Corpo celeste
- 2011
- Tous publics
- 1h 39m
IMDb RATING
6.8/10
2.3K
YOUR RATING
Thirteen year-old Marta has recently moved back to southern Italy with her mother and older sister and struggles to find her place, restlessly testing the boundaries of an unfamiliar city an... Read allThirteen year-old Marta has recently moved back to southern Italy with her mother and older sister and struggles to find her place, restlessly testing the boundaries of an unfamiliar city and the catechism of the Catholic church.Thirteen year-old Marta has recently moved back to southern Italy with her mother and older sister and struggles to find her place, restlessly testing the boundaries of an unfamiliar city and the catechism of the Catholic church.
- Director
- Writer
- Stars
- Awards
- 10 wins & 10 nominations total
Yile Yara Vianello
- Marta Ventura
- (as Yle Vianello)
Giovanni Federico
- Nino
- (as Gianni Federico)
Monia Alfieri
- Donatella
- (as Monica Alfieri)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
Having been brought up a Catholic, this evoked many familiar feelings in me and will probably resonate for quite some time.
Peopled with some very well-observed supporting characters - such as the Sunday School teacher, the Priest, and the visiting cardinal's team, it's clear how mysoginistic the whole structure remains, even as they struggle to maintain relevance in the modern world.
The girl at the centre of all this handles her role very well, I think, balancing her rebelliousness with her understandable feelings of dislocation in a new country with new surroundings and cultural (and religious) expectations, plus puberty. One feels that she has the inner strength to survive, despite circumstances so, despite being depressed that things remain like this, there is hope.
Peopled with some very well-observed supporting characters - such as the Sunday School teacher, the Priest, and the visiting cardinal's team, it's clear how mysoginistic the whole structure remains, even as they struggle to maintain relevance in the modern world.
The girl at the centre of all this handles her role very well, I think, balancing her rebelliousness with her understandable feelings of dislocation in a new country with new surroundings and cultural (and religious) expectations, plus puberty. One feels that she has the inner strength to survive, despite circumstances so, despite being depressed that things remain like this, there is hope.
I'm grateful to finally find a film that is sensitive, subtle, original in its view of people and has something to say (about faith and the church, society and outsiders.) It's Italian, but only two characters act like the Italian angry prototype, and only briefly. The acting is extraordinary. Yle Vianello, who plays the thirteen years old girl, seems as authentic as it gets. It is her story-after ten years in Switzerland, she returns to a small town in Italy with her single mother and 18-year-old sister. Right away she's called to participate in the endless studies for the communion at church. She tries to fit in, but is swept by other types of emotional and spiritual searches.
Marta(Yil Vianello) is a twelve-year-old girl preparing for her Confirmation at a church in Calabria. The waif-like kid has some serious questions about all that she is being taught to believe for her official entry into the Holy Apostolic Church.
The parish priest is seen gathering signatures in support of a local candidate for political office. So much for separation of church and state. He also has aspirations for a higher position within the Roman Church.
Meanwhile, the local children are seen at practice sessions for their special day. At sixty-five, I have little memory of my own Confirmation in the 1960s.
Vianello is a gem in the lead and pretty much carries this low-key but endearing slice of modern day Italian life.
The parish priest is seen gathering signatures in support of a local candidate for political office. So much for separation of church and state. He also has aspirations for a higher position within the Roman Church.
Meanwhile, the local children are seen at practice sessions for their special day. At sixty-five, I have little memory of my own Confirmation in the 1960s.
Vianello is a gem in the lead and pretty much carries this low-key but endearing slice of modern day Italian life.
After a slow start, I really enjoyed this one. Yle Vianello is wonderful as Marta, the earnest young girl about to go through the rite of confirmation in the Catholic Church. In a quiet way and without resorting to something like a story of priestly abuse, director Alice Rohrwacher gives us a powerful critique. She shows church leaders to be almost hopelessly far from Christ's precepts, and more interested in indoctrinating the young (in some cases with untranslated and unexplained dogma) and their own positions within the hierarchy than in real teaching. The drive from Reggio Calabria to the abandoned hill town to tussle over a crucifix seems like a perfect metaphor. I felt for Marta's coming-of-age alienation from her changing body, her mean older sister, and her crisis of faith. The subplot of the priest's assistant, a woman who finds out just how little she means in the patriarchy of the church, is also strong.
I finally caught up with Alice Rohrwacher's filmography and watched her debut feature, «Corpo celeste», made nine years ago and for which she won several awards as new director and for best first film. Since then, we have seen a talented filmmaker who is maturing with outstanding works, as «Le meraviglie»" (story of a family that owns an apiary) and «Lazzaro felice» (portrait of an immensely good-natured young man).
This is a subtle drama about growing up and enlightenment, about Marta (Yile Yara Vianello), a beautiful and sensitive girl who becomes a nubile adolescent, during the summer when she is going to receive the sacrament of confirmation in the Catholic church. Marta has just arrived from Switzerland to Reggio di Calabria, an Italian city controlled by the mafia, and she does not find it easy to fit into a small-town congregation of sanctimonious men and women with apocalyptic hearts, a bit silly peers and Don Mario, the parish priest who leads a double life: it is election time and he is seeking a promotion in the ecclesiastical hierarchy. To round things up, add Santa, his housekeeper and Sunday school teacher, who secretly loves him; and, on the personal side, Marta's family picture, made up of a single mother and three daughters, which Rohrwacher portrays as a vivid, volatile and affectionate nest.
Spaces and environments are always special in Rohrwacher's films and, besides her documentaries, here is a seed: we have seen many rugged European villages, carved out of mountains, between ascending curves, with rustic houses crowded one on top of the other, but the brief scenes in which the director's camera enters a house and a church in ruins, it is enough to reveal the desolation of the place; and, in the end, the film opens up (not closes, for it is not a "denouement", the film does not "untie plot knots", but fluently runs through emotions, situations and demonstrations) when Marta unexpectedly arrives to the sea, which, in the characters' fantasies, is alluded as a place of escape and repose.
A very good film, «Corpo celeste» is a preview of Alice Rohrwacher's next two major works, which I hope is enjoyed by those persons who love good cinema from all over the world.
This is a subtle drama about growing up and enlightenment, about Marta (Yile Yara Vianello), a beautiful and sensitive girl who becomes a nubile adolescent, during the summer when she is going to receive the sacrament of confirmation in the Catholic church. Marta has just arrived from Switzerland to Reggio di Calabria, an Italian city controlled by the mafia, and she does not find it easy to fit into a small-town congregation of sanctimonious men and women with apocalyptic hearts, a bit silly peers and Don Mario, the parish priest who leads a double life: it is election time and he is seeking a promotion in the ecclesiastical hierarchy. To round things up, add Santa, his housekeeper and Sunday school teacher, who secretly loves him; and, on the personal side, Marta's family picture, made up of a single mother and three daughters, which Rohrwacher portrays as a vivid, volatile and affectionate nest.
Spaces and environments are always special in Rohrwacher's films and, besides her documentaries, here is a seed: we have seen many rugged European villages, carved out of mountains, between ascending curves, with rustic houses crowded one on top of the other, but the brief scenes in which the director's camera enters a house and a church in ruins, it is enough to reveal the desolation of the place; and, in the end, the film opens up (not closes, for it is not a "denouement", the film does not "untie plot knots", but fluently runs through emotions, situations and demonstrations) when Marta unexpectedly arrives to the sea, which, in the characters' fantasies, is alluded as a place of escape and repose.
A very good film, «Corpo celeste» is a preview of Alice Rohrwacher's next two major works, which I hope is enjoyed by those persons who love good cinema from all over the world.
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Details
- Release date
- Countries of origin
- Official sites
- Language
- Also known as
- Corpo Celeste
- Filming locations
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Gross US & Canada
- $8,919
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $2,263
- Jun 10, 2012
- Gross worldwide
- $347,600
- Runtime1 hour 39 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.85 : 1
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