Il Sorpasso/The Easy Life (Risi, 1962): Cine Lumiere, 6.20pm
This film, which also screens on December 4th with an introduction by Richard Dyer, is part of the Jean-Louis Trintignant season at Cine Lumiere. Full details here.
Time Out review:
“Loneliness, inability to communicate—that stuff’s all the rage now,”
says motormouthed Bruno (Vittorio Gassman, on fire), behind the wheel
of his Lancia Aurelia. Dino Risi’s lightning-fast Italian comedy won’t
ever be confused for a mood piece. (Bruno’s verdict on Michelangelo
Antonioni’s L’Eclisse: “Had a nice nap.”) Knowingly situated outside the art house, Il Sorpasso still feels unmissable: a flourish of the zany commedia all’italiana that eventually fell out of style. Then again, you’ll recognize every road movie from Sideways to Borat and The Hangover
in this impulsive summer drive—a quest for fun. In their own obnoxious
way, Bruno and his unwitting student sidekick, Roberto (Jean-Louis
Trintignant, stunningly youthful), have come to exert a colossal
influence on modern-day movies. It’s a film that leavens the cruising
and carousing with a fair share of internal reflection. Yes, the frame
is filled with the era’s bikini-clad pulchritude, but the fuel here is
primo neurosis.
Joshua Rothkopf
Here (and above) is an extract.
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