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PREVIOUSLY PLAYED

De Sica’s
IL BOOM

Now Streaming

MUST END THURSDAY, MAY 27

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NY Times Critic's Pick

NY Times Critic's Pick

(1963, Vittorio De Sica) Amidst Italy’s “economic miracle” (“il boom”) of the early 1960s, everybody’s dancing to Chubby Checker’s “The Twist”… and getting filthy rich – everyone except archetypal Everyman loser Alberto Sordi (the great star of Mafioso, The White Sheik, I Vitelloni, etc., etc.), who’s in hock to his eyeballs. And everyone in Rome seems to know it, except his beloved status-proud wife Gianna Maria Canale. But then rich, rich matron Elena Nicolai (long-time La Scala mezzo stalwart tour-de-forcing in her first movie role) offers him a way out: enough lire to get out of debt – and to re-establish himself – in exchange for … No, not that. Biting satire made even blacker by Piero Piccioni’s persistently perky score (with help from American pop songs “Let’s Twist Again” and “Wheels”), and scripted by De Sica’s longtime collaborator Cesare Zavattini (ShoeshineThe Bicycle ThiefUmberto D., Gold of Naples, etc.). Il Boom was, inexplicably, never released in the United States, until Film Forum’s short run in 2017, and has never been released on home video or via streaming. The 4K restoration features a new translation and subtitles by Michael F. Moore and Bruce Goldstein. DCP restoration. Approx. 88 minutes. In Italian with English subtitles.

A RIALTO PICTURES RELEASE.

Virtual Cinema program supported by the Robert Gore Rifkind Foundation.

Reviews

“CRITIC’S PICK! Packed with trenchant observation and mordant wit!”
– Glenn Kenny, The New York Times

“Among the most savage and surreal of Italian comedies… De Sica and Zavattini draw both humor and pathos. It’s that combination of qualities — real people, caught in a surreal word, reacting in recognizable ways to a society rapidly spinning out of control — that makes Il Boom so vibrant, funny and disturbing.”
– Bilge Ebiri, The Village Voice. Read the full rave review here.

“A cathartic experience. For those who only know De Sica for the neorealist classics Shoeshine (1946), Bicycle Thieves (1949) and Umberto D. (1953) or the film he made just before Il BoomTwo Women (1962), this ostensible farce might be a surprise, but the tragic undercurrent that pervades the storyline fits well into [De Sica’s] longstanding left-wing sociopolitical concerns… At the climax of the story, Il Boom edges toward suspense, even sci-fi horror, and the actors never overplay the sequence as it becomes large-scale physical comedy, making the unexpected ending all the more poignant and somewhat chilling.”
– Eric Monder, Film Journal International

“Advances a shockingly brutal metaphor for the Sordi character’s need to maintain his wife’s luxurious lifestyle, as well as the demands of capitalism itself. An unusually barbed example of the commedia all’italiana.”
– J. Hoberman, New York Review of Books

“A BITTERSWEET SATIRE OF THE WIFE-SWAPPING, TWIST-DANCING, GET-RICH-QUICK LIFESTYLE! Perhaps it’s the current credit crunch that makes De Sica’s sardonic comedy, about uxorious husband Giovanni drowning in debt in the consumer excess of the early 1960s, feel newly resonant. Puzzlingly marginalized until recently in surveys of De Sica’s commedia all’italiana period, it’s underpinned by a deliriously mocking script from Zavattini and the callous, neon-shiny cityscapes of DP Armando Nannuzzi. As Giovanni, Alberto Sordi expertly blends clowning, contempt and desperation, wrapping his pleas to friends for loans in a gay and ghastly humor that turns a tennis match into an extended humiliation.”
– Kate Stables, Sight & Sound

 “A REAL MASTERPIECE!  A PROPHETIC FILM!  ONE OF THE MOST FUTURE-DIRECTED FILMS IN ALL OF ITALIAN CINEMA!”
– Walter Veltroni

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