fbpx
Wikipedia

Life Is Beautiful

Life Is Beautiful (Italian: La vita è bella, Italian pronunciation: [la ˈviːta ˈɛ bˈbɛlla]) is a 1997 Italian comedy drama film directed by and starring Roberto Benigni, who co-wrote the film with Vincenzo Cerami. Benigni plays Guido Orefice, a Jewish Italian bookshop owner, who employs his fertile imagination to shield his son from the horrors of internment in a Nazi concentration camp. The film was partially inspired by the book In the End, I Beat Hitler by Rubino Romeo Salmonì and by Benigni's father, who spent two years in the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp during World War II.

Life Is Beautiful
Theatrical release poster
Directed byRoberto Benigni
Written byRoberto Benigni
Vincenzo Cerami
Produced byGianluigi Braschi
Elda Ferri
Starring
CinematographyTonino Delli Colli
Edited bySimona Paggi
Music byNicola Piovani
Production
company
Melampo Cinematografica
Distributed byCecchi Gori Group (Italy)
Release date
  • 20 December 1997 (1997-12-20) (Italy)
Running time
116 minutes[1]
CountryItaly
LanguageItalian
Budget$20 million[2]
Box office$230.1 million[3]

The film was an overwhelming critical and commercial success. It received widespread acclaim, with critics praising its story, performances, direction and the union of drama and comedy, despite some criticisms of using the subject matter for comedic purposes. The movie grossed over $230 million worldwide, including $57.6 million in the United States, is the second highest-grossing foreign language film in the U.S. (after Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon)[4] and one of the highest-grossing non-English language movies of all time.[5] The National Board of Review included it in the top five best foreign films of 1998.[6]

The movie won the Grand Prix at the 1998 Cannes Film Festival, nine David di Donatello Awards (including Best Film), five Nastro d'Argento Awards in Italy, two European Film Awards, and three Academy Awards, including Best Foreign Language Film and Best Actor for Benigni, the first for a male non-English performance.[7]

Plot

In 1939, in Fascist Italy, Guido Orefice is a young Italian Jewish man who arrives to work in the city of Arezzo, in Tuscany, where his uncle Eliseo works in the restaurant of a hotel. Guido is comical and sharp and falls in love with a Gentile girl named Dora. Later, he sees her again in the city where she is a teacher and set to be engaged to Rodolfo, a rich but arrogant local government official with whom Guido has regular run-ins. Guido sets up many "coincidental" incidents to show his interest in Dora.

Finally, Dora sees Guido's affection and promise and gives in, against her better judgment. He steals the lady from her engagement party, on a horse, humiliating her fiancé and mother. They are later married, have a son Giosuè, and run a bookstore.

During World War II, in 1944 when Northern Italy is occupied by Nazi Germany, Guido, his uncle Eliseo, and Giosuè are seized on Giosuè's birthday. They and many other Jews are forced onto a train bound for a concentration camp. After confronting a guard about her husband and son and being told there is no mistake, Dora volunteers to get on the train in order to be close to her family.

However, as men and women are separated in the camp, Dora and Guido do not see each other during the internment. Guido pulls off various stunts, such as using the camp's loudspeaker to send messages—symbolic or literal—to Dora to assure her that he and their son are safe. Eliseo is murdered in a gas chamber shortly after their arrival. Giosuè narrowly avoids being gassed himself as he hates to take baths and showers, and did not follow the other children when they had been ordered to enter the gas chambers and were told they were showers.

In the camp, Guido hides the true situation from his son. Guido tells Giosuè that the camp is a complicated game in which he must perform the tasks Guido gives him. Each of the tasks will earn them points and whoever gets to one thousand points first will win a tank. He tells him that if he cries, complains that he wants his mother, or says that he is hungry, he will lose points, while quiet boys who hide from the camp guards earn extra points. Giosuè is at times reluctant to go along with the game, but Guido convinces him each time to continue.

At one point Guido takes advantage of the appearance of visiting German officers and their families to show Giosuè that other children are hiding as part of the game, and he also takes advantage of a German nanny thinking Giosuè is one of her charges in order to feed him as Guido serves the German officers. Guido and Giosuè are almost found out to be prisoners by another server until Guido is found teaching all of the German children how to say "Thank you" in Italian, effectively providing a ruse.

Guido maintains this story right until the end when, in the chaos of shutting down the camp as the Allied forces approach, he tells his son to stay in a box until everybody has left, this being the final task in the competition before the promised tank is his. Guido goes to find Dora, but he is caught by a German soldier. An officer orders Guido to be executed and Guido is led off by the soldier. While he is walking to his death, Guido passes by Giosuè one last time and winks, still in character and playing the game. Guido is then shot and left for dead in an alleyway.

The next morning, Giosuè emerges from the sweat-box, just as a U.S. Army unit led by a Sherman tank arrives and the camp is liberated. Giosuè is overjoyed about winning the game (unaware that his father is dead), thinking that he won the tank, and an American soldier allows Giosuè to ride on the tank.

While traveling to safety, Giosuè soon spots Dora in the procession leaving the camp and reunites with his mother. While the young Giosuè excitedly tells his mother about how he had won a tank, just as his father had promised, the adult Giosuè, in an overheard monologue, reminisces on the sacrifices his father made for him and his story.

Cast

Production

 
The film was shot in Arezzo, Tuscany, including by the Badia delle Sante Flora e Lucilla.

Director Roberto Benigni, who wrote the screenplay with Vincenzo Cerami, was inspired by the story of Rubino Romeo Salmonì and his book In the End, I Beat Hitler, which incorporates elements of irony and black comedy.[8] Salmoni was an Italian Jew who was deported to Auschwitz, survived and was reunited with his parents, but found his brothers were murdered. Benigni stated he wished to commemorate Salmoni as a man who wished to live in the right way.[9] He also based the story on that of his father Luigi Benigni, who was a member of the Italian Army after Italy became a co-belligerent of the Allies in 1943.[10] Luigi Benigni spent two years in a Nazi labour camp, and to avoid scaring his children, told about his experiences humorously, finding this helped him cope.[11] Roberto Benigni explained his philosophy, "to laugh and to cry comes from the same point of the soul, no? I'm a storyteller: the crux of the matter is to reach beauty, poetry, it doesn't matter if that is comedy or tragedy. They're the same if you reach the beauty."[12]

His friends advised against making the film, as he is a comedian and not Jewish, and the Holocaust was not of interest to his established audience.[13] Because he is Gentile, Benigni consulted with the Center for Documentation of Contemporary Judaism, based in Milan, throughout production.[14] Benigni incorporated historical inaccuracies in order to distinguish his story from the true Holocaust, about which he said only documentaries interviewing survivors could provide "the truth".[12]

The film was shot in the centro storico (historic centre) of Arezzo, Tuscany. The scene where Benigni falls off a bicycle and lands on Nicoletta Braschi was shot in front of Badia delle Sante Flora e Lucilla in Arezzo.[15]

Release

In Italy, the film was released in 1997 by Cecchi Gori Distribuzione.[16] The film was screened in the Cannes Film Festival in May 1998, where it was a late addition to the selection of films.[17] In the U.S., it was released on 23 October 1998,[13] by Miramax Films.[18] In Germany, it was released on 12 November 1998. In Austria, it was released on 13 November 1998. In the UK, it was released on 12 February 1999.[12] After the Italian, English subtitled version became a hit in English speaking territories, Miramax reissued Life is Beautiful in an English dubbed version, but it was less successful than the subtitled Italian version.[19]

The film was aired on the Italian television station RAI on 22 October 2001 and was viewed by 16 million people. This made it the most watched Italian film on Italian TV.[20]

Reception

Box office

Life is Beautiful was commercially successful, making $48.7 million in Italy.[21] It was the highest-grossing Italian film in its native country until 2011, when surpassed by Checco Zalone's What a Beautiful Day.[22]

The film was also successful in the rest of the world, grossing $57.6 million in the United States and Canada and $123.8 million in other territories, for a worldwide gross of $230.1 million.[3] It surpassed fellow Italian film Il Postino: The Postman as the highest-grossing foreign language film in the United States until Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon (2000).[23][24]

Critical response

 
Roberto Benigni received positive reviews for his film and performance, which he starred in with his wife Nicoletta Braschi.

The film was praised by the Italian press, with Benigni treated as a "national hero."[14] Pope John Paul II, who received a private screening with Benigni, placed it in his top five favourite films.[14] It holds a "Fresh" 80% approval rating on review aggregation website Rotten Tomatoes, based on 92 reviews with an average rating of 7.50/10. The site's consensus reads: "Benigni's earnest charm, when not overstepping its bounds into the unnecessarily treacly, offers the possibility of hope in the face of unflinching horror".[25]

Roger Ebert gave the film 3.5/4 stars, stating: "At Cannes, it offended some left-wing critics with its use of humor in connection with the Holocaust. What may be most offensive to both wings is its sidestepping of politics in favor of simple human ingenuity. The film finds the right notes to negotiate its delicate subject matter ... The movie actually softens the Holocaust slightly, to make the humor possible at all. In the real death camps there would be no role for Guido. But Life Is Beautiful is not about Nazis and Fascists, but about the human spirit. It is about rescuing whatever is good and hopeful from the wreckage of dreams. About hope for the future. About the necessary human conviction, or delusion, that things will be better for our children than they are right now."[26] Michael Wilmington of the Chicago Tribune gave the movie a score of 100/100, calling it: "A deeply moving blend of cold terror and rapturous hilarity. Lovingly crafted by Italy's top comedian and most popular filmmaker, it's that rare comedy that takes on a daring and ambitious subject and proves worthy of it."[27]

Richard Schickel, writing for Time, argued, "There are references to mass extermination, but that brutal reality is never vividly presented". He concluded that "even a hint of the truth about the Holocaust would crush [Benigni]'s comedy."[28] Owen Gleiberman of Entertainment Weekly gave it a B−, calling it "undeniably some sort of feat—the first feel-good Holocaust weepie. It's been a long time coming." However, Glieberman stated: "There's only one problem. As shot, it looks like a game".[29]

Michael O'Sullivan, writing for The Washington Post, called it "sad, funny and haunting."[30]

Nell Minow of Common Sense Media gave it 5/5 stars, saying: "This magnificent film gives us a glimpse of the Holocaust, but it is really about love, and the indomitability of humanity even in the midst of inhumanity."[31] Janet Maslin wrote in The New York Times that the film took "a colossal amount of gall" but "because Mr. Benigni can be heart-rending without a trace of the maudlin, it works."[18]The Los Angeles Times's Kenneth Turan noted the film had "some furious opposition" at Cannes, but said "what is surprising about this unlikely film is that it succeeds as well as it does. Its sentiment is inescapable, but genuine poignancy and pathos are also present, and an overarching sincerity is visible too."[32]

David Rooney of Variety said the film had "mixed results," with "surprising depth and poignancy" in Benigni's performance but "visually rather flat" camera work by Tonino Delli Colli.[16] In 2002, BBC critic Tom Dawson wrote "the film is presumably intended as a tribute to the powers of imagination, innocence, and love in the most harrowing of circumstances," but "Benigni's sentimental fantasy diminishes the suffering of Holocaust victims."[33]

In 2006, Jewish American comedic filmmaker Mel Brooks spoke negatively of the film in Der Spiegel, saying it trivialized the suffering in concentration camps.[34]

By contrast, Nobel Laureate Imre Kertész argues that those who take the film to be a comedy, rather than a tragedy, have missed the point of the film. He draws attention to what he terms 'Holocaust conformism' in cinema to rebuff detractors of Life Is Beautiful.[35]

Israeli screenwriter, author and art critic Kobi Niv published the book Life is Beautiful, But Not for Jews (in 2000 in Hebrew and an English translation in 2003) in which he analyzed the movie from a highly critical perspective, suggesting that the film's underlining narrative is harmful for Jews.[36]

Another academic analysis of the movie was undertaken by Ilona Klein, who analyzes the film's success and refers to the "ambiguous themes hidden within." Klein suggests that one of the reasons the movie was so successful was its appeal of "sentimental optimism". At the same time, she points out that "Miramax's hype billed this film as a fable about 'love, family, and the power of imagination,' yet most Jewish victims of the Nazis' 'Final Solution' were loving, concerned, devoted parents. No amount of love, family, and power of imagination helped their children survive the gas chambers."[37]

David Sterritt of The Christian Science Monitor highlighted that "Enthusiasm for the movie has not been as unanimous as its ad campaign suggests, however, and audiences would do well to ponder its implicit attitudes." He pointed out that the movie implicitly suggests quick-witted confidence was a match for the terrors of fascist death camps, then added that "[Benigni's] fable ultimately obscures the human and historical events it sets out to illuminate."[38]

Accolades

Life is Beautiful was shown at the 1998 Cannes Film Festival, and went on to win the Grand Prix.[39] Upon receiving the award, Benigni kissed the feet of jury president Martin Scorsese.[32]

At the 71st Academy Awards, Benigni won Best Actor for his role, with the film winning two more awards for Best Music, Original Dramatic Score and Best Foreign Language Film.[40] Benigni jumped on top of the seats as he made his way to the stage to accept his first award, and upon accepting his second, said, "This is a terrible mistake because I used up all my English!"[41]

Award Date of ceremony Category Recipient(s) Result Ref(s)
Academy Awards 21 March 1999 Best Picture Elda Ferri and Gianluigi Braschi Nominated [40]
Best Director Roberto Benigni Nominated
Best Actor Won
Best Original Screenplay Roberto Benigni and Vincenzo Cerami Nominated
Best Foreign Language Film Italy Won
Best Film Editing Simona Paggi Nominated
Best Music, Original Dramatic Score Nicola Piovani Won
Australian Film Institute Awards 1999 Best Foreign Film Roberto Benigni, Elda Ferri and Gianluigi Braschi Won [42]
BAFTA Awards 11 April 1999 Best Film Not in the English Language Roberto Benigni, Elda Ferri and Gianluigi Braschi Nominated [43]
Best Film Original Screenplay Writing Roberto Benigni and Vincenzo Cerami Nominated
Best Film Actor in a Leading Role Roberto Benigni Won
Cannes Film Festival 13–24 May 1998 Grand Prize Won [39]
César Awards 6 March 1999 Best Foreign Film Won [44]
Critics' Choice Awards 19 January 1999 Best Movie Nominated [45]
Best Movie in a Foreign Language Roberto Benigni Won
David di Donatello Awards 1998 Best Film Won [46]
Best Director Won
Best Producer Elda Ferri and Gianluigi Braschi Won
Best Script Roberto Benigni and Vincenzo Cerami Won
Best Actor in a Leading Role Roberto Benigni Won
Best Actor in a Supporting Role Sergio Bustric Nominated
Best Cinematography Tonino Delli Colli Won
Best Editing Simona Paggi Nominated
Best Sound Tullio Morganti Nominated
Best Score Nicola Piovani Nominated
Best Production Design Danilo Donati Won
Best Costumes Won
Scholars Jury David Roberto Benigni Won
European Film Awards 7 December 1998 Best Film Elda Ferri and Gianluigi Braschi Won [47]
Best Leading Actor Roberto Benigni Won
Jerusalem Film Festival 1998 Best Jewish Experience Won [12]
Screen Actors Guild Awards 7 March 1999 Outstanding Performance by an Ensemble in a Motion Picture Cast Nominated [48]
Outstanding Performance by a Male Actor in a Leading Role in a Motion Picture Roberto Benigni Won
Toronto International Film Festival 10–19 September 1998 People's Choice Award Won [17]

Soundtrack

The original score to the film was composed by Nicola Piovani,[16] with the exception of a classical piece which figures prominently: the "Barcarolle" by Jacques Offenbach and A Musical Joke by Mozart. The soundtrack album won the Academy Award for Best Original Dramatic Score[40] and was nominated for a Grammy Award: "Best Instrumental Composition Written for a Motion Picture, Television or Other Visual Media", but lost to the score of A Bug's Life.

See also

References

  1. ^ "La Vita E Bella (Life Is Beautiful) (12A)". Buena Vista International. British Board of Film Classification. 26 November 1998. from the original on 31 December 2013. Retrieved 23 August 2013.
  2. ^ . The Wrap. Archived from the original on 19 June 2013. Retrieved 4 April 2013.
  3. ^ a b "Life is Beautiful". Box Office Mojo. from the original on 6 June 2016. Retrieved 11 September 2016.
  4. ^ "Top grossing foreign films in the US". RTT News.
  5. ^ John, Adriana (21 September 2016). "Top 10 Highest Grossing Non-English Movies of All Time". Wonderslist. Retrieved 7 January 2018.
  6. ^ "1998 Archives". National Board of Review.
  7. ^ "Roberto Benigni: Dante is Beautiful". Mary Manning.
  8. ^ Squires, Nick (11 July 2011). . The Daily Telegraph. Archived from the original on 23 March 2016. Retrieved 11 September 2016.
  9. ^ Paradiso, Stefania (10 July 2011). "E' morto Romeo Salmonì: l'uomo che ispirò Benigni per La vita è bella". Un Mondo di Italiani. from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 11 September 2016.
  10. ^ Norden 2007, p. 146.
  11. ^ Piper 2003, p. 12.
  12. ^ a b c d Logan, Brian (29 January 1999). "Does this man really think the Holocaust was a big joke?". The Guardian. from the original on 24 September 2016. Retrieved 11 September 2016.
  13. ^ a b Okwu, Michael (23 October 1998). "'Life Is Beautiful' through Roberto Benigni's eyes". CNN. from the original on 18 September 2016. Retrieved 11 September 2016.
  14. ^ a b c Stone, Alan A. (1 April 1999). "Escape from Auschwitz". Boston Review. from the original on 4 September 2016. Retrieved 11 September 2016.
  15. ^ Warkentin, Elizabeth (30 May 2016). "Life truly is beautiful in Tuscany's underappreciated Arezzo". The Globe and Mail. from the original on 12 September 2016. Retrieved 12 September 2016.
  16. ^ a b c Rooney, David (3 January 1998). "Review: 'Life Is Beautiful'". Variety. from the original on 5 March 2017. Retrieved 12 September 2016.
  17. ^ a b Piper 2003, p. 11.
  18. ^ a b Maslin, Janet (23 October 1998). "Giving a Human (and Humorous) Face to Rearing a Boy Under Fascism". The New York Times. from the original on 29 November 2016. Retrieved 11 September 2016.
  19. ^ "Benigni's 'Pinocchio' Out With Subtitles". 8 February 2003. from the original on 21 November 2018. Retrieved 17 November 2018.
  20. ^ "Benigni, audience da record oltre 16 milioni di spettatori". La Repubblica. 23 October 2001. from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 11 September 2016.
  21. ^ Perren 2012, p. 274.
  22. ^ . tgcom24.mediaset.it. Archived from the original on 20 December 2016. Retrieved 11 September 2016.
  23. ^ "Foreign Language". Box Office Mojo. from the original on 24 July 2010. Retrieved 11 September 2016.
  24. ^ Carver, Benedict; Cox, Dan (21 March 1999). "'Life' shows there's life for foreign pix". Variety. Retrieved 4 September 2022.
  25. ^ "Life is Beautiful". Rotten Tomatoes. from the original on 13 April 2011. Retrieved 26 December 2022.
  26. ^ Ebert, Roger (30 October 1998). "Life Is Beautiful". Rogerebert.com. from the original on 25 September 2016. Retrieved 11 September 2016.
  27. ^ "Life is Beautiful". Moviemonitor.
  28. ^ Schickel, Richard (9 November 1998). "Cinema: Fascist Fable". Time. ISSN 0040-781X. Retrieved 7 February 2022.
  29. ^ Glieberman, Owen (6 November 1998). "Life Is Beautiful". Entertainment Weekly. from the original on 18 November 2016. Retrieved 12 September 2016.
  30. ^ O'Sullivan, Michael (30 October 1998). "'Life's' Surprisingly Graceful Turn'". The Washington Post. from the original on 19 September 2016. Retrieved 11 September 2016.
  31. ^ "Life is Beautiful". Common Sense Media. 24 August 2009.
  32. ^ a b Turan, Kenneth (23 October 1998). "The Improbable Success of 'Life Is Beautiful'". The Los Angeles Times. from the original on 5 March 2017. Retrieved 12 September 2016.
  33. ^ Dawson, Tom (6 June 2002). "La Vita è Bella (Life is Beautiful) (1998)". BBC. from the original on 26 July 2016. Retrieved 12 September 2016.
  34. ^ Brooks, Mel (16 March 2006). "SPIEGEL Interview with Mel Brooks: With Comedy, We Can Rob Hitler of his Posthumous Power". Spiegel Online. from the original on 10 June 2017. Retrieved 3 June 2017.
  35. ^ MacKay, John; Kertész, Imre (1 April 2001). "Who Owns Auschwitz?". The Yale Journal of Criticism. 14 (1): 267–272. doi:10.1353/yale.2001.0010. ISSN 1080-6636. S2CID 145532698.
  36. ^ Niv, Ḳobi (2003). Life is beautiful, but not for Jews : another view of the film by Benigni (1st ed.). Landham, Md.: Scarecrow Press. ISBN 0-8108-4875-9. OCLC 52312653.
  37. ^ Klein, Ilona (2010). ""Life Is Beautiful, Or Is It?" Asked Jakob the Liar". Brigham Young University Scholars Archive Faculty Publications. 3836: 16–31 – via BYU ScholarsArchive.
  38. ^ "'Life Is Beautiful': Too Light For Heavy Subject Matter?". Christian Science Monitor. 30 October 1998. ISSN 0882-7729. Retrieved 7 February 2022.
  39. ^ a b "Festival de Cannes: Life is Beautiful". festival-cannes.com. from the original on 18 January 2012. Retrieved 1 October 2009.
  40. ^ a b c "The 71st Academy Awards (1999) Nominees and Winners". oscars.org. from the original on 2 April 2015. Retrieved 20 October 2015.
  41. ^ Higgins, Bill (24 February 2012). "How 'Life Is Beautiful's' Roberto Benigni Stole the Oscars Show in 1999". The Hollywood Reporter. from the original on 12 October 2016. Retrieved 11 September 2016.
  42. ^ "1999 Winners & Nominees". AACTA.org. from the original on 16 November 2016. Retrieved 11 September 2016.
  43. ^ Lister, David (11 April 1999). "Good night at Baftas for anyone called Elizabeth". The Independent. from the original on 5 March 2017. Retrieved 11 September 2016.
  44. ^ "César du Meilleur film étranger – César". AlloCiné. from the original on 18 September 2016. Retrieved 11 September 2016.
  45. ^ Clinton, Paul (26 January 1999). "Broadcast Film critics name 'Saving Private Ryan' best film". CNN. from the original on 5 March 2017. Retrieved 11 September 2016.
  46. ^ . David di Donatello. Archived from the original on 10 November 2016. Retrieved 11 September 2016.
  47. ^ "European Film Awards Winners 1998". European Film Academy. from the original on 12 October 2017. Retrieved 11 September 2016.
  48. ^ Madigan, Nick (7 March 1999). "SAG tells Benigni 'Life' is beautiful". Variety. from the original on 5 March 2017. Retrieved 11 September 2016.

Bibliography

  • Bullaro, Grace Russo (2005). Beyond "Life is Beautiful": Comedy and Tragedy in the Cinema of Roberto Benigni. Troubador Publishing Ltd. ISBN 1-904744-83-4.
  • Norden, Martin F., ed. (2007). The Changing Face of Evil in Film and Television. Amsterdam and New York: Rodopi. ISBN 978-9042023246.
  • Perren, Alisa (2012). Indie, Inc.: Miramax and the Transformation of Hollywood in the 1990s. University of Texas Press.
  • Piper, Kerrie (2003). Life is Beautiful. Pascal Press. ISBN 1741250307.

External links

life, beautiful, this, article, about, 1997, italian, film, other, uses, disambiguation, vita, bella, redirects, here, other, uses, vita, bella, disambiguation, italian, vita, bella, italian, pronunciation, ˈviːta, ˈɛ, bˈbɛlla, 1997, italian, comedy, drama, fi. This article is about the 1997 Italian film For other uses see Life Is Beautiful disambiguation La vita e bella redirects here For other uses see La vita e bella disambiguation Life Is Beautiful Italian La vita e bella Italian pronunciation la ˈviːta ˈɛ bˈbɛlla is a 1997 Italian comedy drama film directed by and starring Roberto Benigni who co wrote the film with Vincenzo Cerami Benigni plays Guido Orefice a Jewish Italian bookshop owner who employs his fertile imagination to shield his son from the horrors of internment in a Nazi concentration camp The film was partially inspired by the book In the End I Beat Hitler by Rubino Romeo Salmoni and by Benigni s father who spent two years in the Bergen Belsen concentration camp during World War II Life Is BeautifulTheatrical release posterDirected byRoberto BenigniWritten byRoberto BenigniVincenzo CeramiProduced byGianluigi BraschiElda FerriStarringRoberto Benigni Nicoletta BraschiCinematographyTonino Delli ColliEdited bySimona PaggiMusic byNicola PiovaniProductioncompanyMelampo CinematograficaDistributed byCecchi Gori Group Italy Release date20 December 1997 1997 12 20 Italy Running time116 minutes 1 CountryItalyLanguageItalianBudget 20 million 2 Box office 230 1 million 3 The film was an overwhelming critical and commercial success It received widespread acclaim with critics praising its story performances direction and the union of drama and comedy despite some criticisms of using the subject matter for comedic purposes The movie grossed over 230 million worldwide including 57 6 million in the United States is the second highest grossing foreign language film in the U S after Crouching Tiger Hidden Dragon 4 and one of the highest grossing non English language movies of all time 5 The National Board of Review included it in the top five best foreign films of 1998 6 The movie won the Grand Prix at the 1998 Cannes Film Festival nine David di Donatello Awards including Best Film five Nastro d Argento Awards in Italy two European Film Awards and three Academy Awards including Best Foreign Language Film and Best Actor for Benigni the first for a male non English performance 7 Contents 1 Plot 2 Cast 3 Production 4 Release 5 Reception 5 1 Box office 5 2 Critical response 5 3 Accolades 6 Soundtrack 7 See also 8 References 8 1 Bibliography 9 External linksPlot EditIn 1939 in Fascist Italy Guido Orefice is a young Italian Jewish man who arrives to work in the city of Arezzo in Tuscany where his uncle Eliseo works in the restaurant of a hotel Guido is comical and sharp and falls in love with a Gentile girl named Dora Later he sees her again in the city where she is a teacher and set to be engaged to Rodolfo a rich but arrogant local government official with whom Guido has regular run ins Guido sets up many coincidental incidents to show his interest in Dora Finally Dora sees Guido s affection and promise and gives in against her better judgment He steals the lady from her engagement party on a horse humiliating her fiance and mother They are later married have a son Giosue and run a bookstore During World War II in 1944 when Northern Italy is occupied by Nazi Germany Guido his uncle Eliseo and Giosue are seized on Giosue s birthday They and many other Jews are forced onto a train bound for a concentration camp After confronting a guard about her husband and son and being told there is no mistake Dora volunteers to get on the train in order to be close to her family However as men and women are separated in the camp Dora and Guido do not see each other during the internment Guido pulls off various stunts such as using the camp s loudspeaker to send messages symbolic or literal to Dora to assure her that he and their son are safe Eliseo is murdered in a gas chamber shortly after their arrival Giosue narrowly avoids being gassed himself as he hates to take baths and showers and did not follow the other children when they had been ordered to enter the gas chambers and were told they were showers In the camp Guido hides the true situation from his son Guido tells Giosue that the camp is a complicated game in which he must perform the tasks Guido gives him Each of the tasks will earn them points and whoever gets to one thousand points first will win a tank He tells him that if he cries complains that he wants his mother or says that he is hungry he will lose points while quiet boys who hide from the camp guards earn extra points Giosue is at times reluctant to go along with the game but Guido convinces him each time to continue At one point Guido takes advantage of the appearance of visiting German officers and their families to show Giosue that other children are hiding as part of the game and he also takes advantage of a German nanny thinking Giosue is one of her charges in order to feed him as Guido serves the German officers Guido and Giosue are almost found out to be prisoners by another server until Guido is found teaching all of the German children how to say Thank you in Italian effectively providing a ruse Guido maintains this story right until the end when in the chaos of shutting down the camp as the Allied forces approach he tells his son to stay in a box until everybody has left this being the final task in the competition before the promised tank is his Guido goes to find Dora but he is caught by a German soldier An officer orders Guido to be executed and Guido is led off by the soldier While he is walking to his death Guido passes by Giosue one last time and winks still in character and playing the game Guido is then shot and left for dead in an alleyway The next morning Giosue emerges from the sweat box just as a U S Army unit led by a Sherman tank arrives and the camp is liberated Giosue is overjoyed about winning the game unaware that his father is dead thinking that he won the tank and an American soldier allows Giosue to ride on the tank While traveling to safety Giosue soon spots Dora in the procession leaving the camp and reunites with his mother While the young Giosue excitedly tells his mother about how he had won a tank just as his father had promised the adult Giosue in an overheard monologue reminisces on the sacrifices his father made for him and his story Cast EditRoberto Benigni as Guido Orefice Nicoletta Braschi as Dora Orefice Giorgio Cantarini as Giosue Orefice Giustino Durano as Uncle Eliseo Horst Buchholz as Doctor Lessing Marisa Paredes as Dora s mother Sergio Bustric as Ferruccio Amerigo Fontani as Rodolfo Lydia Alfonsi as Guicciardini Giuliana Lojodice as the Headmistress Pietro Desilva as Bartolomeo Francesco Guzzo as Vittorino Raffaella Lebboroni as Elena Claudio Alfonsi as Rodolfo s friend Richard Sammel as Waffen SS Officer Omero Antonutti as the voice of the narrator uncredited Production Edit The film was shot in Arezzo Tuscany including by the Badia delle Sante Flora e Lucilla Director Roberto Benigni who wrote the screenplay with Vincenzo Cerami was inspired by the story of Rubino Romeo Salmoni and his book In the End I Beat Hitler which incorporates elements of irony and black comedy 8 Salmoni was an Italian Jew who was deported to Auschwitz survived and was reunited with his parents but found his brothers were murdered Benigni stated he wished to commemorate Salmoni as a man who wished to live in the right way 9 He also based the story on that of his father Luigi Benigni who was a member of the Italian Army after Italy became a co belligerent of the Allies in 1943 10 Luigi Benigni spent two years in a Nazi labour camp and to avoid scaring his children told about his experiences humorously finding this helped him cope 11 Roberto Benigni explained his philosophy to laugh and to cry comes from the same point of the soul no I m a storyteller the crux of the matter is to reach beauty poetry it doesn t matter if that is comedy or tragedy They re the same if you reach the beauty 12 His friends advised against making the film as he is a comedian and not Jewish and the Holocaust was not of interest to his established audience 13 Because he is Gentile Benigni consulted with the Center for Documentation of Contemporary Judaism based in Milan throughout production 14 Benigni incorporated historical inaccuracies in order to distinguish his story from the true Holocaust about which he said only documentaries interviewing survivors could provide the truth 12 The film was shot in the centro storico historic centre of Arezzo Tuscany The scene where Benigni falls off a bicycle and lands on Nicoletta Braschi was shot in front of Badia delle Sante Flora e Lucilla in Arezzo 15 Release EditIn Italy the film was released in 1997 by Cecchi Gori Distribuzione 16 The film was screened in the Cannes Film Festival in May 1998 where it was a late addition to the selection of films 17 In the U S it was released on 23 October 1998 13 by Miramax Films 18 In Germany it was released on 12 November 1998 In Austria it was released on 13 November 1998 In the UK it was released on 12 February 1999 12 After the Italian English subtitled version became a hit in English speaking territories Miramax reissued Life is Beautiful in an English dubbed version but it was less successful than the subtitled Italian version 19 The film was aired on the Italian television station RAI on 22 October 2001 and was viewed by 16 million people This made it the most watched Italian film on Italian TV 20 Reception EditBox office Edit Life is Beautiful was commercially successful making 48 7 million in Italy 21 It was the highest grossing Italian film in its native country until 2011 when surpassed by Checco Zalone s What a Beautiful Day 22 The film was also successful in the rest of the world grossing 57 6 million in the United States and Canada and 123 8 million in other territories for a worldwide gross of 230 1 million 3 It surpassed fellow Italian film Il Postino The Postman as the highest grossing foreign language film in the United States until Crouching Tiger Hidden Dragon 2000 23 24 Critical response Edit Roberto Benigni received positive reviews for his film and performance which he starred in with his wife Nicoletta Braschi The film was praised by the Italian press with Benigni treated as a national hero 14 Pope John Paul II who received a private screening with Benigni placed it in his top five favourite films 14 It holds a Fresh 80 approval rating on review aggregation website Rotten Tomatoes based on 92 reviews with an average rating of 7 50 10 The site s consensus reads Benigni s earnest charm when not overstepping its bounds into the unnecessarily treacly offers the possibility of hope in the face of unflinching horror 25 Roger Ebert gave the film 3 5 4 stars stating At Cannes it offended some left wing critics with its use of humor in connection with the Holocaust What may be most offensive to both wings is its sidestepping of politics in favor of simple human ingenuity The film finds the right notes to negotiate its delicate subject matter The movie actually softens the Holocaust slightly to make the humor possible at all In the real death camps there would be no role for Guido But Life Is Beautiful is not about Nazis and Fascists but about the human spirit It is about rescuing whatever is good and hopeful from the wreckage of dreams About hope for the future About the necessary human conviction or delusion that things will be better for our children than they are right now 26 Michael Wilmington of the Chicago Tribune gave the movie a score of 100 100 calling it A deeply moving blend of cold terror and rapturous hilarity Lovingly crafted by Italy s top comedian and most popular filmmaker it s that rare comedy that takes on a daring and ambitious subject and proves worthy of it 27 Richard Schickel writing for Time argued There are references to mass extermination but that brutal reality is never vividly presented He concluded that even a hint of the truth about the Holocaust would crush Benigni s comedy 28 Owen Gleiberman of Entertainment Weekly gave it a B calling it undeniably some sort of feat the first feel good Holocaust weepie It s been a long time coming However Glieberman stated There s only one problem As shot it looks like a game 29 Michael O Sullivan writing for The Washington Post called it sad funny and haunting 30 Nell Minow of Common Sense Media gave it 5 5 stars saying This magnificent film gives us a glimpse of the Holocaust but it is really about love and the indomitability of humanity even in the midst of inhumanity 31 Janet Maslin wrote in The New York Times that the film took a colossal amount of gall but because Mr Benigni can be heart rending without a trace of the maudlin it works 18 The Los Angeles Times s Kenneth Turan noted the film had some furious opposition at Cannes but said what is surprising about this unlikely film is that it succeeds as well as it does Its sentiment is inescapable but genuine poignancy and pathos are also present and an overarching sincerity is visible too 32 David Rooney of Variety said the film had mixed results with surprising depth and poignancy in Benigni s performance but visually rather flat camera work by Tonino Delli Colli 16 In 2002 BBC critic Tom Dawson wrote the film is presumably intended as a tribute to the powers of imagination innocence and love in the most harrowing of circumstances but Benigni s sentimental fantasy diminishes the suffering of Holocaust victims 33 In 2006 Jewish American comedic filmmaker Mel Brooks spoke negatively of the film in Der Spiegel saying it trivialized the suffering in concentration camps 34 By contrast Nobel Laureate Imre Kertesz argues that those who take the film to be a comedy rather than a tragedy have missed the point of the film He draws attention to what he terms Holocaust conformism in cinema to rebuff detractors of Life Is Beautiful 35 Israeli screenwriter author and art critic Kobi Niv published the book Life is Beautiful But Not for Jews in 2000 in Hebrew and an English translation in 2003 in which he analyzed the movie from a highly critical perspective suggesting that the film s underlining narrative is harmful for Jews 36 Another academic analysis of the movie was undertaken by Ilona Klein who analyzes the film s success and refers to the ambiguous themes hidden within Klein suggests that one of the reasons the movie was so successful was its appeal of sentimental optimism At the same time she points out that Miramax s hype billed this film as a fable about love family and the power of imagination yet most Jewish victims of the Nazis Final Solution were loving concerned devoted parents No amount of love family and power of imagination helped their children survive the gas chambers 37 David Sterritt of The Christian Science Monitor highlighted that Enthusiasm for the movie has not been as unanimous as its ad campaign suggests however and audiences would do well to ponder its implicit attitudes He pointed out that the movie implicitly suggests quick witted confidence was a match for the terrors of fascist death camps then added that Benigni s fable ultimately obscures the human and historical events it sets out to illuminate 38 Accolades Edit Life is Beautiful was shown at the 1998 Cannes Film Festival and went on to win the Grand Prix 39 Upon receiving the award Benigni kissed the feet of jury president Martin Scorsese 32 At the 71st Academy Awards Benigni won Best Actor for his role with the film winning two more awards for Best Music Original Dramatic Score and Best Foreign Language Film 40 Benigni jumped on top of the seats as he made his way to the stage to accept his first award and upon accepting his second said This is a terrible mistake because I used up all my English 41 Award Date of ceremony Category Recipient s Result Ref s Academy Awards 21 March 1999 Best Picture Elda Ferri and Gianluigi Braschi Nominated 40 Best Director Roberto Benigni NominatedBest Actor WonBest Original Screenplay Roberto Benigni and Vincenzo Cerami NominatedBest Foreign Language Film Italy WonBest Film Editing Simona Paggi NominatedBest Music Original Dramatic Score Nicola Piovani WonAustralian Film Institute Awards 1999 Best Foreign Film Roberto Benigni Elda Ferri and Gianluigi Braschi Won 42 BAFTA Awards 11 April 1999 Best Film Not in the English Language Roberto Benigni Elda Ferri and Gianluigi Braschi Nominated 43 Best Film Original Screenplay Writing Roberto Benigni and Vincenzo Cerami NominatedBest Film Actor in a Leading Role Roberto Benigni WonCannes Film Festival 13 24 May 1998 Grand Prize Won 39 Cesar Awards 6 March 1999 Best Foreign Film Won 44 Critics Choice Awards 19 January 1999 Best Movie Nominated 45 Best Movie in a Foreign Language Roberto Benigni WonDavid di Donatello Awards 1998 Best Film Won 46 Best Director WonBest Producer Elda Ferri and Gianluigi Braschi WonBest Script Roberto Benigni and Vincenzo Cerami WonBest Actor in a Leading Role Roberto Benigni WonBest Actor in a Supporting Role Sergio Bustric NominatedBest Cinematography Tonino Delli Colli WonBest Editing Simona Paggi NominatedBest Sound Tullio Morganti NominatedBest Score Nicola Piovani NominatedBest Production Design Danilo Donati WonBest Costumes WonScholars Jury David Roberto Benigni WonEuropean Film Awards 7 December 1998 Best Film Elda Ferri and Gianluigi Braschi Won 47 Best Leading Actor Roberto Benigni WonJerusalem Film Festival 1998 Best Jewish Experience Won 12 Screen Actors Guild Awards 7 March 1999 Outstanding Performance by an Ensemble in a Motion Picture Cast Nominated 48 Outstanding Performance by a Male Actor in a Leading Role in a Motion Picture Roberto Benigni WonToronto International Film Festival 10 19 September 1998 People s Choice Award Won 17 Soundtrack EditMain article Life Is Beautiful soundtrack The original score to the film was composed by Nicola Piovani 16 with the exception of a classical piece which figures prominently the Barcarolle by Jacques Offenbach and A Musical Joke by Mozart The soundtrack album won the Academy Award for Best Original Dramatic Score 40 and was nominated for a Grammy Award Best Instrumental Composition Written for a Motion Picture Television or Other Visual Media but lost to the score of A Bug s Life See also EditList of submissions to the 71st Academy Awards for Best Foreign Language Film List of Italian submissions for the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language FilmReferences Edit La Vita E Bella Life Is Beautiful 12A Buena Vista International British Board of Film Classification 26 November 1998 Archived from the original on 31 December 2013 Retrieved 23 August 2013 Box Office Information for Life is Beautiful The Wrap Archived from the original on 19 June 2013 Retrieved 4 April 2013 a b Life is Beautiful Box Office Mojo Archived from the original on 6 June 2016 Retrieved 11 September 2016 Top grossing foreign films in the US RTT News John Adriana 21 September 2016 Top 10 Highest Grossing Non English Movies of All Time Wonderslist Retrieved 7 January 2018 1998 Archives National Board of Review Roberto Benigni Dante is Beautiful Mary Manning Squires Nick 11 July 2011 Life Is Beautiful Nazi death camp survivor dies aged 91 The Daily Telegraph Archived from the original on 23 March 2016 Retrieved 11 September 2016 Paradiso Stefania 10 July 2011 E morto Romeo Salmoni l uomo che ispiro Benigni per La vita e bella Un Mondo di Italiani Archived from the original on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 11 September 2016 Norden 2007 p 146 Piper 2003 p 12 a b c d Logan Brian 29 January 1999 Does this man really think the Holocaust was a big joke The Guardian Archived from the original on 24 September 2016 Retrieved 11 September 2016 a b Okwu Michael 23 October 1998 Life Is Beautiful through Roberto Benigni s eyes CNN Archived from the original on 18 September 2016 Retrieved 11 September 2016 a b c Stone Alan A 1 April 1999 Escape from Auschwitz Boston Review Archived from the original on 4 September 2016 Retrieved 11 September 2016 Warkentin Elizabeth 30 May 2016 Life truly is beautiful in Tuscany s underappreciated Arezzo The Globe and Mail Archived from the original on 12 September 2016 Retrieved 12 September 2016 a b c Rooney David 3 January 1998 Review Life Is Beautiful Variety Archived from the original on 5 March 2017 Retrieved 12 September 2016 a b Piper 2003 p 11 a b Maslin Janet 23 October 1998 Giving a Human and Humorous Face to Rearing a Boy Under Fascism The New York Times Archived from the original on 29 November 2016 Retrieved 11 September 2016 Benigni s Pinocchio Out With Subtitles 8 February 2003 Archived from the original on 21 November 2018 Retrieved 17 November 2018 Benigni audience da record oltre 16 milioni di spettatori La Repubblica 23 October 2001 Archived from the original on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 11 September 2016 Perren 2012 p 274 Checco Zalone supera Benigni tgcom24 mediaset it Archived from the original on 20 December 2016 Retrieved 11 September 2016 Foreign Language Box Office Mojo Archived from the original on 24 July 2010 Retrieved 11 September 2016 Carver Benedict Cox Dan 21 March 1999 Life shows there s life for foreign pix Variety Retrieved 4 September 2022 Life is Beautiful Rotten Tomatoes Archived from the original on 13 April 2011 Retrieved 26 December 2022 Ebert Roger 30 October 1998 Life Is Beautiful Rogerebert com Archived from the original on 25 September 2016 Retrieved 11 September 2016 Life is Beautiful Moviemonitor Schickel Richard 9 November 1998 Cinema Fascist Fable Time ISSN 0040 781X Retrieved 7 February 2022 Glieberman Owen 6 November 1998 Life Is Beautiful Entertainment Weekly Archived from the original on 18 November 2016 Retrieved 12 September 2016 O Sullivan Michael 30 October 1998 Life s Surprisingly Graceful Turn The Washington Post Archived from the original on 19 September 2016 Retrieved 11 September 2016 Life is Beautiful Common Sense Media 24 August 2009 a b Turan Kenneth 23 October 1998 The Improbable Success of Life Is Beautiful The Los Angeles Times Archived from the original on 5 March 2017 Retrieved 12 September 2016 Dawson Tom 6 June 2002 La Vita e Bella Life is Beautiful 1998 BBC Archived from the original on 26 July 2016 Retrieved 12 September 2016 Brooks Mel 16 March 2006 SPIEGEL Interview with Mel Brooks With Comedy We Can Rob Hitler of his Posthumous Power Spiegel Online Archived from the original on 10 June 2017 Retrieved 3 June 2017 MacKay John Kertesz Imre 1 April 2001 Who Owns Auschwitz The Yale Journal of Criticism 14 1 267 272 doi 10 1353 yale 2001 0010 ISSN 1080 6636 S2CID 145532698 Niv Ḳobi 2003 Life is beautiful but not for Jews another view of the film by Benigni 1st ed Landham Md Scarecrow Press ISBN 0 8108 4875 9 OCLC 52312653 Klein Ilona 2010 Life Is Beautiful Or Is It Asked Jakob the Liar Brigham Young University Scholars Archive Faculty Publications 3836 16 31 via BYU ScholarsArchive Life Is Beautiful Too Light For Heavy Subject Matter Christian Science Monitor 30 October 1998 ISSN 0882 7729 Retrieved 7 February 2022 a b Festival de Cannes Life is Beautiful festival cannes com Archived from the original on 18 January 2012 Retrieved 1 October 2009 a b c The 71st Academy Awards 1999 Nominees and Winners oscars org Archived from the original on 2 April 2015 Retrieved 20 October 2015 Higgins Bill 24 February 2012 How Life Is Beautiful s Roberto Benigni Stole the Oscars Show in 1999 The Hollywood Reporter Archived from the original on 12 October 2016 Retrieved 11 September 2016 1999 Winners amp Nominees AACTA org Archived from the original on 16 November 2016 Retrieved 11 September 2016 Lister David 11 April 1999 Good night at Baftas for anyone called Elizabeth The Independent Archived from the original on 5 March 2017 Retrieved 11 September 2016 Cesar du Meilleur film etranger Cesar AlloCine Archived from the original on 18 September 2016 Retrieved 11 September 2016 Clinton Paul 26 January 1999 Broadcast Film critics name Saving Private Ryan best film CNN Archived from the original on 5 March 2017 Retrieved 11 September 2016 La vita e bella Premi vinti 9 David di Donatello Archived from the original on 10 November 2016 Retrieved 11 September 2016 European Film Awards Winners 1998 European Film Academy Archived from the original on 12 October 2017 Retrieved 11 September 2016 Madigan Nick 7 March 1999 SAG tells Benigni Life is beautiful Variety Archived from the original on 5 March 2017 Retrieved 11 September 2016 Bibliography Edit Bullaro Grace Russo 2005 Beyond Life is Beautiful Comedy and Tragedy in the Cinema of Roberto Benigni Troubador Publishing Ltd ISBN 1 904744 83 4 Norden Martin F ed 2007 The Changing Face of Evil in Film and Television Amsterdam and New York Rodopi ISBN 978 9042023246 Perren Alisa 2012 Indie Inc Miramax and the Transformation of Hollywood in the 1990s University of Texas Press Piper Kerrie 2003 Life is Beautiful Pascal Press ISBN 1741250307 External links Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to Life Is Beautiful Life Is Beautiful at IMDb Life Is Beautiful at the TCM Movie Database Life Is Beautiful at AllMovie Life Is Beautiful at Box Office Mojo Life Is Beautiful at Metacritic Life Is Beautiful at Rotten Tomatoes Life Is Beautiful at the Arts amp Faith Top 100 Spiritually Significant Films list Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Life Is Beautiful amp oldid 1144960901, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.