Unfolds like a novel full of characters we can't help but care about.
The Best of Youth (2005)
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Reviews Counted:60
Fresh:57
Rotten:3
Average Rating:8.3/10
Consensus: Earns its 6 hours running time by telling an engrossing story with compelling characters.
Theatrical Release:Mar 2, 2005 Limited
Synopsis: Spanning four decades, from the chaotic 1960s to the present, director Marco Tullio Giordana’s passionate epic THE BEST OF YOUTH follows two Italian brothers through some of the most tumultuous... Spanning four decades, from the chaotic 1960s to the present, director Marco Tullio Giordana’s passionate epic THE BEST OF YOUTH follows two Italian brothers through some of the most tumultuous events of recent Italian history. In a final period of hopeful innocence, free-spirited Nicola (Luigi Lo Cascio) travels the world and settles for a life as a successful psychiatrist, while his tragically introverted and idealist brother Matteo (Alessio Boni) joins the Italian police with the hope of righting society’s wrongs. Their politics and personalities are inextricably intertwined as the world around them violently shifts and they are pushed together and pulled apart by the tides of history and their own divergent dreams. [More]
Starring: Luigi Lo Cascio, Alessio Boni, Adriana Asti, Sonia Bergamasco
Starring: Luigi Lo Cascio, Alessio Boni, Adriana Asti, Sonia Bergamasco, Maya Sansa, Andrea Tidona, Fabrizio Gifuni, Jasmine Trinca
Director: Marco Tullio Giordana
Director: Marco Tullio Giordana
Screenwriter: Stefano Rulli, Sandro Petraglia
Producer: Angelo Barbagallo
Studio: Miramax Films
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Release:
Feb 7, 2006
Reviews for The Best of Youth
When the movie concludes, you can talk about these characters as if you actually know them -- which won't be far from the truth.
Few films have ever made better use of combining social and political history with romantic melodrama and suspense.
Best of Youth has the textures and depth of characterization of a great novel.
Its point is this: That every nation, like a family, is made up of many people who are often at odds with one another, but that ultimately, we are all one.
For six hours that seemed more like two, I was wrapped up in a human drama that was also a historical drama and a genuine wonder of filmmaking.
Despite many charming elements, this movie is not an example of good storytelling.
A brilliant, sprawling piece of cinematic art, and perhaps the best film of the year.
This film is either a profound investigation of recent Italian history and a loving look at the national psyche -- warts, poetry and all -- or else it's a really superb soap opera.
In the end, you'll be savouring an emotion not often engendered by film: tranquillity, a calm acceptance, tinged with joy and flecked with sadness, of life's up-and-down journey.
Giordana's redemptive vision provides a sense of discovery and a well of hope in the most devastating of troubles, and beautiful surprises in love, friendship and family.
The Best of Youth runs, though never dawdles, for an easy six hours, with barely a false note.
By the end of the film, it's as if I know these people, and I want to sit with them again for a few hours. Or six.
So in-depth, so appealing, so easy to sit through and so anomalously grand scale that few who see it will ever forget it.
I dropped outside of time and was carried along by the narrative flow; when the film was over, I had no particular desire to leave the theater, and would happily have stayed another three hours.
Its storytelling style is as close to the novel form as you'll find on film, both a strengh and a weakness.
A major cinema event of the year, a masterpiece of Italian film traditions in social/political realism and historical family epic.
Latest News for The Best of Youth
April 05, 2006:
Breaking News: Movies Not Screened For Critics Aren't Very Good
After some furious debate over David Germain's discussion of films "not screened for critics," RT takes a look at the Tomatometers and respective B.O. performances of... More...
December 13, 2005:
Awards Season Gets Rolling with Crix Picks
If you're a fan of the late-year awards season, be sure to add Movie City News to your hit list, because they deliver some consistently excellent coverage. Mid-December is when... More...
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