CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
7.1/10
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TU CALIFICACIÓN
Dos mujeres bastante diferentes escapan de una institución mental para ver la Toscana en un coche robado y conocerse.Dos mujeres bastante diferentes escapan de una institución mental para ver la Toscana en un coche robado y conocerse.Dos mujeres bastante diferentes escapan de una institución mental para ver la Toscana en un coche robado y conocerse.
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Elenco
- Premios
- 30 premios ganados y 30 nominaciones en total
Luisanna Pandolfi
- Luisanna, la caposala
- (as Luisanna Messeri)
Mimma Pirré
- Suor Diletta
- (as Mimma Pirrè)
Opiniones destacadas
Whenever I review a foreign language film, I fully realize many people won't bother watching the picture because it's not in English. This is a shame, as many of the better films I have seen have been in a variety of languages and with "Like Crazy", you'd be missing a very good movie.
The story begins in a psychiatric institution in Italy. Beatrice (Valeria Bruni Tedeschi) is a patient, though she won't admit this to anyone even herself. In her distorted mind, she is a countess and the old mansion used as a hospital was donated by her to treat these unfortunate people! So, while at times Beatrice looks and seems very normal, she is severely deluded and self-absorbed. When a new resident arrives, Beatrice decides to make Donatella (Micaela Ramazzotti) her own personal project. After all, she is a rich, benevolent lady and helping the unfortunates is her life! So how, exactly, does she 'help'? Yep she orchestrates an escape and soon the oddly matched pair are out on a joy ride complete with stolen car.
At this point in the movie, Paolo Virzi (who wrote and directed the picture) could have chosen to make the film a kooky comedy, like "Crazy People" or "The Couch Trip" which is what you might expect with a Hollywood film. Fortunately, "Like Crazy" does not go there but manages to be rather poignant as well as realistic. You learn more about Beatrice and Donatella and their lives outside the institution but there are no magic solutions to their problems. After all, they are indeed very ill and mental illness isn't particularly funny and is often quite tragic. Now this is not to say that ultimately this is a depressing or tragic film and it manages to say quite a bit while still being believable and compelling.
The story begins in a psychiatric institution in Italy. Beatrice (Valeria Bruni Tedeschi) is a patient, though she won't admit this to anyone even herself. In her distorted mind, she is a countess and the old mansion used as a hospital was donated by her to treat these unfortunate people! So, while at times Beatrice looks and seems very normal, she is severely deluded and self-absorbed. When a new resident arrives, Beatrice decides to make Donatella (Micaela Ramazzotti) her own personal project. After all, she is a rich, benevolent lady and helping the unfortunates is her life! So how, exactly, does she 'help'? Yep she orchestrates an escape and soon the oddly matched pair are out on a joy ride complete with stolen car.
At this point in the movie, Paolo Virzi (who wrote and directed the picture) could have chosen to make the film a kooky comedy, like "Crazy People" or "The Couch Trip" which is what you might expect with a Hollywood film. Fortunately, "Like Crazy" does not go there but manages to be rather poignant as well as realistic. You learn more about Beatrice and Donatella and their lives outside the institution but there are no magic solutions to their problems. After all, they are indeed very ill and mental illness isn't particularly funny and is often quite tragic. Now this is not to say that ultimately this is a depressing or tragic film and it manages to say quite a bit while still being believable and compelling.
To define madness starts by defining normalcy. 'La pazza gioia' (the English title is 'Like Crazy'), the film written and directed by Paolo Virzì in 2016 has as main heroines two women hospitalized in a sanatorium for psychiatric diseases. In general, films of this kind are characterized by an oppressive and depressing atmosphere, same as life in this kind of institutions is known to be. Not 'La pazza gioia'. To start with, the film present a candid and sympathetic point of view towards what is happening in the villa in Tuscany where the heroines are hospitalized. The story has rhythm and humor. As we get to know the two women, we begin to understand the motivations of their actions, from escaping from the closed (or semi-closed) premises they are constrained to the past with the actions that brought them into the situation of being psychiatric patients. Up to a point, the female 'road movie' formula with two women running away from their own destiny quite faithfully respects the formula in the best known classic original 'Thelma & Louise', with the characters dominating the film here as well, largely due to outstanding acting. The result is original and exciting.
At first glance, the two women are very different from each other. Beatrice Morandini (Valeria Bruni Tedeschi) assumes aristocratic manners and creates an imaginary world around her own person, a world in which she is the rich and the dominant one. Donatella Morelli (Micaela Ramazzotti) is closed in herself, she always seems in danger of self-harming, obviously hiding tremendous trauma. One is chic and neat even when her dresses fall badly, the other neglects herself. One is blonde, the other is brunette. The institution in which they are hospitalized seems liberal, tolerant, trying to help. Their running away is not the result of despair but rather the pursuit of a promordial instinct of the desire for freedom. However, the outside world turns out to be much more cruel than the one in the constrained space from which they had fled. Confronting the reality and the personal histories of each of them, which are gradually revealed to us, is more traumatic than the treatment inside. It would be tragic if everything wasn't approached in a comic register which is, well ... crazy. Undoubtedly, this is the right word.
The roles of lunatics often provide opportunities for remarkable acting performances, but it seems to me that in this film the two actresses have achieved something extraordinary. These are two roles of this kind, but the two actresses not only do not eclipse each other, but complement each other wonderfully in a relationship in which their traumas and despairs come together and generate emotion without falling into pathos or cheap melodrama. However, the film also features numerous scenes in which the comic of situations and characters offers opportunities for healthy laughter. The sunny and picturesque landscape of Tuscany that we know from so many films with touristic aromas provides the background of a corrupt and ruthless world, where the only chance and last refuge of the heroines is the psychiatric institution from which they fled. Paolo Virzì manages with 'La pazza gioia' a remarkable performance - a 'good feeling' movie about madness and despair.
At first glance, the two women are very different from each other. Beatrice Morandini (Valeria Bruni Tedeschi) assumes aristocratic manners and creates an imaginary world around her own person, a world in which she is the rich and the dominant one. Donatella Morelli (Micaela Ramazzotti) is closed in herself, she always seems in danger of self-harming, obviously hiding tremendous trauma. One is chic and neat even when her dresses fall badly, the other neglects herself. One is blonde, the other is brunette. The institution in which they are hospitalized seems liberal, tolerant, trying to help. Their running away is not the result of despair but rather the pursuit of a promordial instinct of the desire for freedom. However, the outside world turns out to be much more cruel than the one in the constrained space from which they had fled. Confronting the reality and the personal histories of each of them, which are gradually revealed to us, is more traumatic than the treatment inside. It would be tragic if everything wasn't approached in a comic register which is, well ... crazy. Undoubtedly, this is the right word.
The roles of lunatics often provide opportunities for remarkable acting performances, but it seems to me that in this film the two actresses have achieved something extraordinary. These are two roles of this kind, but the two actresses not only do not eclipse each other, but complement each other wonderfully in a relationship in which their traumas and despairs come together and generate emotion without falling into pathos or cheap melodrama. However, the film also features numerous scenes in which the comic of situations and characters offers opportunities for healthy laughter. The sunny and picturesque landscape of Tuscany that we know from so many films with touristic aromas provides the background of a corrupt and ruthless world, where the only chance and last refuge of the heroines is the psychiatric institution from which they fled. Paolo Virzì manages with 'La pazza gioia' a remarkable performance - a 'good feeling' movie about madness and despair.
"A joyful madness" would have been a better translation for the international market.
Such a surprisingly good film.
Well, not entirely surprising because Paolo Virzì, from Tuscany, currently one of Italy's best directors, his movies always centred around interesting, well defined characters, masterfully mixing comedy and drama, in this case with heart breaking results.
It helps that this screenplay has been written together with talented screenwriter and director Francesca Archibugi who, amongst other things, in 1990 directed Italian movie icon Marcello Mastroianni in the drama "Verso sera" (Towards Evening). Her contribution to this film must be acknowledged.
The two leading actresses are excellent.
Micaela Ramazzotti as the desperate mother who, amongst all sort of troubles, tries to get back in contact with her only son.
Even better is Valeria Bruni Tedeschi, who is absolutely amazing as Donatella, the rich countess who struggles to cope with her mental disorders but who takes the younger Beatrice under her wing. When they run away from the psychiatric facility they are placed in by the authorities (perfectly depicted in typical human but caothic way) their foolish adventure begin.
Such an intense, moving, touching film.
Highly recommended.
One of my top ten movies of all time is One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest. It still holds up 48 years after its' release. Crazy Life is sort of a step child of Milos Forman's masterpiece. While not as good as Jack Nicholson's best film, it is one of my favorite foreign films of the last ten years. Donatella and Beatrice are a couple of emotionally unstable women who meet at a mental hospital. They click on a shared level of being outcasts from normal society. The misfits team up for a really wild adventure. The actresses are tremendous, with a screen chemistry as good as I have ever seen. The script is both sad and funny, with a completely unpredictable story which kept me guessing from beginning to end. One slight drawback is the rapid fire dialogue here. If you do not speak Italian; and I don't, be prepared to speed read for two hours. Even with that, I highly recommend Crazy Life.
What a poor, non-requested and superficial rating from @dierregi; although the best thing about this platform is that everyone can express themselves, is so sad to read that. I advice to take @dierregi's review as an example : approach yourself to this movie in the opposite way!!! This is something about depression, loneliness, the fear of being unable to be back to a "normal life", the lack of consciousness about being unstable but also the great power of realizing it (see one of the last scene when Donatella confesses Beatrice, and herself too, what happened). This is also something about forgiveness, about giving a second chance and being mentally opened and ready to face reality, even if it's cruel, terrible, frightful. This is about a very difficult social phenomenon as well as a great lesson of embracing and not refusing.
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaFrancesca Turrini's debut.
- ErroresThe camera crane is reflected on the blue van as it enters the institution.
- Bandas sonorasSenza fine
Written and Performed by Gino Paoli
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- How long is Like Crazy?Con tecnología de Alexa
Detalles
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- Países de origen
- Sitios oficiales
- Idiomas
- También se conoce como
- Like Crazy
- Locaciones de filmación
- Livorno, Tuscany, Italia(train station)
- Productoras
- Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro
Taquilla
- Presupuesto
- EUR 15,000,000 (estimado)
- Total en EE. UU. y Canadá
- USD 107,362
- Fin de semana de estreno en EE. UU. y Canadá
- USD 5,799
- 7 may 2017
- Total a nivel mundial
- USD 9,046,658
- Tiempo de ejecución
- 1h 56min(116 min)
- Color
- Relación de aspecto
- 2.35 : 1
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