Screen Cannes Daily Day 6

Page 14

REVIEWS

Reviews edited by Mark Adams mark.adams@screendaily.com

» The Wonders p12 » The Homesman p14 » It Follows p14

» The Salvation p16 » A Hard Day p16

» Self Made p18 » The Go-Go Boys p18

The Wonders Reviewed by Lee Marshall A rich, strange mix of coming-of-age film and troubled modern pastoral, The Wonders (Le Meraviglie) proves that Alice Rohrwacher’s spikily original feature debut, Corpo Celeste, was no flash in the pan. Delving partly into the director’s own family background, The Wonders captures something profound about the passage to adulthood as a mix of hormonal drama and dream state. Anchored by a fine cast, dominated by the compellingly natural performance of first-time Romanian-Italian actress Alexandra Lungu in the central role of Gelsomina, this resonant film will place Rohrwacher firmly in the canon of Italian directors to watch. Monica Bellucci’s turn as a past-her-sell-bydate TV soubrette should not kid anyone about The Wonders’ target audience: it is resolutely arthouse, though at the wider end of the spectrum and with solid international potential for curious, patient viewers. If The Great Beauty was showy modern opera, this is intimate contemporary chamber music. On one of its many levels, The Wonders is a film about the challenges of growing up in an unorthodox family. Twelve-year-old Gelsomina (who bears little resemblance in looks or character to her namesake in Fellini’s La Strada) is the oldest daughter of a couple of former student revolutionaries, he German and she Italian, who

n 12 Screen International at Cannes May 19, 2014

COMPETITION It-Switz-Ger. 2014. 110mins Director/screenplay Alice Rohrwacher Production companies Tempesta, Rai Cinema International sales The Match Factory, www. the-match-factory.de Producers Carlo CrestoDina, Karl Baumgartner, Tiziana Soudani, Michael Weber Cinematography Hélene Louvart Editor Marco Spoletini Production designer Emita Frigato Main cast Alexandra Lungu, Sam Louwyck, Alba Rohrwacher, Sabine Timoteo, Agnese Graziani, Luis Huilca Logrono

have moved to the Tuscan countryside to keep bees and build their own utopia. But it is under threat from hunters, non-organic neighbours whose weedkiller is killing the bees, health and safety bureaucrats, and most of all from the sheer unremitting drudgery of farm work. Home is a crumbling, draughty farmhouse with floor mattresses for beds. Family patriarch Wolfgang (Belgian dancer Sam Louwyck) is a taut, feral soul at war with the world and the daughters he loves; the mother, played by the director’s older actress sister Alba, is stressed and overworked, and Gelso — as she is nicknamed — has stepped into the breach, mothering her sisters and helping out dad with the bees. The emotional arm-wrestling match between Wolfgang and Gelso, both stubborn loners in their own ways, spills over into Gelso’s manipulative-affectionate rapport with the next sister down, plump mother’s girl Marinella (Graziani). Two younger sisters run wild, on the fringes of Gelso’s emotional attention. And then there’s Coco (Timoteo), a wiry, lonely German woman who lives and works with the family. Is she a relative, a friend? For Gelso, as for the audience, she’s just there. Two new plot balls eventually thicken the blend: the first is the family’s seaside stumble onto the location shoot of a promo for Il Paese Delle Meraviglie, a madly kitsch ‘best farm produce’ local TV talent show that raids the area’s

Etruscan past with more artistic licence than a 1960s peplum movie. Bellucci plays the fairygodmother presenter of the show, a woman mutely startled by her own superficiality, but seen as a marvel by the daughters. Second turnup is the arrival of a German juvenile offender, Martin (Logrono), sent to work on the family farm as part of a rehabilitation programme. Rohrwacher listens to her characters, lets them take the story in unexpected directions, at the same time building resonance out of recurrent symbols and triggers. One of these is the slow drip of honey from a vat into a bucket that needs changing before it is full — a country ritual, a promise of sweetness, but also a distillation of paternal tyranny. Bees are both threats and wonders: they cannot be relied on to stay in the hive, but can also be persuaded to perform miracles — emerging from Gelso’s mouth in a party trick that gives the film its Italian-release poster image. Cinematographer Hélene Louvart channels both the poetry and harshness of the rural setting, sensitively building on Gelso’s transitional status: half a part of the family that nurtured her, half becoming her own woman. Rarely has the suspended state of pre-adolescence been captured so instinctively on film.

Screen Score

★★★★


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