'La Chimera' review: Alice Rohrwacher's tombaroli tale is pure magic

politics2024-04-30 08:59:5766

When we talk about “movie magic,” the first thing that comes to mind is often something like the bikes achieving liftoff in “E.T.” But it applies no less to Alice Rohrwacher’s wondrous “La Chimera,” a grubbily transcendent folk tale of a film that finds its enchantment buried in the ground.

“Were you dreaming?” a train conductor asks the sleeping Arthur (Josh O’Connor), a distant, temperamental Brit in Italy with little more to his name than the rumpled cream-colored linen suit he wears. The answer is yes. Radiant memories of Arthur’s dead lover, Benjamina, haunt his dreams and propel him on a strange quest into the underground tombs of Tuscany.

A melancholy spell seems to hang over Arthur, who has a mystical gift for finding ancient relics. It’s the early 1980s. Arthur is returning home from a stint in jail for grave robbing. His homecoming is received like a hero’s return by the scruffy, carnivalesque band of tombaroli — tomb raiders who plunder Etruscan artifacts — who look on Arthur more like a prince than a destitute thief. They call him “maestro.”

Address of this article:http://mayotte.gigirondeau.com/article-96f599814.html

Popular

Chinese FM meets with chairman of MSC Foundation

As Kansas City Chiefs star Patrick Mahomes insists his 'dad bod' is 'great' for his NFL performance

Sluggish start for spring homebuying season as home sales fall in March with mortgage rates rising

Columbia University: Police arrest protesters who had set up pro

Stunning Michigan castle near Detroit hits market for $2.3M

Kate Beckinsale sheds light on her recent health woes as she wears 'tummy troubles survivor' T

Protesting Spanish professor 'warned university' over Confucius Institutes — Radio Free Asia

Natalie Portman shows Benjamin Millepied what he's missing in sexy see

LINKS