Tag Archives: Luigi Comencini

Incompresso (Luigi Comencini, 1966).

A beautiful film about childhood, quite restrained in its telling but very successful as a tearjerker. The film begins with the British Consul in Florence (Anthony Quayle) at his wife’s deathbed deciding how he’s going to tell the news to his children. He decides on telling the oldest, Andrew, who he feels can handle it, but not the youngest, Miles, who is not yet in school and, in his view, more sensitive, like his mother. This decision results in structural miscommunication in this otherwise loving family to the point that Andrew, who dearly loves his father, gets so little attention that he begins to feel unwanted. According to Michel Ciment in one of the extras, the film was damned at Cannes for being too popular. Ciment offers an interesting critique of film critics arguing that they devote too much time to theme and too little to mise-en-scene. He argues that opera is melodrama and critics of opera would never think of restricting their critique to the libretto, yet how film critics often damn melodrama without dealing seriously with the direction, which Ciment finds to be perfect in INCOMPRESSO, as do I. Milo, the younger son is depicted with all the freedom from restraint that Tootie is in MEET ME IN ST. LOUIS, just as sharp and equally capable of wickedness. The absent mother is figured regularly through the house the family inhabit, absent, but with constant reminders through décor, paintings, forgotten messages, and a much-valued recording of her reading Eliot’s THE LOVE SONG OF J. ALFRED PRUFROCK. The first scene had me welling, and in spite of all the humour in the film, I remained that way until the end, when the floodgates opened. David Cairns has an excellent video essay on the depiction of Childhood in Comencini films, A CHILD’S HEART. The film is based on a Victorian novel by Florence Montgomery published in 1869. It was remade in Hollywood as MISUNDERSTOOD (Jerry Schatzberg, 1983) with Gene Hackman in the Quayle part.

José Arroyo

Thinking Aloud About Film: DELITTO D’AMORE (Luigi Comencini, 1974).

DELITTO D’AMORE (Luigi Comencini, 1974), also known as CRIME OF LOVE or SOMEWHERE BEYOND LOVE in English, is along with VOLTATI EUGENIO (1980), my favourite of the Comencini films shown at this year’s Ritrovato in Bologna.

Two factory workers fall in love. He’s from a family of Anarchists from the North. She’s an immigrant from South. They both live with their families but she’s a woman so all her movements are monitored. They split up because she needs to be married in a Church whilst he can only consider City Hall. Factories spewing smoke is a constant background to the development of their romance.

In the accompanying podcast Richard and I discuss: how it is a MARXIST romance in which two factory workers fall in love even as the factory spews poison all over them (one of the titles considered for the film was LOVE AND POISON); how rare it is for a political film to deploy such a delicate tone, a mixture of humour/romance/enchantment; the relative rarity of having working class workers depicted so lovingly and glamorously (by Guliano Gemma and Stefania Sandrelli).

The film’s been compared to LOVE STORY (Arthur Hiller, 1970) and also ALI, FEAR EATS THE SOUL (Fassbinder, 1974). We bring up Visconti’s ROCCO E I SUOI FRATELLI (1960). None of the comparisons convey the humour, the romance, the enchantment that this very political film evokes. We hope we do in the podcast that follows:

The podcast may also be listened to here:

The podcast may also be listened to on: Spotify here: https://open.spotify.com/show/2zWZ7Egdy6xPCwHPHlOOaT

and on itunes here: https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/first-impressions-thinking-aloud-about-film/id1548559546

Many thanks to David Cairns for his help with this. He’s done a wonderful video essay on children in Comencini films called A CHILD’S HEART, that  may be found in the Radiance’s disc of Comencini’s INCOMPRESSO.  The article from SENSES OF CINEMA on the film that Richard refers to, The Aesthetics and Politics of Melodrama, Reconsidered: Delitto d’amore/ Crime of Love by Thomas Austin, may be found here.

José Arroyo