Vivere (2019) Poster

(2019)

User Reviews

Review this title
3 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
2/10
Just Awful
oguru-6478214 October 2021
I'm not sure how the other reviewers thought it was a 10 but my partner and I found it to be terrible. Doesn't really seem to have much point, and was really stupid. I made an account after using imdb for many years just to rate this.
1 out of 4 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Selfishness runs rampant
GTornatore23 June 2021
This is a well made movie of a rotten subject, selfishness. The characters are well developed so, at the end, you realize how despicable most of them are. The father is written as an incredible loser lacking any male leadership or protective role. He's actually an emotional parasite, as are all the male roles. The women are all written as brain dead bimbos.

Meanwhile, the children suffer from the emotional neglect.

Interesting is the god-like busy body next door neighbor that sees and knows all the sins.

Still the movie tells the story well and is a very worthwhile study of the destructive power of selfishness.
3 out of 4 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Nice film
nathaider2 February 2020
Warning: Spoilers
The family at the centre of Vivere is dysfunctional, there's no denying it. It revolves around Susi, played by Micaela Ramazzotti who is once again stepping into the shoes of a somewhat unhinged woman from the outskirts of Rome, who nurses shattered dreams of becoming a dancer, now teaching aerobic dance to women looking to lose weight. She's mum to Lucilla (Elisa Miccoli), a 7-year-old who suffers from psychosomatic asthma attacks. The little girl's father is Luca (Adriano Giannini), a journalist who scrapes a living from small-scale projects, despised for his weakness by those around him, and who still depends on his former father-in-law for help: De Santis (Enrico Montesano), a powerful lawyer with friends in high places and a string of shady acquaintances. Off the back of his fling with Susi, he was thrown out of the De Santis family home and found himself separated from Azzurra (Valentina Cervi). He stays in touch with her via their son, 17-year-old Pierpaolo (Andrea Calligari, an interesting new face in film) who, for all his lines of coke seems endowed with far more maturity than his dad. Completing the family portrait is the au pair who looks after Lucilla, the young, God-fearing Irish girl and History of Art student Mary Ann (Roisin O'Donovan). It's not long before compulsive cheat Luca, whom she's left alone in the house with, jumps on her, with the excuse that he's unhappy. It's an explanation which Mary Ann happily accepts, having made the sign of the cross and put up a brief attempt at resistance. Once she realises the true extent of her lover's baseness and mediocrity, the girl escapes from the Irish sisters in the Aventino district, only to discover some time later that she's pregnant. Susi, meanwhile, is being chased by the luminary who's treating Lucilla, a charming widower played by Massimo Ghini. But she doesn't give in, despite the fact she thinks her husband's a rotter. Standing on the sidelines watching everything is their neighbour, an industrial expert known as Perind (Marcello Fonte, winner of Cannes' Best Actor prize for Dogman [+]). The circle closes when the granddad-lawyer is found dead from a heart attack in the bed of a Brazilian transgender prostitute whom, it turns out, De Santis met up with frequently, telling him all about his family (in one entertaining scene, the sex worker concludes: "You must be Luca: a loser and a bit of a prick ...). Luca's paper subsequently offers him job security in exchange for a story unearthing the secrets of his dead father-in-law. But he refuses, redeeming himself from a lifetime of errors.
1 out of 4 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed