Saturday, July 14, 2012

To Rome with Love: Movie Review


   


All of your heart's fantasies played out in Rome with love, celebrities, death and opera.
“To Rome with Love” is a fantasy film; a comedy about people living out their fantasies. The great thing about it is that it’s subtle enough that you don’t recognize the fantasy element in all of the relationships until later on in the film. The obvious one is when native Roman, Leopoldo Pisanello (Roberto Benigni), becomes a celebrity over night. “It’s better to be a celebrity than an unknown.” And as Benigni shows, way funnier too. 2012

Directed by: Woody Allen

Screenplay by: Woody Allen

Starring: Roberto Benigni, Alison Pill, Woody Allen and Jesse Eisenberg

Left to Right: Antonio (Alessandro Tiberi) and Anna (Penélope Cruz).
Photo by Philippe Antonello (c) Gravier Productions, Inc.,
Courtesy of Sony Pictures Classics
It’s the type of film where everybody gets to see themselves as famous, or supremely interesting, or a guiding angel, or married to a hooker, or the object of a movie star’s affections, or on a romantic rendezvous with a thief, or having the ability to change the world with one simple idea. It will take you to wherever your heart desires. And then you’ll realize why it’s often advised to think with your brain rather than with your heart.

Half Italian and half English, we follow two relationships involving Romans and two relationships with Americans in Rome. A young, Italian, married couple get separated and the young man finds himself living out every other young man’s fantasies while the young woman finds herself living out her own fantasies.

Hayley (Alison Pill), a New Yorker transplanted in Rome, falls in love and gets engaged to a successful Roman lawyer. Her parents (Woody Allen and Judy Davis) make the trek across the ocean to meet their in-laws. But Allen’s obsession with death and equating retirement with death causes him to create a national disaster (or success story, depending on how you look at it).

Left to Right: John (Alec Baldwin) and Jack (Jesse Eisenberg).
Photo by Philippe Antonello (c) Gravier Productions, Inc.,
Courtesy of Sony Pictures Classics
Jack (Jesse Eisenberg) is an American architect living in Rome with his girlfriend. First he meets his architecture idol, John (Alec Baldwin), who sees Jack as the younger version of himself. Or more accurately, Jack sees John as the older version of himself (the joke works better that way). Then Jack meets Monica (Ellen Page) who is his girlfriend’s best friend and is the object of all men’s fantasies.

Page also gets to play the role of the self-obsessed, pseudo-intellectual — commonly referred to as “the pedantic one” in most Woody Allen movies. Other than Allen himself, Eisenberg and Baldwin play a sort of tag-team version of the self-deprecating, neurotic hero, although this time with a touch of confidence.

Confidence is not to be confused with optimism because as funny as “To Rome with Love” is, it also has Allen’s usual undertone of pessimism. Death is going to come sooner than you would like, but not soon enough. And even if you do get to live out your heart’s fantasies, they may not lead to everything that you hoped for. This film is the comedy version of death and negativity, and can provide you with the simple joys in life.





Recommended:

Midnight in Paris (2011) - Paris and literature taken to golden heights of intelligence and humour.