The Conformist (film)

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See also The Conformist for the novel.
The Conformist

Theatrical Poster
Directed by Bernardo Bertolucci
Produced by Giovanni Bertolucci
Maurizio Lodi-Fe
Written by Bernardo Bertolucci
Story:
Alberto Moravia
Starring Jean-Louis Trintignant
Stefania Sandrelli
Music by Georges Delerue
Cinematography Vittorio Storaro
Editing by Franco Arcalli
Distributed by Paramount Pictures
Release date(s) 22 October 1970
(USA and Italy)
Running time 107 minutes
Country Italy
France
West Germany
Language Italian
All Movie Guide profile
IMDb profile

The Conformist (Italian: Il Conformista) is a political film released in 1970 and directed by Bernardo Bertolucci. The screenplay was written by Bertolucci based on the novel of the same name written by Alberto Moravia.[1]

The film stars Jean-Louis Trintignant, Stefania Sandrelli, and others.

The picture was a co-production of Italian, French, and West German companies.

The films tells the story of an 1930s Italian coward, Marcello Clerici, who spends his life accommodating others and joins the Italian Fascist party as a way of disappearing into the crowd so that he can "belong."

Contents

[edit] Plot

Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow.

The movie opens with Marcello Clerici (Jean-Louis Trintignant) in Paris finalizing preparations to assassinate his former college professor, Luca Quadri (Enzo Tarascio).

Through a series of flashbacks we see him discussing his plans to marry a blind friend, his somewhat awkward attempts to join the secret police, his visit to his morphine-addicted mother at the family's decaying villa and to his unhinged father at an insane asylum.

In one of these flashbacks we see him as a boy during World War I, who finds himself isolated from society by his family's wealth. He has it better than the other children because he is regularly chauffered to school. Still, he is mistreated by his schoolmates and suffers a seduction attempt by the chauffer Lino (Pierre Clémenti) that he apparently kills in self-defence.

Another features a heated discussion over whether it is necessary to go to Confession in order to get married. He reluctantly agrees, and it is there that he admits to having committed many sins, including the single homosexual experience with Lino, killing him, premarital sex and not having confessed for 15 years or so. The priest is shocked but warns him how important it is to confess.

As a man in fascist Italy, he finds himself a cog in a great machine that keeps Italy going. Although he has gotten married, and gets to go to Paris for his honeymoon, he is also ordered to secure the assassination of his old friend and teacher, now an exile living in France.

The duty to follow orders becomes more urgent now that his teacher is a famed opponent to the fascist movement in 1930s Italy. When his superior officer Manganiello (Gastone Moschin) hands him a gun to make sure the job gets done, Marcello replies that he does not want to carry a gun but does not explain why. The conflict between marital love and political duty is made more pronounced here because it is a conflict between his duty to the woman he has married, a woman of high social standing, culture, and party loyalty, which is responsible for his salary, his sabbaticals, and his paychecks.

Since he was having a hard time pulling off the assassination at a big party that was thrown, more operatives are brought in from Italy to get the job done. This leads to a meandering auto drive through some snowy mountain peaks, with Marcello in a car closely trailing the professor's.

As he looks on, the operatives lure the professor from his stopped car and gang-stab him to death in a scene alluding to the murder of Julius Caesar. In an even more traumatic scene, the professor's wife Anna - whom Marcello has developed sexual feelings for - is chased through the woods and finally shot.

If there are any deep-seated feelings of guilt or remorse for killing the man who tried to rape him when he was a teenager, a surprise ending turns everything around, and gives the viewer reason to reflect; Marcello recognizes a person that he encounters in 1943 during the fall of fascist dictatorship as Lino and loudly accuses him of the assassination of Professor Quadri.

Spoilers end here.

[edit] Background

Accoring to the documentary Visions of Light the film is widely praised as a visual masterpiece. The film was photographed by Vittorio Storaro who used rich colours, authentic wardrobe of the 1930s, and a series of unusual camera angles and fluid camera movement.

The image of blowing leaves in The Conformist influenced a very similar scene in The Godfather, Part II by Francis Ford Coppola (1974).[2]

Bertolucci's cinematic style synthesizes expressionism and "fascist" film aesthetics. Its style can be compared with classic German films of the thirties, such as in Leni Riefenstahl's The Triumph of the Will and Fritz Lang's Metropolis.[3]

[edit] Filming locations

The filming locations included: Gare d'Orsay and Paris, France; Sant' Angelo Bridge, The Colosseum, both in Rome, Lazio, Italy.[4]

[edit] Exhibition

The film premiered at the Berlin Film Festival in June 1970. It opened on a wide release in Italy and the United States on October 22, 1970.

The first American release of the film was trimmed by five minutes compared to the Italian release. They were restored in the 1996 reissue[5]

The film was released in the United States on DVD by Paramount Home Entertainment on December 5, 2006. The DVD includes: the original theatrical version; The Rise of The Conformist: The Story, the Cast featurette; Shadow and Light: Filming The Conformist featurette; The Conformist: Breaking New Ground featurette.

[edit] Critical reception

The film was well received by the film critics and won many film awards.

Vincent Canby, the film critic for The New York Times liked Bernardo Bertolucci's screenplay and his directorial effort. He wrote, "Bernardo Bertolucci...has at last made a very middle-class, almost conventional movie that turns out to be one of the elegant surprises of the current New York Film Festival...It is also apparent in Bertolucci's cinematic style, which is so rich, poetic, and baroque that it is simply incapable of meaning only what it says...The movie is perfectly cast, from Trintignant and on down, including Pierre Clementi, who appears briefly as the wicked young man who makes a play for the young Marcello. The Conformist is flawed, perhaps, but those very flaws may make it Bertolucci's first commercially popular film, at least in Europe where there always seems to be a market for intelligent, upper middle-class decadence."[6]

Recently critic James Berardinelli wrote a review and heralded the film's look. He wrote, "Storaro and Bertolucci have fashioned a visual masterpiece in The Conformist, with some of the best use of light and shadow ever in a motion picture. This isn't just photography, it's art -- powerful, beautiful, and effective. There's a scene in the woods, with sunlight streaming between trees, that's breathtaking to behold -- and all the more stunning because of the brutal events that take place before this background."[7]

[edit] Cast and ratings

Ratings
Australia:  MA
Finland:  K-16
Spain:  18
Sweden:  15
United Kingdom:  X
United States:  R
  • Jean-Louis Trintignant as Marcello Clerici
  • Stefania Sandrelli as Giulia
  • Gastone Moschin as Manganiello
  • Enzo Tarascio as Professor Quadri
  • Fosco Giachetti as Il colonnello
  • José Quaglio as Italo
  • Dominique Sanda as Anna Quadri
  • Pierre Clémenti as Lino
  • Yvonne Sanson as Madre di Giulia
  • Giuseppe Addobbati as Padre di Marcello
  • Christian Aligny as Raoul
  • Carlo Gaddi as Hired Killer
  • Umberto Silvestri as Hired Killer
  • Furio Pellerani as Hired Killer

[edit] Awards

Wins

Nominations

[edit] Footnotes

  1. ^ The Conformist at the Internet Movie Database.
  2. ^ Visions of Light at the Internet Movie Database.
  3. ^ Klein, Jessi. Vassar College Department of Italian, 1996.
  4. ^ The Conformist, IMDb, ibid.
  5. ^ Erickson, Hal. All Movie Guide web site.
  6. ^ Canby, Vincent. The New York Times, film review, September 19, 1970.
  7. ^ Berardinelli, James. Reel Views, film review, 1994.

[edit] External links