With only 6 full-length feature films under his belt Paolo Sorrentino
has already established himself as one of the cinema's greatest
stylists. Indeed, I think Sorrentino will turn out to be one of the
great directors and not just in his native Italy. His first foray into
English, "This Must be the Place", was an extraordinary American
road-movie and a very worthy addition to both that genre and to those
visions of America, (and in that particular case, Ireland as well), as seen through the eyes of an outsider.
"The Family Friend" was his third film and it, too, is astonishing. It's
about a loan shark, the thoroughly despicable Geremia, (a wonderful
performance from Giacomo Rizzo), who could have come straight from the
pages of a Dickens novel and, though himself in middle-age, lives with
his ancient, bed-ridden mother and is on the look-out for a wife or at
least a woman. He is a man who takes no prisoners and is certainly not
the kind of man you would like to cross. Then one day he meets Rosalba,
the daughter of a couple who have borrowed money from him to pay for
her wedding, and he is smitten, even though she despises him.
This
is a dark and very funny film; a variation on "Beauty and the Beast"
where the beast really is a beast, a "Phantom of the Opera" where the
phantom is as hideous on the inside as he is on the outside, told in the
same gloriously broad strokes that Sorrentino has brought to all his
films. Critics have compared him to Fellini, (and his most recent film, "The Great Beauty" is a "La Dolce Vita" for the 21st century), but
Sorrentino is much too original a talent to be compared to anyone and "The Family Friend" is a true original. Right now I think the only director turning out movies this good, on such a consistent basis, is Paul Thomas Anderson. For starters, they both share the same sense of the absurd though when it comes to the use of music in his movies I think Sorrentino has the edge on all his competitors.
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