IMDb RATING
6.7/10
3.1K
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The story of Italy, from the 80s to nowadays, told through the life of four friends, Giulio, Gemma, Paolo e Riccardo; during 40 years of loves, aspirations, success and failures.The story of Italy, from the 80s to nowadays, told through the life of four friends, Giulio, Gemma, Paolo e Riccardo; during 40 years of loves, aspirations, success and failures.The story of Italy, from the 80s to nowadays, told through the life of four friends, Giulio, Gemma, Paolo e Riccardo; during 40 years of loves, aspirations, success and failures.
- Awards
- 2 wins & 12 nominations total
Featured reviews
No, I'm not talking about the characters of the movie (though I can't say that I didn't fall for each one of them, I did, they took me on a ride on their own personal rollercoaster), I'm talking about the story that unfolded at the end of the movie. I was just sitting there absolutely taken by the mesmerising beauty of the cinematography when a small group walked in. They set down behind me and they were eating popcorn, chitt-chatting, laughing, making comments on the plot, just living it. These kinds of noises bother me most of the time, well this time I found it cute even. I didn't turn around.
The story is perfectly round, exquisite, I cried twice. First when the exact appropriate aria came along in the exact appropriate moment, when I thought that it can't go any higher emotionally and then just before leaving the movie theatre. Dazzled by this amazing, some two hours of length of magic a man called out to me. "Excuse me miss, can you take a photo of us?" "Sure", I said, than the lights went on and I saw this small gang of people, in their 50's and the gentleman said: "we're just like them, we're friends for almost 40 years now..". I hope the pictures turned out well, since I couldn't see clearly from the tears swelling up, but I do recall that I told them how beautiful they are.
Lately I ask myself a lot why is it exactly that I love art so much, maybe because it's a mirror to life.
The story is perfectly round, exquisite, I cried twice. First when the exact appropriate aria came along in the exact appropriate moment, when I thought that it can't go any higher emotionally and then just before leaving the movie theatre. Dazzled by this amazing, some two hours of length of magic a man called out to me. "Excuse me miss, can you take a photo of us?" "Sure", I said, than the lights went on and I saw this small gang of people, in their 50's and the gentleman said: "we're just like them, we're friends for almost 40 years now..". I hope the pictures turned out well, since I couldn't see clearly from the tears swelling up, but I do recall that I told them how beautiful they are.
Lately I ask myself a lot why is it exactly that I love art so much, maybe because it's a mirror to life.
I bet everyone in their 50's will find connection with at least one character in this lovely Italian film.
Gabriele Muccino's Gli Anni Più Belli aspires to be an epic tale of friendship, love, and personal growth over four decades, but it ultimately falters under the weight of its clichés, melodrama, and lack of emotional authenticity. While the film boasts a talented cast and a polished production, it fails to deliver the depth and resonance necessary to leave a lasting impact.
The film's narrative, chronicling the lives of four friends from youth to adulthood, is disappointingly predictable. It relies heavily on well-worn tropes-romantic triangles, betrayals, and career struggles-that feel recycled rather than fresh. Instead of delving into the nuances of evolving relationships or societal changes over time, the plot skims the surface, offering little more than a series of contrived dramatic moments.
Despite the efforts of an accomplished cast, the characters lack depth and complexity. Their arcs are telegraphed from the start, leaving little room for surprise or genuine growth. Relationships that should feel profound and transformative instead come across as shallow, and the frequent melodramatic outbursts only highlight the lack of subtlety in the script.
Muccino leans heavily on sentimentality, often pushing emotional scenes to the point of excess. Moments meant to be poignant or heartwarming instead feel overwrought and manipulative, undermining the sincerity of the film's message. This reliance on exaggerated emotions results in a tone that feels more soap opera than cinematic.
While the film spans decades, it does little to meaningfully engage with the political, social, or cultural shifts of the periods it portrays. The setting often feels like mere window dressing, with the characters' personal dramas taking center stage at the expense of a richer, more layered context. This lack of historical depth makes the film feel disconnected from the very eras it seeks to represent.
The musical score, while pleasant, is overly saccharine and heavy-handed, often telegraphing emotions rather than allowing the story to evoke them naturally. This further detracts from the film's ability to connect with the audience on a deeper level, making even its most emotional moments feel forced.
Gli Anni Più Belli aims to be a sweeping exploration of friendship and life's complexities but ends up feeling like a shallow, overly sentimental melodrama. Despite its star-studded cast and nostalgic ambitions, the film lacks the emotional honesty and narrative depth needed to make it truly memorable. For all its aspirations, it delivers little more than a glossy, predictable tale that's as forgettable as it is contrived.
The film's narrative, chronicling the lives of four friends from youth to adulthood, is disappointingly predictable. It relies heavily on well-worn tropes-romantic triangles, betrayals, and career struggles-that feel recycled rather than fresh. Instead of delving into the nuances of evolving relationships or societal changes over time, the plot skims the surface, offering little more than a series of contrived dramatic moments.
Despite the efforts of an accomplished cast, the characters lack depth and complexity. Their arcs are telegraphed from the start, leaving little room for surprise or genuine growth. Relationships that should feel profound and transformative instead come across as shallow, and the frequent melodramatic outbursts only highlight the lack of subtlety in the script.
Muccino leans heavily on sentimentality, often pushing emotional scenes to the point of excess. Moments meant to be poignant or heartwarming instead feel overwrought and manipulative, undermining the sincerity of the film's message. This reliance on exaggerated emotions results in a tone that feels more soap opera than cinematic.
While the film spans decades, it does little to meaningfully engage with the political, social, or cultural shifts of the periods it portrays. The setting often feels like mere window dressing, with the characters' personal dramas taking center stage at the expense of a richer, more layered context. This lack of historical depth makes the film feel disconnected from the very eras it seeks to represent.
The musical score, while pleasant, is overly saccharine and heavy-handed, often telegraphing emotions rather than allowing the story to evoke them naturally. This further detracts from the film's ability to connect with the audience on a deeper level, making even its most emotional moments feel forced.
Gli Anni Più Belli aims to be a sweeping exploration of friendship and life's complexities but ends up feeling like a shallow, overly sentimental melodrama. Despite its star-studded cast and nostalgic ambitions, the film lacks the emotional honesty and narrative depth needed to make it truly memorable. For all its aspirations, it delivers little more than a glossy, predictable tale that's as forgettable as it is contrived.
"Gli anni più belli" portraits 40 years in the life of four friends whose personal stories intersects recent history. On the steps of Lelouch "Bolero" and Scola's "C'eravamo tanto amati", which is explicitly quoted. Although the movie develops on the edge of mannerism and can be fairly accused of lacking subtlety in some of its topic scenes (as often with Muccino's work), its message is true and powerful: the best years are the ones we dare to live fully. Love is not the romantic fantasy that happens to you in Hollywood movies, it is not a commodity, but it is an ongoing practice of care, respect, forgiveness for others. Connection is the answer. All actors deliver great performances (Ramazzotti in particular). The movie is packed with quotations from Italian classics which will please movie lovers.
This is a film about our lives: sometimes hilarious, sometimes sad, but always real. In general, this is a film about forgiveness.
Did you know
- TriviaInspired by Ettore Scola's "C'eravamo tanto amati". Rights were secured by production before the film was released
- ConnectionsReferences La dolce vita (1960)
- SoundtracksGli anni più belli
Written and performed by Claudio Baglioni
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Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Official sites
- Languages
- Also known as
- The Best Years
- Filming locations
- Ronciglione, Viterbo, Lazio, Italy(wedding scenes)
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Budget
- €8,000,000 (estimated)
- Gross worldwide
- $7,358,771
- Runtime
- 2h 9m(129 min)
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 2.39 : 1
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