Certificate
15
Number of Discs
1
Country/Region of Manufacture
Italy
Director of Photography
Giuseppe Lanci
Reviews
New York Times - ...Touching....[A] calm, humane movie....It is a hushed contemplation of the kind of senseless, all-too-frequent tragedy that leaves the survivors reeling and speechless..., Total Film - ...[Moretti tells] his story with a freshness and quiet intensity that hooks you, draws you in and keeps you twitching on the line 'til the very end....The film teems with originality and detail..., Chicago Sun-Times - ...Very touching....THE SON'S ROOM has a relaxed tenderness and empathy....Sometimes in a quite ordinary way a director can reach out and touch us..., Sight and Sound - ...THE SON'S ROOM stands out for its simplicity and restraint....Nicola Piovani's score is a quiet, compassionate presence..., Entertainment Weekly - ...[The film offers] a heartfelt exploration of the means by which happiness repairs itself..., USA Today - ...THE SON'S ROOM stands apart for its raw, quiet emotion and its shattering sense of truth..., Los Angeles Times - ...Quietly moving because it touches on something real...
Additional Information
Nanni Moretti's extraordinary drama THE SON'S ROOM, which won the Palme D'Or at the 2001 Cannes Film Festival, tells the harrowing story of a once tight-knit, happy family having to come to terms with a devastating loss and get on with their lives. Nanni Moretti, the writer-director of the charming CARO DIARIO, which was based on his own life, has created this piece of fiction from scratch, but he nails it so well it is hard to believe it is not a documentary. Moretti, who not only stars in and directs the film but is also cowriter and coproducer, plays Giovanni, a happily married man with two wonderful children; he is also a psychoanalyst with a group of patients both hysterical and sad. He enjoys running through the streets of Ancona, but when he opts to make a rare house call one Sunday morning instead of going for a run with his son, tragedy strikes, and he can't help blaming himself and his choices. He starts having trouble listening to and caring about his patients, and he also distances himself from his wife, played magnificently by Laura Morante. One of the underlying themes of the film is the need to make--and break--scheduled appointments that threaten to overtake one's life with its potential for compulsive obsession; as Giovanni dreams of past scenes playing out differently, he can't help but think that if he had rearranged his schedule based on the importance and necessity of his appointments, his idyllic world might not have been turned upside down.
Movie/TV Title
The Son's Room
Composer
Nicola Piovani
Screenwriter
Heidrun Schleef, Linda Ferri, Nanni Moretti