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(1979)

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10/10
"Weekend" in the Park
frankgaipa20 September 2002
Call this Petri's "Weekend." Every cityscape is full of trash. Every dog, though leashed, is out of control. Strange things happen in odd corners of the screen. Or call it a film for our times: terrorism, assassination, strikes, blackouts, mental illness, monitored constantly yet constantly accepted. Or if not accepted, then subjugated to more immediate concerns: It's also an intensely erotic film, in a mental sort of way, if failure can be erotic, as if Lina Wertmuller's Giancarlo Giannini found education, shiny suits, and philosophy. Like "Pierrot le fou"'s Ferdinand, he's always reading, though I don't think we ever see what.

A few images: Each time a bomb scare empties Giannini's building, the staff flow, only slightly rushed, to a seemingly boundless park that just happens to be nearby. They bring soccer balls, books, snacks. A gelato cart turns up. Also vicious dogs, menacing archers, groping lovers, homeless squatters, but the totality is pastoral. The film opens with Giannini hanging a painting, chatting about his inner terrors with "Fedora." Behind him an apparently headless woman on a hypermodern exercycle spins hard. This is (no ref to Oliver Sacks) Fedora, his wife, facing down, head, hanging way below her shoulders, completely hidden by long hair. Only, if I recall, after a blackout deprives us of this image, do we realize who Fedora is. Perhaps an hour later, we see her again like this, again faceless, yet unbearably present. It's an image Dante might have placed who knows where. It's as if Rodin had tried to do one of Poe's fictional women. Beauteous and horrifying, it's a pose Petri has to have worked to create, no lucky accident. You can almost see him on the set, with a hair brush, making certain no trace of Fedora's face is unhidden.

I'm afraid I've made "Le Buone notizie" sound bleak. It's a joy to watch, as hilarious as Wertmuller's Giannini films. Somehow its title is apt, but I'd have to ramble a few more pages to work out exactly how. Some of it's the friendly chattiness of Giannini's controlled insanity, reassuring us by example just how much room there is this side of the asylum. Some of it, a reach for Petri but as always had it been Godard, is the never boring syncopation of the edits, even toward the end when traditional plot elements threaten to take over. Petri plays Virgil, plus maybe a little Beatrice in the bargain, and pulls us through.
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9/10
"Only for those abnormal"
RodrigAndrisan15 May 2016
The music for this film is composed by the greatest composer of film music of all time, Ennio Morricone. But it's almost nonexistent and as little as it is, it's not great. Deliberately maybe, because the subject itself, with capital M, is Madness, The Madness of Humanity. Place of the action: the crazy world we live in, a world where those who do not kill, do not use drugs, etc., are abnormal. Here's what the director Elio Petri himself says, in his book "The adventurous history of Italian cinema": "It's a film about the société du spectacle. In the society of the spectacle it's not the spectacle of life, there is only the show that gives you the impression that you live, while you don't live from long time ago. I believe that reality is no longer there. I think that ours is a simulacrum of life, our love a love simulacrum, our culture, a culture of simulacrum." We have four great actors, all four special talents: Giancarlo Giannini, Angela Molina(the one from "That Obscure Object of Desire" by Bunuel), Aurore Clément, Paolo Bonacelli(the one from "Salò, or the 120 Days of Sodom" by Pasolini). A film to be seen at least twice, to understand it better. And then to see it again.
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