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Happy as Lazzaro

Lazzaro felice

  • Status: Released
  • 31-05-2018
  • Runtime: 128 min
  • Score: 7.401
  • Vote count: 725

Purehearted teen Lazzaro is content living as a sharecropper in rural Italy, but an unlikely friendship with the marquise’s son will change his world.

Adriano Tardiolo

Lazzaro

Agnese Graziani

Antonia (young)

Luke Chikovani

Tancredi (young)

Alba Rohrwacher

Antonia

Sergi López

Ultimo

Tommaso Ragno

Tancredi

Natalino Balasso

Nicola

Nicoletta Braschi

Marchesa Alfonsina De Luna

Carlo Massimino

Pippo

Daria Pascal Attolini

Maria Grazia (Adult)

Maddalena Baiocco

Stefania

Giulia Caccavello

Teresa

Annunziata Capretto

Natalina anziana

Alessandro Genovesi

Maresciallo

Davide Denci

Appuntato

Edoardo Montalto

Pippo (young)

Leonardo Nigro

Gala Othero Winter

Stefania

Iris Pulvano

Natalina (adult)

Ettore Scarpa

Maresciallo

Pasqualina Scuncia

Suora

Carlo Tarmati

Carletto

Pascal Tréguy

Head animal trainer

Daria Deflorian

Donna Truffata

Elisabetta Rocchetti

Teresa (adult)

Luciano Vergaro

Catirre adulto

Annibale De Luca

Catirre anziano

Giuseppe Corsini

Ardito adulto

Marcello Duranti

Ardito anziano

Marco Donno

Don Severino

Nicola Sorci

Giuseppe

Sofia Stangherlin

Mariagrazia

Silvia Lucarini

Mariù (young)

Cinzia de Luca

Mariù (adult)

Lucia Centoscudi

Grandmother Agostina

Anita Crucitti

Assuntina

David Bennent

Swiss engineer

Antonio Salines

Nicola anziano

SWITCH.

‘Happy as Lazzaro’ comes and goes like an airy fable but doesn’t make as much of an impact as it wants to. Through a lack of convincing and earned pivot, its first half in realism drags down the escapism it yearns for in its second half. Its ambition is to be commended and is definitely a film that deserves to be seen, but as a whole is just verging on greatness. - Ashley Teresa Read Ashley's full article... https://www.maketheswitch.com.au/article/review-happy-as-lazzaro-more-than-meets-the-eye

BornKnight

A tale (or fable?) of social commentary by directress and writer Alice Rohrwacher (that I first knew in the short "Le Pupille") in rural Italy with touches of anti capitalism and class division, where sharecroppers live, without knowing their semi-slavery state because of lack of knowledge. Lazzaro the protagonist, is an innocent character that is happy to make others happy, in the pureness of his heart. He doesn't know who is his father of mother just who is maybe his grandmother. There are very few signs of when this passes you can guess the 60 or 70's till later you see a cellphone of the 90's. So this is the condition that those people lives. They live under Marchesa Alfonsina De Luna state till one day Lazzaro meets the rebellious son of her, Tancredi, that wants to live away from the rot of his bankrupt family, so he devise a plan. A plan that unwillingly ends ends with and event that throws Lazzaro in the future 20 to 30 years ahead. By chance or destiny he meet robbers in the now decadent rural mansion (not knowing that they are people of his past "family") and in the city where he is recognized by an old female friend (the role is played by the older sister of Rohrwacher, Alba) - the only one that sees the miracle of him not ageing anything at all (and not all broken and bloody by the event that happened so many years ago, not seen by anyone). In this urban future he ends up living within the same ignorant and individualist clan (with some exceptions) and ends up meeting by chance the Baroness son again, decadent as ever in his dreams of richness that broke his spirit. Not telling the end after all this spoilers, but it is sad to see Lazzaro so pure treated as nothing, unhappy by his friend status, and trying to correct things in a wrong way in his innocency (no, it doesn't have an happy ending). A movie that may not be for everyone but that shines to see such saintness and pureness of heart among our society. Good cinematography and choice of colors, with Kodak Super 16mm film by cinematographer DP Hélène Louvart AFC and good acting by the protagonist, the newcomer Adriano Tardiolo. I would score this one a 8.0 out of 10.0 / A-.