“I don’t think I’m
anti-fascist,” the well-dressed man remarks. “If anything, fascism is anti-me.”
Those simple words, revealing a world of sociopolitical significance, epitomize
what makes the Italian drama A Special
Day so resonant. By viewing cataclysmic historical events through the prism
of one very specific relationship, the picture brings the past to vivid life
while also conveying timeless truths about subjects ranging from compassion to
tyranny. A Special Day is also
noteworthy as one of the best collaborations between classic Italian stars
Sophia Loren and Marcello Mastroianni. Whereas many of their celebrated
onscreen pairings are romantic comedies, A
Special Day uses their easygoing chemistry in a more imaginative way, which
nets powerful results.
Set in 1938, the movie takes place in Rome on the day Adolf Hitler made a state visit to confer with Italy’s fascistic strongman, Benito Mussolini. The action revolves around a huge apartment building with a massive inner courtyard. In the morning, bedraggled housewife Antonietta (Loren) rouses her large family. Her husband, Emanule (John Vernon), is a staunch Mussolini supporter, so he plans to take all their kids to a rally celebrating Hitler’s visit. Given her backbreaking obligations of cleaning and cooking for the big family, Antonietta stays home. Once the apartment building is nearly empty, she happens into a conversation with a neighbor from across the courtyard, Gabriele (Mastroianni). We discover things about Gabriele gradually, learning that he’s a radio announcer recently fired from his position for mysterious reasons, and that just before he encountered Antonietta, he was close to attempting suicide.
Set in 1938, the movie takes place in Rome on the day Adolf Hitler made a state visit to confer with Italy’s fascistic strongman, Benito Mussolini. The action revolves around a huge apartment building with a massive inner courtyard. In the morning, bedraggled housewife Antonietta (Loren) rouses her large family. Her husband, Emanule (John Vernon), is a staunch Mussolini supporter, so he plans to take all their kids to a rally celebrating Hitler’s visit. Given her backbreaking obligations of cleaning and cooking for the big family, Antonietta stays home. Once the apartment building is nearly empty, she happens into a conversation with a neighbor from across the courtyard, Gabriele (Mastroianni). We discover things about Gabriele gradually, learning that he’s a radio announcer recently fired from his position for mysterious reasons, and that just before he encountered Antonietta, he was close to attempting suicide.
Giving away the other revelations about his character would diminish the
experience of watching A Special Day,
so broad strokes must suffice—over the course of a long day comprising
conversations, flirtations, and intimacies, Antonietta discovers through her
new friend a world of emotion and ideas and nonconformity that rocks her
existence. By the end of the day, she’s almost a completely different person
than the woman who first met Gabriele. And because the things we learn about
Gabriele speak directly to the dangers of living under a totalitarian regime,
he changes, too, if only in the sense of emerging from shadows by sharing
provocative secrets with a friend.
Directed by the acclaimed Ettore Scola, A Special Day achieves that rare trick
in movies, presenting characters who are so fully realized they seem like real
people; accordingly, even the most fanciful turns in the movie’s central
relationship have credibility and depth. At different times, we experience
Antonietta’s fear, loneliness, pride, and warmth, just as we experience
Gabriele’s dignity, humor, joy, and sadness. Loren downplays her signature
glamour, hewing closer to the earth-mother aspect of her screen persona, while
Mastroianni effectively tweaks his urbane image. (Modern viewers may flinch at
some aspects of the characterizations, but the portrayals fit the period during
which the story takes place.) Also worth noting is the picture’s unique visual
style. Scola and cinematographer Pasqualina de Santis employed a desaturated
color scheme, putting the look of A
Special Day somewhere between black-and-white and color, and while the look
is jarring at first, it makes sense after a while; this is a story that exists
between the margins of history, so it warrants an offbeat presentation.
Given
the way the horrors of World War II loom just outside the narrative, there’s
something fundamentally grim about A
Special Day. Surely, not every character we meet is destined to survive the
next few years. Yet within the darkness, A
Special Day provides much that is bright and uplifting, conveying how real
human connection is the only way to bridge divides. Many well-deserved
accolades came the film’s way, including two Oscar nominations (for Best
Foreign Film and for Mastroianni as Best Actor), as well as a Golden Globe for
Best Foreign Film.
A Special Day: RIGHT ON
1 comment:
One of my favorite films of all time. Loren and Mastroianni both playing against their glamorous image. Quiet and gently observed, a beautiful film.
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