The hands of 69-year-old director Luchino Visconti are shown turning the pages of the 1892 Gabriele D'Annunzio novel upon which this, Visconti's final film, is based.
During the pandemic lockdown of 2020, between panic attacks and bouts of binge-eating, I also managed to find time to watch a great many wonderful movies. A year-long, borderless flow from night to day provided the perfect conditions for indulging my passion for the long-form motion pictures: aka movies with lengthy running times. With no worries about having to get up early the next day (indeed, at the height of lockdown, “next day” was more an abstract concept than a reality), I breezed through Bergman’s 5hr 26min Fanny & Alexander; aced Scorsese’s 3hr 30min The Irishman, and Kubrick’s 3hr 7min Barry Lyndon felt like it was over before I’d even settled into my chair.
Of particular interest and appeal to me during this period were the films of Luchino Visconti. And not simply because he’s a director whose visually sumptuous epics are as heedless of time constraints as I suddenly found myself to be. No, given the almost surreal socio-political climate of America in 2020, I drew ceaseless comfort and solace from Visconti's flagrant surrender to beauty and staunch respect for intelligence. But chiefly I reveled in the vehement strain of anti-Fascism that underscore the narratives of the deeply poetic and majestic films made by the late Italian director. His films--each a repudiation of moral ugliness and spiritual ignorance--were like an anchor to a sane and humane world that was slipping away.
I revisited old favorites: Death in Venice, Ludwig, The Damned, and Conversation Piece. And I also discovered a treasure trove of heretofore unseen-by-me masterworks that further solidified in my mind the conviction that Visconti is unsurpassed as cinema's painterly pundit of aristocratic foibles. A peerless chronicler of corrupted ideals and self-immolating passions. Each newly discovered (and gloriously restored) film felt richer than the last: Ossessione, Rocco & His Brothers, Senso, & The Leopard --his final film, the tragic L’Innocente, catching me totally off guard by being far more poetically moving than I'd expected.
Giancarlo Giannini as Tullio Hermil |
Jennifer O'Neill as Countess Teresa Raffo |
Laura Antonelli as Giuliana Hermil |
Marc Porel as Filippo d'Arborio |
Italian aristocrat Tullio Hermil (Giannini) is the self-styled embodiment of Nietzsche’s Higher Man. A handsome, athletic gentleman of wealth, intelligence, and taste who, by nature of his philosophical beliefs and self-discerned status as a superior being, answers to no man, no social mores, and certainly no god. An avowed atheist, Tulio professes to be a self-regulating free man and free-thinker. One whose idleness of occupation (coupled with a self-serving disdain for convention) affords the unimpeded indulgence of all manner of hedonistic pursuits and sensual gratifications...all outside of the confines of his marriage.
Given his libertine worldview, Tullio’s marriage to the docile and religiously devout Giuliana (Antonelli) suggests, at first glance, a contradiction. That is, until one is reminded that all narcissists require a mirror. And in the eyes of Giuliana—who remains somewhat masochistically devoted to him in the face of countless infidelities and humiliations—Tullio sees the confirmation of his superior image of himself. Ascribing nobility to Guiliana’s martyred suffering, Tullio reasons that if a woman so good and pure of heart can love a man who gives so little and treats her so shabbily, then that man must be a great man, indeed.
But as is so often the case with individuals harboring a God complex (or Yeezus complex, for that matter); Tullio’s professed self-possession is simply self-absorption left to flourish in the absence of either introspection or self-awareness. And it’s Tullio’s arrogant lack of self-awareness that proves to be the source of his unexpected anguish when, after abandoning Giuliana for the beautiful Teresa Raffo (O’Neill)—a widowed countess arguably as independent-minded as Tullio, but lacking his gift for self-deception—he begins to suspect his wife of having fallen in love with Filippo d’Arborio, a dashing author (Porel) renowned for his compassionate nature.
Merely the thought of his wife’s infidelity is enough to throw Tullio into an existential tailspin that has him grappling not only with the untenable prospect of her choosing to exercise the same sexual agency he affords himself, but the dreaded notion that he, a man superior, should find himself falling prey to the lowborn sensations of jealousy, envy, and rivalry. Most confounding of all (more so for Tullio than the viewer), his suspicions have the effect of rekindling his passion and reawakening his love for his wife.
But is love something Tullio is capable of?
Tullio's high opinion of himself induces the desire to vanquish all rivals |
Luchino Visconti used the traditional family saga to chronicle the dissolution of Italian aristocracy in The Leopard (1963). With L’Innocente, the classic romantic triangle scaffolds a critique of the hypocrisy and amorality of bourgeois society while delivering a bitter requiem to Italian patriarchy (perhaps even Visconti's own). The film is set in a world rigid in its governance and regulation of women's sexuality and bodies, but Visconti's vision—one less nihilistic than D'Annunzio's morally myopic and proto-fascist source novel I was inspired to read after watching L'Innocente...twice—questions the value of a life lived in pursuit of sensual experience if starved of a spiritual existence.
"I don't have a hell to fear or a heaven to hope for." |
WHAT I LOVE ABOUT THIS FILM
Given my cinematic attraction to high-style debauchery, grand passions, male nudity, and directors of whose visual style the term “operatic dimensions” is oft applied, I’ve a natural affinity for the films of Luchino Visconti. A born aesthete, Visconti’s eye finds rapturous beauty even in his stark neorealist melodramas.
Inaccessibility and maturity of content played a part in my not seeing any of his films until college (Death in Venice being the 1st unless you count Visconti’s contribution to the 1962 anthology film Boccaccio ’70 which popped up often on late-late night TV). But my heel-dragging paid off in that I was introduced to the bulk of Visconti’s masterworks in pristine condition; when released on DVD/Blu-ray digitally enhanced, restored to their original lengths, and subtitled, not English-dubbed.
Making films that were political, sensual, and courageously Queer in subtext if not in theme, Visconti, like my other fave Ken Russell, was one of the last of the truly fearless filmmakers. The ambitious visual scope of Visconti’s films was matched only by how ambitiously his films sought to explore the dark extremes of human relationships.
In synopsis, L’Innocente sounds like another one of those movies about men who profess to love women so much that they can’t seem to treat them like real people (making it something of a 19th-century cousin to Shampoo, Boomerang, Carnal Knowledge, and All That Jazz). Visconti takes the framework of the romantic tragedy to breathe life into the sexual double-standard narrative, making the struggle representative of larger socio-political conflicts related to morality and religion.
Luchino Visconti died on March 17, 1976 while L'Innocente was still being edited. The film didn't premiere in the U.S. until 1979.
Didier Haudepin as Federico Hermil, Tullio's younger brother |
THE STUFF OF FANTASY
“We’re intelligent, we’ve studied, we’ve traveled. We’ve enjoyed ourselves so much, we’re so rich…and then?" Federico L'Innocente -1976
“We're rich, we’re famous, we’re beautiful…and miserable.” Holly Andy Warhol’s Women in Revolt -1977
Identical sentiments, albeit from absurdly dissimilar sources. Movies tasked with depicting the empty existence of the wealthy usually fail miserably when faced with the challenge of how to visually represent a world of material excess without inadvertently glamorizing what they’re trying to condemn. My theory behind movies that fall into this trap (e.g., both the 1974 and 2013 adaptations of The Great Gatsby and The Wolf of Wall Street - 2013) is that the filmmakers themselves simply don’t believe it. The movie narrative dictates it, but these directors, like many working in an industry tentpoled on glorifying its own overindulgence in greed and money-worship, come across as being too in awe (and covetous) of wealth to even recognize when their opulence gaze turns more fetishistic and admiring than critical.
Visconti, the father of Italian neorealist cinema, was born into nobility (his full title is Count Don Luchino Visconti di Modrone). Yet when his filmmaker's gaze shifted from the gritty realism of Italy’s working classes to the ornate drawing rooms of the Italian aristocracy, his vision reflected the eye of someone both familiar and disenchanted with this world. A lover of beauty, Visconti’s films are overflowing with lavishly operatic images of wealth and elegance, but his aesthetic eye for detail works in service of creating a verisimilitude that draws us into this world; a world we know only from paintings and books. The breathtaking authenticity he brings to his films via costuming (Piero Tosi), production design (Mario Garbuglia), & cinematography (Pasqualino De Santis) create environments that don't call to mind enviable splendors and worlds of happiness and comfort. Rather, they bring forth images of ornamentally lush prisons or gilded birdcages entrapping his decadent and morally-adrift characters.PERFORMANCES
If I think back to the first time I saw L’Innocente…replaying it in my mind, trying to figure out just what in particular it is about this movie that brought me to such stinging tears by the finale, affecting me far more deeply than any of Visconti’s arguably more masterful works; I always come back to the same thing…the eyes have it.
Giannini’s expressive eyes were practically his calling card during the early ‘70s when his films with director Lina Wertmüller made him the darling of the foreign film scene. So it's no surprise he’s able to make the rather repugnant Tullio creepily relatable (like Daffy Duck, he’s all our worst instincts consolidated) and imbue him with a kind of pitiable humanity lacking in the novel. Laura Antonelli, whose propensity for consistently doffing her period britches made her something of an arthouse pinup during the ‘70s, is hampered somewhat by a character so compliant she risks becoming infuriating before the story reveals her truth, but Antonelli is the heart of L’Innocente and gives one of those radiant, delicate performances that gets better each time you see it.
To my utter and unending astonishment, American actress Jennifer O’Neill turned out to be my personal favorite in the entire film. Indeed, it’s O’Neill’s mournful eyes - which Visconti is wise to keep his camera trained on in the film’s heart-rending final sequence - that remains the single most haunting image my mind returns to each time I think of how much I love this movie. Known more for her beauty than her acting chops (and she looks positively stunning here), O’Neill leaves her Summer of ’42 girlishness behind in Nantucket (along with her voice, mercifully, as she is dubbed in Italian by actress Valeria Moriconi), evincing a heretofore untapped womanly bearing that's alluringly hard-edged and impassioned.
Rina Morelli as Mrs. Hermil (mother of Tullio & Federico) L'Innocente was the actress' last film. She also appeared in Visconti's The Leopard |
THE STUFF OF DREAMS
Depending on the translation, Gabriele D'Annunzio's novel is known as The Innocent, The Intruder, or The Victim (US). Each title suggesting a subtle shift in the narrative interpretation of the object of Tullio’s obsession. The book is written as a first-person, past-tense confessional told from Tullio’s point of view, his warped perspective the only version of reality to which we're we're privy.
L’Innocente’s screenplay (written by Visconti, Suso Cecchi D’Amico, & Enrico Medio) is linear in form, providing glimpses of events outside the sphere of Tullio's awareness. In essence, we're given a God’s eye view of an atheist. While the novel remains staunchly immoral and self-serving in its point of view, the religious Visconti (“My ideas may be unorthodox, but I am still a Catholic” ) who was ailing and directed from a wheelchair, has no problem coming right out and labeling his protagonist a monster.
It was poignant watching Luchino Visconti’s last film L’Innocente, during the pandemic lockdown mere months after the insurrectionist riot of January 2021. When I saw L’Innocente I was seeing a work of the artist as revolutionary—an Italian bisexual Marxist, at that—wresting the mike from the hand of history and not allowing the oppressor to control the narrative. Visconti takes an amoral chronicle written by a poet dubbed “the father of fascism” and transforms a self-aggrandizing, masturbatory exercise in nihilism into a theological, protofeminist evisceration of the kind of louche narcissist who fancies himself as a towering superman, when in reality he is simply self-loathing and morally bereft.Luchino Visconti’s first film was Ossessione (1943) an unauthorized adaptation of James M. Cain’s The Postman Always Rings Twice. That film’s realism, upfront sexuality, core antifascism, and Queer sensibility flew rebelliously in the face of Mussolini’s regime and was banned.
As much as I adore it, I don’t think L’Innocente is Visconti’s best film. But in its own way, it’s a work as deceptively and sublimely subversive as his first.
BONUS MATERIAL
Can't tell you how happy it made me feel to see the handsome star of Luchino Visconti's very first film, return, handsome as ever, 33-years later, to make an appearance in the director's swan song.
Massimo Girotti as Gino in Ossessione (1943) - Visconti's first film |
Massimo Girotti as Count Stefano in L'Innocente (1976) - Visconti's last film |
I wonder what you'd think of _Celine et Julie vont en bateau_, by Rivette, which I've seen several times despite its 3h 13m running time. It ticks a couple of your usual boxes I'd think.
ReplyDeleteThanks for the recommendation, Allen. I looked it up and it sounds intriguing on many fronts (not the least being its 3-hour running time). I've already secured myself a copy and look forward to seeing my first Jacques Rivette film.
DeleteCome to think of it, his _La Belle Noiseuse_ is even longer, and may also be up your alley. It's fairly different... argh, I don't want to say anything about either movie yet!
ReplyDeleteOK, I've found that one, too. I'll keep it in reserve for after I give Céline and Julie Go Boating a look. Again, thanks for suggesting a film you like that you think I may enjoy as well. It's kind of you.
DeleteThis is not a film nor a director I'm familiar with so I found your review of it interesting. That's not entirely true...I did try to watch "Death in Venice" one time but couldn't get into it. What I found most interesting in your commentary was Visconti's ability to show wealth and status as potentially constricting as poverty and ignominy. Too often, "first world problems" are dismissed as irrelevant and that the richer you are, the happier and more settled you should be. And I think some films that try to tackle that issue just come off as shallow critiques of that lifestyle (or as you said poorly-disguised tributes to that lifestyle). But human wants and needs are infinite (according to some) and having everything material doesn't ever guarantee happiness (there's plenty of real world examples of THAT!). So if Visconti is able to create characters of wealth and privilege and convincingly demonstrate that such things not only don't guarantee happiness but may be the very source of their unhappiness, that makes him very interesting to me. I'll have to check out more of his films.
ReplyDeleteHi Ron
DeleteI hope you do give Visconti another try. His work isn't for everybody (as beautiful and impassioned as his themes can be, many feel his films are too leisurely. And even devout Visconti fans find the almost non-verbal DEATH IN VENICE a little on the torpid side).
His 1943 film OSSESSIONE might be a good place to start, as it's fascinating to see how differently his film to it's 1946 counterpart THE POSTMAN ALWAYS RINGS TWICE.
As for what I perceive to be his gift for not glamorizing the wealthy, it's such a subtle talent, but it seems to run through each of his films. Perhaps it has to do with his political beliefs and having been born into such wealth that he ceased to be impressed by it. American directors (born into a culture that fetisizes and worships wealth) can't seem to help themselves from doing the same.
I can't think of a Visconti film where his disdain for the aristocracy isn't a subtle strain running like an undercurrent through every scene.
Visconti definitely able to: "convincingly demonstrate that [wealth and possessions] not only don't guarantee happiness but may be the very source of their unhappiness.
Thanks for reading this and commenting so thoughtfully, Ron.
Hi Ken,
ReplyDeleteI don't have much to say about The Innocent. (Visconti never topped 1963's The Leopard, imo.) One thing I note about his later films (e.g. The Damned, Ludwig, The Innocent) is their hothouse, stuffy, suffocating atmosphere - one feels like cracking open a window during some of these interior scenes. And, horrifically, it's the leaving open of a window in The Innocent which leads to one of the most chilling (pun intended) murders in movie history.
Mark R.Y.
I love what you did there...using the window to convey both your feelings about the relative airless quality of Visconti's latter works, and to cite the very tragic role a window plays in this film. Giving things (feelings, usually) a good airing never works out well in Visconti films.
DeleteI just cried so hard at the ending of L'INNOCENTE, and on reflection, I think to some degree the tragedy hit me doubly hard because (as I experienced with Kubrick's BARRY LYNDON) I find a great deal of poignance in the sadness hidden within the hothouse, stuffy, suffocating atmosphere...an atmosphere inseparable from the closed-off (to themselves)characters. My fondness for Visconti grew after I saw that his operatic epics were as emotionally truthful as his stark neorealist films.
And THE LEOPARD...what a beautiful film that is.
Thank you for reading and commenting, Mark!
Argyle here. I first saw this when it was released while I was in college, probably a late show. It was probably the first Visconti film I ever saw. I had read about and become fascinated with a couple of this films, "The Damned" and "Death in Venice", long before I would ever be able to see them; I'm talking decades. For me, in 1977 or so, "L'Innocente" was beautiful, long, not as erotic as I wanted, and beyond me thematically. It was not the "Oh my God - that was incredible!" experience that I was hungering for. But it didn't matter; I was glad I saw it. Now, over the decades, I've seen pretty much everything of Visconti's, some multiple times. He's one of my touchstones, gods, whatever you want to call it. I watched this again a couple of years ago and still, at 62, I cannot articulate themes the way you can. It's just not my skill. I think I absorb them as I watch like some kind of liquid. With his films, I don't feel any need to judge people or actions. They seem so true, it's like it's just a privilege to be able to observe. I remember them sort of like the way I remember music, which reminds me, the music in his films is always delicious and like another door opening. I'm not saying very much specific here. When I look at your screen shots I remember, as you say, how incredible Jennifer O'Neill looks. I love a performance that is delivered by the body, by the face. Also, I am reminded how handsome and seductive Giancarlo Giannini is with his dark hair and blondish moustache and beard. I really don't need much more than "looks", when they are mounted so respectfully and passionately, to draw me in. For me, Visconti is the master of this. This sounds like shallow praise, but it is not. I'm at the limits of my skills and just happy to be an observer. "Senso" is one I can always return to again, too. But don't ask me to remember the plot! And "The Leopard". They're all just a privilege to watch. So great about Massimo Girotti, that he returned to him. I did not know this. (I have seen "Ossesione" and love it.)
ReplyDeleteOK - I'll stop rambling! Thank you, Ken!
Bill
Hello Bill
DeleteAs ever, nice to hear from you. We are alike in being major fans of Visconti. Me arriving much later to the party than you in recognizing the director's orchestral skill at skill at meshing the visual with the sensual, the emotional with the intellectual.
Although I enjoy writing about movies, I think the best ones really SHOULD leave us feeling as you do...at a loss for ways to articulate why you feel and respond the way you do, but just keenly aware that you have been moved, thrilled, touched, or made somehow more keenly aware of something inside of you that has been stirred.
I feel that way about music. I am stunned at the ability of music critics to express themselves about something that often washes over me with strong emotions I would be floundering to express.
So Visconti, a painter, a musician, and artist --is the ideal filmmaker to respond to emotionally and leave the words behind (or to the verbose, like me).
What comes through in your comment is how you are sensually drawn to his film and how you give yourself the permission to have the sensual experience be enough and not need to explain it or excuse it. You know that it is getting through to you on other levels, but...as I find when i watch THE LEOPARD or SENSO...it's a privilege to let these beautiful film work their magic on us. Why do we need to figure it out when we can simply feel it?
Thank you for reading this.I'm so envious that you saw this in a theater. I'm torn between being sorry/grateful about coming to Visconti so late. Sorry because I missed out on seeing his films in a theater, grateful that I didn't see them at an age where I KNOW they would have gone right over my head.
Great to hear from you again, Bill! Thanks for contributing your thoughts to this essay!
Ken,
DeleteI'm so glad you got what I was trying to say, which could have (maybe did!) sound shallow. I can't explain the hold his films have over me, part of it is some deep mystical connection to Italy. I have never properly seen "Rocco..." but last year it was on TCM and after planning my week around watching it, things suddenly changed and I couldn't, except for the last half-hour or so, which I reluctantly allowed myself to watch (like slipping into the back of a church.) Just that little bit I was completely bowled over and deeply moved by, totally out of context.
When I saw that "The Leopard" (which I had never seen, but dreamed of) was playing at my favorite Chicago theater, The Music Box, I knew we had to go. It was the same weekend as the Chicago marathon which I was running, so that night, after running 26 miles, risking rigor mortis, we saw "The Leopard" on the big screen. I would have crawled there. It was everything I had imagined and more. I would could have sat there for 3 hours just watching the curtains billow in the open windows, the light, the heat. "Death in Venice" while maybe clunky in spots (I should not say that!) is so moving. Two performances delivered by the body and the face; make that three with Ms. Mangano. I have not seen "Ludwig" - but someday, somewhere.
Bill
You expressed yourself very well, I think, and your point was easy to understand. Infact, I think it actually bears repeating.
DeleteOne of the things I've always disliked about the elitism attached to an accessible, entertaining, populist art like film is the notion that profound art must be experienced profoundly. People frequently have a hesitancy to express in simple terms what they like about the films of famously complex directors like Fellini, Kurosawa, Bergmen, etc.
Art is essentially meant to be experienced, not dissected, and so I wish more people would discover these artists and feel fine with expressing simply that they found such and such film, dull, or entertaining, or funny, or luminous. I am a big believer in films not needing to be "understood" in order to be enjoyed.
I think if some of the intellectual pretentiousness were removed from the designation "art film" more people would explore these directors and discover their work to be very relatable and accessible on a human level. Even a superficial level is so desired.
So I appreciate your comments in offering yet another opportunity to re-state a credo of my blog: that films of all types are to be experienced and felt. And that is a personal relationship between the viewer, the film, and the dreams they inspire. Their can't be a right or wrong way of feeling about a film...it's yours.
Thanks, Bill
what is your opinion about Robert Eggers movies: The Witch and The Lighthouse ?
ReplyDeleteI enjoyed them both a great deal. Although The Lighthouse is the one the stayed with me longer, I liked them both for their visual storytelling and evocation of a distinct, atmospheric world. I found them to be entertaining puzzlers...movies of ideas...films I was able to enjoy without always fully "getting" everything I was seeing.
DeleteThanks for the interesting question.
You had me at your obsessions in the pandemic. Not sure where to continue my journey into HB and Alain Delons filmography so will try these.. do recommend Delon with Charles Bronson.. it's an unlikely double act but it works... Their bank heist movie is solid gold
ReplyDeleteHello, Gill -
DeleteAs of this date, I've seen but two Alain Delon films, THE SWIMMING POOL, and BORSALINO. Both of which I enjoyed a great deal. I might check out the Bronson pairing you mention, but I think at heart you're far more adventurous than I when it comes to charting unfamiliar movie territory. A quality that will do you well in exploring the varied filmographies of those beautiful actors.
Thank you for reading this, and lovely to hear from you. Hope all is well!
Delon is very mesmerising on screen and quite a timeless actor. I do love your taste in movies and of course that HB movie review of yours will always be special..
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