expresso : Currently no links yet but available through VidSrc
expresso : Negative space is the perfect metaphor. I was on the outer orbit of an artists' collective...
hellsingfan01 : Truer words have never been spoken.
ΜΥΓΑΣ : LOL They cut the last scene when the musical guest left the stage. But why? Hahahaha!
expresso : "Novelist and creative writing teacher Iris (Naomi Watts) finds her comfortable, solitary ...
Dethkids : Now I don't have to post anything u already said it. Check out Cosmic Disclosure (series/...
Crim : best ending. they should have left it here. well. Dont remember actually so I will see in ...
bigguy01 : this series led to the naked gun films
magiczoo : Debated whether to watch it, the subject matter is heavy and the ending is predetermined, ...
mikebcarguy : Contains spoilers. Click to show. Is it effed-up that I applaud Hildy for, "living her truth," by dosing the city's water su...
This film is a modern masterpiece of Cinema. Luca Bigazzi’s cinematography is beautiful, with elegant tracking shots of Rome that draw the viewer into the loveliness of Jep’s world (even if age and experience seems to have robbed him of the ability to feel and see this great beauty himself).
The enchanting score of choral works by David Lang (I Lie), Vladimir Martynov (The Beatitudes), John Tavener (The Lamb) and Arvo Part (My Heart is in the Highlands) give depth to the wonderful images of Rome. This haunting soundtrack replaces the need for dialogue and adds intensity to Servillo’s melancholic performance.
Servillo’s acting is superb from his moments of dry humour to the heartbreaking intensity of those feelings he cannot quite hold on to.
La Grande Bellezza gives a window into Roman life that is probably only fully understood by a fellow Roman. However all can appreciate the aesthetic pleasure of Sorrentino’s Rome and the bittersweet meanderings of its characters.
This is a cinema of the highest order, imbued with elegance & style. For the viewer it is like swimming in honey. Grazie Signore Sorrentino.