear on the opening credits, however.   
   
As might be expected from the director of My Mother’s Smile, a.k.a.The Religion Hour, Catholic vs. secular views about euthanasia square off.  The religious-minded young Maria (Alba Rohrwacher sporting a no-makeup, Catholic schoolgirl look) demonstrates on the opposite side of police lines from a boy she likes, Roberto (Michele Riondino), and his rabidly angry, mentally ill brother. It’s an honest, clean relationship that leaps across ideological barriers, at least while they fall in love.

In another story so subtly interwoven it seems to overlap, a famous actress (Isabelle Huppert) obsessively cares for her own coma-stricken sleeping beauty, her daughter Rosa, with a small army of nurses and nuns. Though no cardinals or bishops appear in the story, Huppert embodies the Catholic p.o.v.; her neglected son even calls her “the Divine Mother.” It’s not a disrespectful portrait of a mother’s pain, but the very fact that the cold Huppert plays a Francesca Bertini-style diva, one who dreams of Lady Macbeth in her sleep, signals how distant she is from the screenwriters’ affection.

In a third story, Dr. Pallido (Pier Giorgio Bellocchio) becomes attracted to a beautiful, suicidal drug addict (Maya Sansa) and watches over her sedated sleep in a public hospital, while doctors and orderlies are cynically betting on how long Eluana will survive.  The young doctor’s attention may not be disinterested, but it offers space to affirm the positive value of life and freedom:  “You’re free to kill yourself,” he tells the girl, “and I’m free to try to stop you.”   

The film’s real center of empathy, however, is Toni Servillo’s very human impersonation of Uliano Beffardi, an honest politician. A first-term senator elected for Berlusconi’s party, he’s called on to vote for a law against euthanasia designed specifically to stop Eluana Englaro from being taken off life support. It goes completely against his conscience, especially given a traumatic event in his past.   

Uliano contemplates resigning from office to honor his beliefs, but he’s deathly afraid of losing the trust of his daughter, Maria. Their differing ideas about the Englaro case are a painful source of friction. Meanwhile, he reluctantly goes to Rome where the political tension is peaking as the vote approaches.

Remarkably, Bellocchio takes time out for wry humor that will help the film immeasurably at the Italian box office and beyond. The script he wrote with Stefano Rulli and Veronica Raimocontains a scene for the archives that tears the political class to pieces, allowing the best of Italian liberalism to triumph for one brief moment. The droll, lined face of Roberto Herlitzka, who played Aldo Moro, animates the surreal figure of a shrink who seems to work in the Senate (or maybe in party headquarters) prescribing uppers and downers to depressed politicians. There’s even a candle-lit Turkish bath where the pols relax like ancient Roman senators, with their heads sticking out of a steamy pool while they watch closed-circuit TV of live parliamentary debates.

Bellocchio’s excellent technical crew lead by director of photography Daniele Cipri’ (who directed Toni Servillo in the other Italian film in Venice competition, It Was the Son) gives the film a dark, rich look echoed in Carlo Crivelli’s moving dramatic score and its magical adaptation of David Bowie’s Abdulmajid.

Venue: Venice Film Festival, Sept. 5, 2012.Production companies: Cattleya, Rai Cinema, Babe Films
Cast: Toni Servillo, Alba Rohrwacher, Maya Sansa, Pier Giorgio Bellocchio, Isabelle Huppert, Michele Riondino, Gian Marco Tognazzi, Fabrizio Falco, Brenno Placido, Roberto Herlitzka, Federica Fracassi
Director: Marco Bellocchio
Screenwriters: Marco Bellocchio, Veronica Raimo, Stefano Rulli
Producers: Riccardo Tozzi, Marco Chimenz, Giovanni Stabilini
Co-producer: Fabio ConversiExecutive producer: Francesca Longardi
Director of photography: Daniele Cipri’
Production designer: Marco Dentici
Costumes: Sergio Ballo
Editor: Francesca Calvelli
Music: Carlo Crivelli
Sales Agent: Celluloid Dreams
No rating, 115 minutes.

VENICE REVIEW: Thy Womb (Sinapupunan)



Thy Womb (Sinapupunan) 
Venice Review
9:13 AM PDT 9/6/2012

By Neil Young
Bangas-An (Bembol Roco), Mersila (Lovi Poe), Shaleha (Nora Aunor)
of the film
Thy Womb (Sinapupunan)

The Bottom Line
Alluring scenery and a sympathetic lead performance help elevate an otherwise tepid, underdeveloped slice of Philippine ethno-drama.

An infertile midwife turns matchmaker for her aging husband in the ever-prolific Brillante Mendoza's colorfully ethnographic but torpid drama Thy Womb (Sinapupunan), premiering in Venice competition seven months after Isabelle Huppert collaboration Captive contended at Berlin. He teams up here with Nora Aunor, an enduring mega-star of his nation's cinema and music industries, making this Toronto selection an appealing box-office proposition at home. Overseas fortunes regarding distribution and TV sales will likely depend on the Venice jury, and unless it wins something big on the Lido a future of festival berths looks the most probable scenario.

Mendoza, credited here as "Brillante Ma. Mendoza," won Best Director at Cannes in 2009 for what remains internationally his best-known work, the harrowingly violent Kinatay (aka The Execution of P.). Hostage chronicle Captive similarly put its cast and audience through a tough ordeal, but Mendoza is on restrained and lyrical form here as he immerses us in the unspoiltwaterworld of the Philippine archipelago's south-western extremity, Tawi-Tawi.

A spectacularly big sky, big sea location just off the coast of Borneo, Tawi-Tawi is one of the country's five mainly Muslim provinces, and Mendoza's depiction of the religion's exotic but mild local variant adds much flavor to proceedings, especially the dazzlingly opulent garments worn at festive and formal occasions.

Shaleha (Aunor) and her fisherman husband Bangas-An (BembolRoco) are practicing adherents of the faith. But it's never made clear how this informs Shaleha's decision to seek a second wife for his spouse, whose long-held desire to have a child of his own has in the past been temporarily satisfied by adopting. "Instead of cheating on me, I'd rather pick a bride for him," she confides to a friend.

Shaleha's search comprises the bulk of the slender narrative, taking its cue from the steady rhythms of life on and between the islands, a sedate pace with several long stretches of waiting. This patience-taxing approach does allow us to contemplate the district's natural and man-made environments via cinematographer Odyssey Flores' generally pin-sharp digital images. Among the wide range of locations visited is an abandoned church, whose dilapidated state eloquently hints that Christianity, while still the overwhelmingly dominant religion in the country, has receded as a force in this particular area.

Mendoza's offbeat choice of title, a reference to the Virgin taken from the Catholic prayer "Hail Mary," ties in with this aspect of the story. But Burgos' script only touches superficially on potentially tricky matters of faith and religion, and it's never clear what's going on when the Tawi-Tawi tranquility is shattered by the occasional appearance of gun-toting guerillas. Further frustrations mar the crucial final act, after a beautifully demure and surprisingly willing partner for Bangas-As emerges in the form of Mersila (Lovi Poe) with negative consequences for the self-sacrificing Shaleha ("for my husband's happiness I'd do anything").

Fifty-nine-year-old Aunor's 170-film career dates back to the 1960s, including collaborations with colossal figures of Philippine cinema such as LinoBrocka and Gerardo de Leon. And her elfin features, so powerfully expressive of both happiness and sorrow, help make Shahela an engaging, unlikely heroine here. It's a shame, then, that her character is ultimately somewhat ill-served by Burgos and Mendoza's overall design, especially in the underdeveloped finale which concludes on an ironic but naggingly unsatisfying note just as things are about to get much more interesting.

Venue: Venice Film Festival (Competition), September 6, 2012.
Production company: Center Stage Productions
Cast: Nora Aunor, Bembol Rocco, Mercedes Cabral, Lovi Poe
Director: Brillante Ma. Mendoza
Screenwriter: Henry Burgos
Executive producers: Brillante Ma. Mendoza, Melvin Mangada, Jaime Santiago
Director of photography: Odyssey Flores
Production designer: 'Dante Mendoza' (i.e. Brillante Ma. Mendoza)
Music: Teresa Barrozo
Editor: Kats Serraon
Sales agent: Center Stage Productions, Mandaluyong City, The Philippines
No MPAA rating, 105 minutes