Speranza
The interview below first ran as part of Filmmaker‘s coverage of the 2013 Cannes
Film Festival, where The Great Beauty had its world premiere.
It is released
today through Janus Films.
Paolo Sorrentino’s latest film, The Great Beauty,
premiered in competition in Cannes this year, wowing fans with its over-the-top
depiction of modern Roma.
Seen through the sad eyes of a Neapolitan journalist, Jep
Gambardella (Antonio Servillo), the film uncovers a series of unsettling scenes
where everyone in Rome aims to be an actor on his or her own stage.
And Jep is
at the center of it all, a man who squandered his writing talents in exchange
for a hard-partying lifestyle.
He is surrounded by characters too distracted by
their urban surroundings to make anything meaningful.
Yet behind every image of
decadence and decay is a scene of great beauty, as the Eternal City herself
takes the title role.
Jep struggles to recover his passion for life, and
finally finds it within Roma.
The film is a wild, long ride, visually packed
with indulgent colours and lights.
It provides pure cinematic indulgence through
a fantastic escape into dark corners and bright landscapes of the fabulous
Italian city.
Filmmaker spoke with Sorrentino during the festival about his
film, which explores his country’s missed opportunities, the fatigue of living
and the distracting nature of city dwelling.
Q: What are we to take from Jep’s
failures in life?
A: It’s very much a film about time flowing
and with the flowing of time, the time that we end up wasting in our lives.
That’s why it becomes burdensome and we are all dealing with the aspect of
death.
But through this fatigue, this weight of our life on all of us, we
somehow give dignity to the life that we are living.
Q: After
watching the film, should we feel happy about the state of Roma
today?
Sorrentino: Yes and no, actually.
No, because it could be better than
it is.
And yes, because behind the world, which is portrayed in the film, which
is vulgar and decadent and cheap, there is indeed beauty in Rome.
But you
wouldn’t find it in one day.
So if you want to come, you have to spend some time
there in order to find the beauty.
I think the film tries to express the
present time.
That was my ideal of course, and then this is done by reinventing
reality and fictionalizing it.
But, of course, as often happens through fantasy
and invention, you can find truth in a way.
Italy has often been a country
with millions of opportunities that have been missed along the way.
And that’s
why Jep is missing out on his opportunities.
He’s wasting his talents and
missing out on his life in doing so.
There’s one thing that I like about Rome
that was stated by Napoleone: that from sublime to pathetic is only one step
away.
And in Rome there’s a constant shifting between sublime and
pathetic.
Q:
Your films also go quickly from sublime to pathetic.
What do you find so interesting in the grotesque?
Sorrentino:
I cannot
honestly answer that. I don’t know why but I like it.
I like grotesque film.
It’s like asking somebody why do you prefer white wine or red wine.
There’s no
answer to it.
But if you think about it, it’s something that we all like at
the end of the day.
If we had the best ballerina in the world performing in a
beautiful dance at the moment, and then she suddenly stumbled and became clumsy,
we would all remember that moment when she failed and made herself grotesque and
not at her best performance.
So I just wait for people to
stumble.
Q:
Director of photography Luca Bigazzi’s images stick with
us long after watching the film.
What was it like collaborating with him this
time around?
Sorrentino:
Well, it was a long process actually.
I had one idea
that was very clear in my mind.
I wanted the lights to move in the film.
I liked
very much this idea.
So either the lights were moving or the characters moved in
and out of the lights all the time.
And it was quite funny to see behind the
scenes the director of photography moving around with the lights, instead of
having a light source and him moving around.
Q:
What did you
learn from making this film?
Sorrentino:
I’m afraid you never learn from
experience, but experiences can be very funny.
Luckily, from my point of view
you cannot capitalize on filmmaking.
There’s no connection between what you do
before and what you do after.
It’s just a simple, single, wonderful experience
that has no influence on what you do afterward. That’s my point of view.
You can
just make films and they become a beautiful memory, but you don’t learn from
them.
And I can say because I’ve seen this from experience, that when a
director says, “I’m going to do this because I’ve done this already and I know
it works,” he’s making a mistake.
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