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7.3/10
4.3K
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Forced to leave his family in Sicily, Mimí finds a job in a factory in Turin, where he gets involved in an extramarital affair.Forced to leave his family in Sicily, Mimí finds a job in a factory in Turin, where he gets involved in an extramarital affair.Forced to leave his family in Sicily, Mimí finds a job in a factory in Turin, where he gets involved in an extramarital affair.
- Awards
- 8 wins & 1 nomination total
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As a woman director in the early seventies, in a series of films Lina Wertmuller took on the issues related to gender and sexual revolutions, feminism and entrenched politics and economics. This work is one of them.
As is true of this part of her oeuvre, the film works on many levels. The director is never satisfied with merely going after the easy laughs. Any viewer looking for social commentary, both in the main story-telling and the subtext will come away satisfied.
This is a very "Italian" and "European" movie, in the sense that it captures the spirit of the times: both of the Italian North/South cultural wars/divide and of a particular European concern with the strength of "left" political and artistic movements and explorations of alternative, non-materialistic life-styles.
All of this is shown as experienced by Mimi, a southern Italian everyman, buffeted by fate. In this role, Giancarlo Giannini once again shows his mastery of the acting craft. As is true for all foreign films, my advice is that if you don't know the language of the original, always view the subtitled version, so as not to miss the subtleties of the individual performances.
I won't give away any of the plot. Just want to note that (as an architect, not a formally- trained film-maker) I can still appreciate the choices made by the director and cinematographer in telling the story. This is true for a thousand details. In the case of this film, the inspired choice of the camera lens ("fish-eye") for the scene between Giannini and Elena Fiore toward the end of the movie, adds immeasurably to its effectiveness. See for yourself and ROTFL.
As is true of this part of her oeuvre, the film works on many levels. The director is never satisfied with merely going after the easy laughs. Any viewer looking for social commentary, both in the main story-telling and the subtext will come away satisfied.
This is a very "Italian" and "European" movie, in the sense that it captures the spirit of the times: both of the Italian North/South cultural wars/divide and of a particular European concern with the strength of "left" political and artistic movements and explorations of alternative, non-materialistic life-styles.
All of this is shown as experienced by Mimi, a southern Italian everyman, buffeted by fate. In this role, Giancarlo Giannini once again shows his mastery of the acting craft. As is true for all foreign films, my advice is that if you don't know the language of the original, always view the subtitled version, so as not to miss the subtleties of the individual performances.
I won't give away any of the plot. Just want to note that (as an architect, not a formally- trained film-maker) I can still appreciate the choices made by the director and cinematographer in telling the story. This is true for a thousand details. In the case of this film, the inspired choice of the camera lens ("fish-eye") for the scene between Giannini and Elena Fiore toward the end of the movie, adds immeasurably to its effectiveness. See for yourself and ROTFL.
Lina Wertmüller's Mimì metallurgico ferito nell'onore (The Seduction of Mimi) is a biting political satire wrapped in a tragicomedy about masculinity, honor, class struggle, and hypocrisy in 1970s Italy.
The story follows Mimì (Giancarlo Giannini), a Sicilian laborer whose refusal to vote for the Mafia-backed candidate costs him his job. Fleeing to Turin, he finds work and becomes involved in union politics - and in a passionate affair with a fiery leftist woman. But when personal betrayal and political disillusionment intertwine, Mimì's ideals unravel, exposing the contradictions of both the patriarchal system and his own moral compass.
Giannini gives a brilliant, charismatic performance as a man torn between traditional values and modern ideologies, love and ego, revolution and self-interest. Mariangela Melato also shines with her fearless and sharp presence. Wertmüller's direction is vibrant, satirical, and deeply human - she exposes the ridiculousness of macho pride and political opportunism with humor and sadness.
The story follows Mimì (Giancarlo Giannini), a Sicilian laborer whose refusal to vote for the Mafia-backed candidate costs him his job. Fleeing to Turin, he finds work and becomes involved in union politics - and in a passionate affair with a fiery leftist woman. But when personal betrayal and political disillusionment intertwine, Mimì's ideals unravel, exposing the contradictions of both the patriarchal system and his own moral compass.
Giannini gives a brilliant, charismatic performance as a man torn between traditional values and modern ideologies, love and ego, revolution and self-interest. Mariangela Melato also shines with her fearless and sharp presence. Wertmüller's direction is vibrant, satirical, and deeply human - she exposes the ridiculousness of macho pride and political opportunism with humor and sadness.
Giancarlo Giannini plays a simple Southern Italian worker who unwisely thinks his local elections aren't 100% rigged by the local mob. Assuming it's a truly secret ballot, he disobeys the mobs instructions and votes for a local Communist instead. Well, he nearly gets himself killed in the meantime and is forced to run to Turin in the north. There, quite by accident, he runs afoul of the mob AGAIN and is nearly killed. In fact, this happens a lot in the film and the generally apolitical Giannini tries to play BOTH sides to his own benefit. In addition, he begins sleeping with several different women--once again hoping he can somehow balance it all and keep from getting killed. Despite all the many, many dangers, Giannini is somehow a survivor and the film has many cute little twists and turns.
I can tell that this satire was meant to be very funny, but I just didn't find myself laughing. While it is a good film, it's certainly not among the more memorable Italian films I have ever seen. It's slightly better than a time-passer, but that's really about all. I think the biggest reason for this isn't due to the humor but more to the fact that Giannini's character is a real selfish jerk. Had he been more sympathetic, I really think the film would have been more memorable. However, considering this film won many awards and was pretty well respected in its day, it is quite possible I am just an idiot. See it for yourself, but just be surprised if you, too, don't find the film all that interesting--or you think I am a lousy reviewer!
I can tell that this satire was meant to be very funny, but I just didn't find myself laughing. While it is a good film, it's certainly not among the more memorable Italian films I have ever seen. It's slightly better than a time-passer, but that's really about all. I think the biggest reason for this isn't due to the humor but more to the fact that Giannini's character is a real selfish jerk. Had he been more sympathetic, I really think the film would have been more memorable. However, considering this film won many awards and was pretty well respected in its day, it is quite possible I am just an idiot. See it for yourself, but just be surprised if you, too, don't find the film all that interesting--or you think I am a lousy reviewer!
As always, Giannini and Melato are the shining stellas in yet another of the Wertmueller's movies. The two of them alone make this film worth seeing (though this time it's more Giannini since Melato's role is not as demanding as in some later films). However, compared to some other realizations by the same director-two-actors trio, this film does not strike as equally capturing and consistent in its message. Heavily leaning against social issues (remember "Swept Away"?), but bringing to the front the romance/fidelity/honor plot, it apparently fails to round up either of them. Not even the diversion into the familiar Italian-honor humor towards the end of the film is able to pull out the hanging feeling. Those who love the genre will still not regret spending their time with this movie.
Mimi is not a woman; it is the nickname of the main character. If there is a funnier actor than Giancarlo Giannini in the last 50 years, I have not seen one. He is ten times funnier and more believable than Roberto Benigni of Life is Beautiful, the highly overrated film that won Benigni best actor and Best Foreign Film in 1998. There are a half dozen Giannini films that are better, and this is one of them. Mariangela Melato is supurb is this film and every film she was ever in with Gianinni. The plot is silly; but it doesnt matter; its the MOVIE that counts and makes you laugh your ass off. Anyone who does not laugh at the fat lady sequence is definitely disturbed. Enjoy this and all the Wertmueller satires.
Did you know
- TriviaElena Fiore's butt in the famous betrayal scene is not hers but that of a stand-in. Wertmuller herself declared this in one of her memoirs: the actress had a butt that was too small.
- ConnectionsEdited into Lo schermo a tre punte (1995)
- SoundtracksLa Cumparsita
Music by Sunny Skylar
- How long is The Seduction of Mimi?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- The Seduction of Mimi
- Filming locations
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Gross US & Canada
- $466,215
- Runtime
- 2h 1m(121 min)
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.85 : 1
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