MOVIE REVIEW
'Don't Move'Passions ignite in an Italian film of the sort once performed by Sophia Loren and Marcello Mastroianni.
By Kevin Thomas, Times Staff Writer
The emotional Italian temperament has always seemed ideally suited to telling tales of grand passion, and this is especially true for "Don't Move," a full-bodied, all-stops-out love story with a wrenching impact that makes most of today's screen romances seem undernourished by comparison. Not surprisingly, the film won Donatellos — Italy's version of the Oscars — for both its stars, Penélope Cruz and Sergio Castellitto, who also directed. "Don't Move" has the potential to become one of the most widely appealing foreign films this year.
A 15-year-old girl, Angela (Elena Perino), is thrown off her moped when it is struck by a car. As she hovers between life and death, awaiting surgery to relieve pressure on her brain from a hematoma, her father, Timoteo (Castellitto), a surgeon at the very hospital to which she has been taken, waits outside the operating room. In this moment of crisis Timoteo is swept over by memories — of his childhood, his marriage, his daughter's birth, but above all by the great love affair of his life.
An affair of the utmost tempestuousness has ignited, and in Castellitto and Margaret Mazzantini's astute adaptation of her prizewinning 2002 novel, Timoteo and Italia's love affair gradually and ironically converges with the present. Castellitto creates an unflinchingly honest portrayal of a flawed man who pays a high price for trying to lead a double life. Of men, Timoteo remarks to a friend, "We're all cruel, some more, some less." In a performance that amounts to a breakthrough, Cruz's Italia is as fiery as she is vulnerable, uneducated but possessed of the strength and wisdom of people who have survived an eternity of poverty. "Don't Move" has a rich, lyrical sweep and floats between past and present, reality and imagination, with ease. It is a richly satisfying experience, and it's not too big a stretch to say that Castellitto and Cruz recall Marcello Mastroianni and Sophia Loren, who not all that long ago — or so it seems — might well have played Timoteo and Italia themselves. * 'Don't Move' MPAA rating: Unrated Times guidelines: Adult themes, steamy sensuality Penélope Cruz...Italia Sergio Castellitto...Timoteo Claudia Gerini...Elsa, Timoteo's wife Elena Perino...Angela, Timoteo's daughter A Northern Arts Entertainment release of a Cattleya production co-produced with Alquimia Cinema and the Producers Films in collaboration with Medusa Film and Telecinco. Director Sergio Castellitto. Producers Riccardo Tozzi, Giovanni Stabilini, Marco Chimenz. Story and screenplay by Margaret Mazzantini and Castellitto; based on the novel by Margaret Mazzantini. Cinematographer Gianfilippo Corticelli. Editor Patrizio Marone. Music Lucio Godoy. Costumes Isabella Rizza. Production designer Francesco Frigeri. In Italian with English subtitles. Running time: 2 hours. At selected theaters. To order a reprint of this article, please click here. |
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