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Sunday, April 20, 2025

Paolo Sorrentino's Naples

A double-bill of Paolo Sorrentino's first and newest features:

One Man Up (2001)

Parthenope (2024)

Soccer and Women

Tell me someone is an Italian filmmaker without telling me someone is an Italian filmmaker.

The presence of Soccer and Women in these two films emphasizes Paolo Sorrentino’s Italian credentials even though both aren’t present in all his films.

One Man Up and Parthenope are set in Sorrentino's birthplace of Naples, which since the late 1980s has been associated with soccer after Diego Maradona’s arrival in 1984 to play for Napoli. Therefore, it isn’t a surprise that soccer features in Sorrentino’s first and newest film. In addition, Sorrentino’s 2021 film Hand of God is named after Diego’s infamous 1986 handball goal against England in the World Cup. Soccer is absent in Parthenope until the finale when the film ends with Napoli’s 2023 title celebrations to emphasize a magical finale to the film and the soccer team’s fairytale title.

Soccer is front and center in One Man Up, a tale of two men who share the same name, Antonio Pisapia, and an unlucky fate. The two Antonios live different lives and have different careers but their paths intersect slightly when both their lives are in a state of decline. One Antonio (Tony played by Sorrentino regular Toni Servillo) is a pop singer who is still living on past fortunes despite having his reputation in tatters after a sex scandal. The other Antonio (Andrea Renzi) is a professional soccer player who career is ended early after injury. Since Antonio has only ever known soccer, he tries to become a soccer coach and has some new innovative tactical ideas but he soon learns how talent and a reputation aren’t enough to open all doors for him. Meanwhile, Tony is used to having all doors open for him all his life but soon finds out that those doors aren’t opening like they used to.

It is refreshing to see that Sorrentino once made a film like One Man Up as the film is devoid of any glossy visuals like those in his subsequent films, such as Il Divo (2008), The Great Beauty (2013). Also, unlike those other films, One Man Up is narrative and acting driven. The film also contains the most soccer related content than any of his other films.

The Male Gaze

The male gaze has featured in a few of of Sorrentino’s films especially Youth (2015) where the two elder characters (played by Michael Caine and Harvey Keitel) watch all the female characters with lustful eyes. That same male gaze is prominent in Parthenope, which covers a timeline from the birth of the titular character until her retirement. The film shows Parthenope’s birth in water and then the next time we see her, she is an 18-year-old (played by Celeste Dalla Porta) emerging from the water in a bikini while Sandri (Dario Aita) is in awe of her beauty. Sandri isn’t the only one taken by Parthenope but so is Raimondo (Daniele Rienzo). Raimondo is Parthenope’s brother and his inability to be with her is given a Greek tragedy treatment, a tragedy that hovers over the entire film.

The film jumps in time and depicts fragments of Parthenope’s life as she grows up, completes her education and pursues her career. A constant throughout her life is that men are bewitched by her beauty. This includes writers (with a cameo by Gary Oldman playing John Cheever), actors, producers, professors, politicians and priests. They all want her and she obliges and gives them a few moments of attention but no one can truly have her.

Of course, since this is a Sorrentino film, there is beauty to be found in each frame. One particular segment shows Naples on a hot sultry day, which allows audience to witness all the beauties of the city (both men and women), cat walking through the streets while the camera slows down. This slo-mo music video treatment recalls The Great Beauty and even Il Divo, a Sorrentino signature.

In the hands of another director Parthenope would have been a different film, one that would have given the material an actual narrative and emotional core. In Sorrentino’s hands, the film’s beauty is only on the surface. There is nothing beneath the surface but that isn’t anything new with his films. Films such as Il Divo, The Great Beauty and now Parthenope are visual eye candy made as extended music videos with some dialogues. In the case of The Great Beauty, that treatment worked wonders but doesn’t do justice to Parthenope.

Sunday, April 06, 2025

Top 10 Japanese Films of All Time

Japan has one of the richest cinematic histories in the world, which is why it is very hard to make a Top 10 Film list. Even though many Japanese classic movies are readily available, there are many that never got a proper release. That means, this list will change over the years as I come across previously unseen films. As it is, this list has changed many times over the last few decades. There was a time when Akira Kurosawa’s Rashomon was in the Top 3 and Kenji Mizoguchi’s films were in the Top 10.

This Top 10 could easily be filled with films from Kurosawa, Ozu and Mizoguchi. However, this list has now a handful of genre films in the Top 10 such as Kaiju (Gojira), thriller (Black Test Car) and crime (Kinji Fukasaku’s masterpiece). All these films are there on merit. Plus, I have cheated slightly and incorporated all three Human Condition parts and all five volumes of Battles Without Honor and Humanity.

Top 10 Japanese Films of all time:

1. Tokyo Story (1953, Yasujirô Ozu)

2. Ikiru (1952, Akira Kurosawa)

3. Seven Samurai (1954, Akira Kurosawa)

4. Godzilla (1954, Ishirô Honda)

5. Tampopo (185, Jûzô Itami)

6. Black Test Car (1962, Yasuzô Masumura)

7. The Human Condition Parts 1-3 (1959-61, Masaki Kobayashi)

8. Fires on the Plain (1959, Kon Ichikawa)

9. Battles Without Honor and Humanity vol 1-5 (1973-74, Kinji Fukasaku)

10. When a Woman Ascends the Stairs (1960, Mikio Naruse)

Honourable Mentions (in order of preference):

High and Low (1963, Akira Kurosawa)

Woman in the Dunes (1964, Hiroshi Teshigahara)

Like Father, Like Son (2013, Hirokazu Kore-eda)

Happy Hour (2015, Ryûsuke Hamaguchi)

My Neighbour Totoro (1988, Hayao Miyazaki)

Saturday, April 05, 2025

Top Iranian Films

This is an update to the previous Top 10 list.

Top 10 Iranian Films of All Time:

1. Taste of Cherry (1997, Abbas Kiarostami)
2. Crimson Gold (2003, Jafar Panahi)
3. Chess of the Wind (1976, Mohammad Reza Aslani)
4. The House is Black (1963, Forugh Farrokhzad)
5. Close-Up (1990, Abbas Kiarostami)
6. A Man of Integrity (2017, Mohammad Rasoulof)
7. A Separation (2011, Asghar Farhadi)
8. The Cow (1969, Dariush Mehrjui)
9. The Wind Will Carry Us (1999, Abbas Kiarostami)
10. Turtles can Fly (2004, Bahman Ghobadi)

Honourable Mentions (alphabetical order):

Be Calm and Count to Seven (2008, Ramtin Lavafipour)
Downpour (1972, Bahram Beyzaie)
Iron Island (2005, Mohammad Rasoulof)
It’s Winter (2006, Rafi Pitts)
Salam Cinema (1995, Mohsen Makhmalbaf)
This is not a Film (2011, Jafar Panahi)
A Time for Drunken Horses (2000, Bahman Ghobadi)
Where is the Friend’s House? (1987, Abbas Kiarostami)
The White Balloon (1995, Jafar Panahi)

Thursday, April 03, 2025

Best TV Shows of all Time

This is an updated list to last month’s Top 10.

My Top 10 TV Shows

1. Schitt’s Creek (Seasons 1-6)

Pure comedic gold! Perfection in each episode. This was a much-needed TV series to watch and rewatch during the early years of the pandemic from 2020-2021.

2. Twin Peaks Season 3 (The Return, 2017)

Some have argued this to be considered as a movie but I consider this as a TV show. This series became must watch TV for me as I tuned in weekly to see the newest glimpse into David Lynch’s enigmatic world.

3. Delhi Crime (Seasons 1-2)

Brilliantly acted and directed by Ritchie Mehta, both seasons use real life crimes (horrific in the case of Season 1) to create a tension filled nerve-wracking show.

4. Call My Agent (Seasons 1-4)

A witty and hilarious look at the chaotic world of talent agents who go to great lengths to meet their client’s ever increasing demands. This French series also gives a peek into some of the background scenarios involving film production, distribution and film festivals.

5. Sacred Games (Seasons 1-2)

A hearty mix of politics, crime, religion, Film industry, terrorism. Based on Vikram Chandra’s novel of the same name, this series brings together a stellar cast and directors (Vikramaditya Motwane and Anurag Kashyap). And it ends on a cliffhanger to end all cliffhangers. Please let there be a Season 3!

6. Ted Lasso (Seasons 1-3)

Like Schitt’s Creek, Ted Lasso was much needed during the Pandemic. A charming, delightful series that is perfectly acted.

7. Chernobyl

The series is based on the 1986 Nuclear reactor disaster but its 2019 release date foreshadowed the response of many nations towards the pandemic. This is because at its core, the series highlights the damage to society when poor planning and leadership are combined.

8. The Wire (Seasons 1-5)

This is one of those rare TV shows that uses the long form to properly create stories and characters which examine society both from a micro and macro level. The focus of all five seasons is the cat-mouse game between cops and drug dealers, with the series illustrating the logistics of drug dealing and police surveillance. The show also covers evolution of surveillance from pay phone and landlines to cell phones and the challenges that came with the technology change. Season 2 covers the port and how drugs are smuggled in, Season 3 focuses on local municipal politics, Season 4 highlights the school system and how funding impacts level of education while Season 5 parks itself in a newsroom and observes how journalists cover stories.

Many key characters are present in all 5 seasons even though some of them change jobs. This changing perspective of some characters and their different jobs smartly depicts how imbalances in society impact lives of people across all economic scales. The series covers an entire social, political, economic spectrum of Baltimore via this lens of drugs trade.

The power of the show weakens with each season and Season 4 and 5 are the weakest of the lot and contain many episodes/scenes which pale in comparison to Seasons 1-3.

9. Breaking Bad (Seasons 1-5)

10. Justified (Seasons 1-6) tied with Mad Men (Seasons 1-7)

Honourable mentions (in no particular order):

Severance (Season 1)

Farzi (Season 1)

The Family Man (Seasons 1-2)

Note: this is the Indian TV series that stars Manoj Bajpai

The White Lotus (Seasons 1-3)

Slow Horses (Seasons 1-4)