Learn to Speak Italian
Categories
 
Current Offers
Italian For Beginners [2002]
 
Italian For Beginners [2002]
The winner of a Silver Bear at the Berlin Film Festival, Italian for Beginners is the first film made under the Dogme rules of austerity (no artificial lighting, no extraneous music, no imported props, etc) to be directed by a woman, Danish director Lone Scherfig. It's set in a small Danish town where half-a-dozen awkward misfits (the newly arrived pastor, a recently bereaved hairdresser, an ex-footballer turned abrasive bar manager, a put-upon baker's assistant and so on) are drawn together by the shared activity of an Italian-language evening-class and--yes, you guessed it--start coming out of their shells and finding love.

This is a gentle, good-natured film, full of quirky dialogue and unforced humour. Scherfig derives a good deal of amusement from watching the gloomy, buttoned-up Danes gradually relaxing and expanding under the influence of their improved linguistic skills, and reaching out for happiness. (As usual in North European cinema, Italian equals everything that's spontaneous, life-loving and sexy.) True, the pro-togetherness message is banal, and the whole film's altogether a little too pat, especially in the final neat pairing-off and the way a couple of obstructive parents helpfully contrive to die just when they need to. Still, the freshness of the largely improvised performances, and Scherfig's affectionate regard for her characters, make for a film that's hard to dislike.

On the DVD: Italian for Beginners has no extras except the theatrical trailer. The transfer faithfully reproduces the mainly hand-held, digital video quality of the original. --Philip Kemp

Buying Options
£4.71 Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days  Add to Cart
 
£5.97 Usually dispatched within 1 to 3 weeks  Add to Cart
 
£19.86 Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days  Add to Cart
 
Similar Products
Customer Reviews for Italian For Beginners [2002]
Excellent! posted on 2008-11-19
This is one of the best romcoms I've ever seen (and I have seen quite a few!). An ensemble film, with all actors just perfect for their roles. This film has a unique combination of realism and tenderness, both very true and un-hollywoodian, that makes you want to see it again and again...
 
Bittersweet story about lonely people posted on 2008-06-05
This film was billed as a comedy but, at least at first, there aren't many laughs. It starts with the separate, rather sad stories of six lonely people with troubled lives burdened with a lot of emotional baggage. Gradually the pair up as potential couples and progress to on/off relationships. All this doesn't sound very compelling, but the script, the director and, especially, the fine acting make the characters seem like real people for whom one feels sympathy and about whom one cares about the outcome. I can see why some reviewers were disappointed by the ending, but I was glad the way things turned out for the group.
An unsual film well-worth watching.
 
Tremendously dull posted on 2007-12-08
I got a bit further than another viewer but not much, after maybe 35-40 minutes of absolutely nothing happening but dull dull dull conversations, I stopped watching before I died of boredom.
 
A special memory posted on 2007-10-26
I have fond memories of first watching Italian for beginners five years ago. This film remains one of my favourites and always makes me feel connected when I feel lost. The characters are hopeful and vulnerable but are struggling to find their path in life. Adherence to the Dogma manifesto makes the storytelling sensitive and charming. Having first watched this film with a friend who has recently died, it will continue to be special to me and allow me to remember how we connected.
 
Depressing but insightful posted on 2007-10-20
Quirky this film certainly is, and it's also a rigorous example of the Dogme genre - but feelgood it isn't. I found it quite depressing and melancholy, though with some uplifting moments of genuine humour and a sweet ending, which almost jarred with the harsh realism of the rest of the film. Definitely worth watching though, as it makes such a pleasant change from artificial hollywood flicks.
 
Amazon Products
 
Related Sites  EasyGO Languages
Learn a language abroad. Study Spanish, study French, study Arabic and more abroad and experience the local culture.
Contact Us | Sitemap | Add Website | Advertiser Login
© 2004 - 2009  Learn to Speak Italian