movie review by [click on photos Studio Movie
| "It was cloudy in Italy, which surprised them. They had expected sunshine. But it was Italy. Nothing it did could be bad."
--Elizabeth von Arnim, The Enchanted April
England has long enjoyed a literary love affair with Italy. Think of
themes of English etiquette contrasted with Italian heat. Sweet maidens named
Lucy taking dark-skinned lovers, swapping old social constraints into a
marriage of the self. The same is true for post-war British cinema, which
borrowed from Italian neorealism and modeled its radical stylistic techniques
after the French New Wave. During World War II, most British directors had
opted for armchair narrative adaptations--lavish Technicolor productions heavy
on atmosphere. After the war, the Free Cinema movement (1955), lead by
Lindsay Anderson and Karel Reisz, celebrated "the importance of the
individual and . . . the significance of the everyday." A film should be a medium
of personal expression, "socially committed to illuminating the problems of
contemporary life."
Like Italian neorealism, from which it was born, British social
realist cinema occupied itself with sex, class, and power in the
post-industrial world. Today's British cinema has dissolved from this
movement, but elements of it remain in works as seemingly diverse as those by
Mike Leigh and Merchant-Ivory. Although the latter has earned a stuffy
reputation for translating E.M. Forester novels into detail-driven
melodramas, the neorealist concerns (class politics and gender relations)
still prevail under all that button-down propriety. Merchant-Ivory attacks
contemporary problems under the pretty guise of "costume picture." Take away
the social context and you have "Merchant-Ivory lite"--just another
overwrought period film with lots of scenery.
This is Franco Zeffirelli's fault in Tea With Mussolini, which is supposedly
based on his autobiography. Set in Florence of the early 1930s, it tells the
story of Luca (aka Franco), a little bastard boy taken in by the "Scorpioni,"
a scathing group of British expatriates pursuing artistic interests in Italy.
Lady Hester (Maggie Smith, playing the same breed of uppity matron that she played in A
Room With A View) leads the dames as widow of the former British ambassador.
She poses for a photo opportunity with Musso, inciting the Brown Shirts to
break into the ladies' tea room and send them scurrying into the mountains.
Arabella (Judi Dench) loves terriers and Italian frescos and spends time
rescuing both. The token lesbian is Georgie (Lily Tomlin), an archeologist
ditched in overalls. In case we have any questions concerning her sexual
orientation, the movie has her dancing with ladies, dropping
double-entendres, and not doing much of anything. Mary (Joan Plowright) is a
typist and Luca's caretaker. Cher plays Elsa Morgenthal (apparently modeled
after Peggy Guggenheim), a brash American art collector whose absent hubby is
"too cheap to slip a poor girl a little Picasso."
Together, these enormous personalities eclipse boring little Luca,
who, like a soap opera brat, no longer needed by the plotline, disappears to
boarding school and returns a decade older (though nobody else has aged
except Cher, who somehow looks younger). The film would be better off
eliminating Luca or narrowing its focus through his perspective. These are
supposed to be the director's boyhood memories. Perhaps that's the problem.
If Zeffirelli feels constrained to paint in shades of rose, he hasn't done
his duty as a storyteller.
The movie resembles a memoir in its undramatic string of contrived
events. A lot happens within the space of two hours. Most of it defies
explanation. Would two antagonists (Elsa, the brazen American, and Hester, the
prudish Brit) bury the hatchet for the sake of a happy ending? Why would
Elsa, a Jewish woman, kick up her heels in war-torn Italy? What happens to
Lady Hester's grandson, who dodges the draft by dressing in drag and, for no
apparent reason, suddenly bursts into the street, hollering, "I'm a man!" And
how did Arabella's dog make that incredible journey to the mountaintop?
Alas, these questions remain unanswered. It's a waste of a terrific
cast (who manage to make lasting impressions despite lack of depth) not to
mention an ideal setting. Simply aim a camera at Italy and you've got another
character, more complex than the others.
Cinematographer David Watkin makes
the craggy landscape resemble a sleeping giant, the architecture spearing the
mist like castles on a cloud. How could the English light-loving Zeffirelli
(renowned for one of the truest cinematic adaptations of Romeo and Juliet, as well as Mel
Gibson's Hamlet and Elizabeth Taylor's Taming of the Shrew) fail to
represent the bond between his country and the British (literary and
cinematic) heritage he so admires? Better ask the Scorpioni, who taught him
to read and write, but not remember.
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