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Un film sur la vie de Silvio Berlusconi.Un film sur la vie de Silvio Berlusconi.Un film sur la vie de Silvio Berlusconi.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
- Récompenses
- 7 victoires et 22 nominations au total
Avis à la une
Loro 1, directed by Paolo Sorrentino, is an ambitious yet disjointed exploration of power, decadence, and the enigmatic figure of Silvio Berlusconi. The first installment of a two-part saga, the film focuses on the world surrounding Berlusconi rather than the man himself, attempting to weave a narrative of ambition, excess, and moral decline.
Toni Servillo delivers a performance that captures the magnetism and contradictions of Berlusconi, though his character remains more a symbol than a fully fleshed-out individual in this chapter. Riccardo Scamarcio brings energy as Sergio Morra, a character emblematic of opportunism and corruption. While the cast is strong, their roles often feel more like caricatures, serving the film's aesthetic rather than its narrative depth.
Sorrentino's signature visual flair is evident throughout, with opulent set pieces and stylized sequences that create a surreal, almost dreamlike atmosphere. The cinematography and production design are undeniably striking, but the emphasis on style often overshadows substance. The fragmented structure and lack of narrative cohesion make it difficult for the audience to engage fully with the story or its themes.
While Loro 1 attempts to critique power and the corrupting influence of excess, it often feels more like a voyeuristic spectacle than a profound commentary. The film's focus on surface-level decadence leaves little room for deeper emotional or psychological exploration.
Rating: 5/10 - A visually stunning but narratively hollow first act that struggles to find its footing.
Toni Servillo delivers a performance that captures the magnetism and contradictions of Berlusconi, though his character remains more a symbol than a fully fleshed-out individual in this chapter. Riccardo Scamarcio brings energy as Sergio Morra, a character emblematic of opportunism and corruption. While the cast is strong, their roles often feel more like caricatures, serving the film's aesthetic rather than its narrative depth.
Sorrentino's signature visual flair is evident throughout, with opulent set pieces and stylized sequences that create a surreal, almost dreamlike atmosphere. The cinematography and production design are undeniably striking, but the emphasis on style often overshadows substance. The fragmented structure and lack of narrative cohesion make it difficult for the audience to engage fully with the story or its themes.
While Loro 1 attempts to critique power and the corrupting influence of excess, it often feels more like a voyeuristic spectacle than a profound commentary. The film's focus on surface-level decadence leaves little room for deeper emotional or psychological exploration.
Rating: 5/10 - A visually stunning but narratively hollow first act that struggles to find its footing.
Sorrentino tells with a lot of irony both satirical and grotesque but also with respect and much esteem the life of Berlusconi, or rather a period of it, probably the most difficult, speculated, polemized and known of his life both private and political and therefore public.
Divided into two parts, the second comes out a few weeks away from the premiere, a film that has already discussed long before its release, at the beginning because of its extremely delicate as interesting topic and then precisely because of this questionable, although understandable, division into two films (certainly for reasons of film duration but also and above all for economic reasons, seeing that in this way it could earn almost double) that led the film to be excluded from the official selection for the films in competition at the next Cannes Film Festival, so it was a double edged sword at the end.
As for me, after all, I appreciated this choice, even stylistic if we want, because it has made the film, naturally shorter and therefore enjoyable, but also much lighter and with a very reduced risk of boring the public as the rhythm, however, very slow and calm of the whole film.
In fact, although it is a comedy with dramatic nuances very slow, especially in the development of the plot that in this first part seems almost hinted, I have never bored or disinterested, indeed thanks to the great talent of Sorrentino with his unique way of frame things and make everything extremely exaggerated and bizarre almost to the limit of realistic but at the same time credible because it is placed in a context that is also extreme; and thanks to an elegant editing that gives the right rhythm to the film and thanks to a modern soundtrack very accurate and atmospheric, the film manages to capture, for its entire duration, the attention of the viewer who remains totally involved.
Also thanks to the extraordinary interpretations in the first place that of Toni Servillo who continues role by role to surprise with his innate talent that made him perhaps the best Italian actor of these years, also excellent Bentivoglio and to say the least surprising Scamarcio.
Unfortunately, at the end it remains the feeling of having seen an half-film that has said little of what it means and never reaches a climax because it is impossible to by a cut too sharp and strong that makes it incomplete and therefore not very rewarding, Sorrentino it would have to sweeten better, make this division less felt.
In short, a little regret at the end remains but at the same time I can not wait to watch the second and last part to see what road will take this interesting and unique project.
This film shows the good and bad sides of the controversial Italian ex prime minister Silvio Berlusconi, and does it in a brilliant way.
The mediterranean sunshine, the luxury, the ladies, are the real setting of a real story well worth watching.
He might be a repugnant individual, but Berlusconi's life is also occasionally terrifying and sometimes sad. He is a dinosaur, unwilling to let go of the glamour and corruption that have become his legacy, a man pumped on viagra, desperate to cheat age and ultimately death - unwilling to accept there is a battle he cannot win. Whether it's possible to make a fascinating study of one so vacuous is moot. It's well made. Whether you care what happens to Berlusconi the 'man' is a whole other matter. But certainly this could be shown in schools around the country - as the study of a personality and life one should never aim to duplicate.
Why? Because you can quibble with this and with that. But this is a first class film and it must not go unseen.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesAn obstacle was that Sorrentino's usual Italian co-financier Medusa Film, which is controlled by Berlusconi, was not willing to participate in this production.
- Versions alternativesThe 145 minutes cut of the movie, simply called "Loro", was shown in italian cinemas on September 13, 2018. This new cut, which combines scenes from both "Loro 1" and "Loro 2", has been made in order to allow the movie to run for the 91st Academy Awards and to compete in international festivals as a standalone film.
- ConnexionsEdited into Silvio et les autres (2018)
- Bandes originalesA Chance to Cure
Written by Alec Ounsworth
Performed by Clap Your Hands Say Yeah
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- How long is Loro 1?Alimenté par Alexa
Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Sites officiels
- Langue
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- Loro 1
- Lieux de tournage
- Sociétés de production
- Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
Box-office
- Montant brut mondial
- 6 521 238 $US
- Durée1 heure 44 minutes
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 2.35 : 1
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By what name was Silvio et les autres 1 (2018) officially released in India in English?
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