Review of L’immensità | A deceptive chandelier





Clara and Felice have just moved into a new apartment. Nothing is going right in their marriage anymore and their three children are the only thing keeping them together. The eldest, who has just turned 12, was born in a body that does not correspond to her and tries to convince those around her that she is a boy, which weakens the precarious balance of the family.



Some will be tempted to say, seeing L’immensità (The immensity)new film by Emanuele Crialese (Respiro), which we have again applied to the past of the concepts of the present. In this case, the questioning of gender identity. This would be to ignore the fact that this story is, in large part, the one experienced by the Italian filmmaker in his early adolescence.

The immensity is a family chronicle, set in Rome in the 1970s, about the Borghetti, a drifting married couple and their three children. Adriana (Luana Giuliani), the sassy 12-year-old, wants to be treated like a boy, even though she was born in a girl’s body. We call her Adri, but she would prefer to be called Andrea, a male name in Italy.


PHOTO PROVIDED BY METROPOLE FILMS

Luana Giuliani and Penélope Cruz in a scene from The immensity

As she seems like an enigma to the people around her, Adri is convinced that she was sent to earth by aliens. His greatest accomplice is his mother, Clara (Penélope Cruz), unhappy in the home and depressed, who is suffocating in the traditional Italian family model, even more macho at the time. Clara can only give free rein to her fantasy and her repressed surges of freedom in the presence of her children, who are both her buoy and her straitjacket.

Emanuele Crialese’s film is essentially played on two scenes: that of the girl who feels like a son – and who discovers the first emotions of love – and that of the housewife on the verge of a nervous breakdown, who does not like more her husband. Penélope Cruz, who plays this character of a Spanish immigrant in Rome in Italian, is particularly luminous.

Undoubtedly because of the strong presence of the actress, Crialese’s homage to his own mother, and to the young girl he was, seemed to me to have at the start some semblance of Almodóvar accents. There is also this pretty scene, from the start, where Clara pretends to sing while dancing with her children, while they set the table according to a very precise choreography, to the sound of an old Italian pop song.

Despite his finery vintage of charming melody, The immensity is not a light film. It is about conjugal violence, physical and psychological, and the disarray of a young girl in front of an observation: the body in which she was born is not the one that corresponds to her.

Several musical sequences, mostly dreamlike retro interludes, fortunately allow the story to breathe. Adri imagines herself on the set of an Italian variety show, where she replaces rock singer Adriano Celentano and her mother, the pop diva of the time, Rafaella Carrà.

Thanks to a particularly neat and elegant staging, Emanuele Crialese’s first film in 11 years, presented last year in competition at the Venice Film Festival, stands out favorably from most nostalgic learning stories. This film co-scripted by Crialese is on the other hand rather smooth, in view of the heaviness of the subjects it deals with. As if the Polaroid that the filmmaker had kept from his difficult youth had retained a deceptive luster.

The immensity (the immensity) is presented in the original version in Italian with English subtitles, with French subtitles and dubbed in French.

Indoors

L'immensità (The immensity)

Drama

The immensity (the immensity)

Emanuele Crialese

With Penélope Cruz, Luana Giuliani, Vincenzo Amato

1:37 a.m.

7/10


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