Non pensarci (2007) Poster

(2007)

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8/10
Home ain't what it used to be
Chris Knipp6 June 2008
Stafano Nardini (Valerio Mastandrea) is nearly 36 and he's playing with a young punk group in Rome. Classically trained, he used to be on the covers of magazines, but the audience makes him feel old; his career seems to have stagnated. It's been four years that he's been working to bring out a record. He doesn't have a girlfriend or a real bed to sleep in: it's time to reconnect with the family he hasn't seen in a good long while.

When the lead singer gets injured at a concert, Stefano packs up his guitar in his battered car and drives back to Fellini's home town, Rimini, where the Nardinis run a substantial fruit-packing factory. It's a surprise to his parents and his brother and sister, who're all happy to see him. Soon he's deeply involved in all sorts of revelations and problems. All of a sudden he seems to be indispensable, which is pretty funny considering that as a rock musician, Stefano has long been the odd man out in his industrial family.

Things have changed at home since Stefano was last there. His father (Teco Celio), a cherubic little man, having had a heart attack some time back, now only plays golf. His mother spends lots of time with a trendy guru seeking peace in a "sciamanic journey" course. The running of the factory has fallen to brother Alberto (Giuseppe Battiston, of 'Bread and Tulips' and last year's Open Roads selection, Eugenio Cappuccio's 'One Out of Two'). A former star athlete who's now overweight, Alberto survives on manic energy and a variety of antidepressants. He's clearly at the end of his tether in more ways then one. As factory manager, Alberto has not been doing such a good job of it, apparently. The business is showing huge losses, everything is in hock, and the workers are owed three months' pay. Since their father isn't usually reporting to the factory any more, Alberto is doing everything he can to hide these facts from him. Meanwhile Alberto's also currently separated from his wife, and sees his two little children only on weekends. Later some of Stefano's and Alberto's male school friends decide they know the solution to Alberto's problems—and her work name is Nadine.

It's more than obvious that if Stefano thought he was returning to simpler, more idyllic life than he was living in Rome, he was pretty far off.

Stefano immediately shows himself to be a goof-up himself, since he goes joyriding with Alberto's two kids one afternoon in a parking lot and gets stopped by the cops. And this only underlines the family's and their friends' notion that Sefano's a misfit. In fact Stefano has had his wild, drug-laced years. But nonetheless at this point he gives every evidence of being more stable and perhaps more alert than his other family members, except maybe Michela (Anita Caprioli), his sister.

Trying to jolt his parents awake, Stefano impulsively tells them that Michela is a lesbian. She has given up on university studies and now focuses completely on her job caring for performing dolphins. She has a roommate, Laura.

A lot of Alberto's assumptions are wrong. During his stay in Rimini, he reconnects with old friends, some of whom can help, one of whom has had a nervous breakdown. He and Alberto work to resolve the factory's credit problems. This involves making nice with a young politician that they know, who seems to have a special friendship with Michela. In the end the solution is going to come from perhaps the least expected quarter.

'Don't Think About It'/'Non pensarci' is a film made up of mildly manic and often amusing set pieces that move us around among its multiple locations with a steady rhythm, focusing alternately on one family member or another. Of course there is a sense of urgency, especially in the life of Alberto— whose identity crisis Stefano can totally relate to. There's no essential logic to the narrative, but that's an important part of its charm. All the main characters are very simpatico and Mastrandrea and Battiston's are nicely delineated in this warm film whose appeal lies in the way it sees life as a work in progress. A musical sound track that ranges from Chopin to rock links sound to character. After the emotional repression of the Open Roads noir, 'The Girl by the Lake,' 'Don't Think About It,' wit its open-ended but celebratory ending, felt very appealing for its loose structure and humanity. Zanasi keeps things consistently light and amusing without descending into frivolity or silliness. I guess if 'Non pensarci' has a motto, it's this:

You can't give up your family (especially if you're Italian), but you don't have to take on all its problems.

Shown at the Open Roads: New Italian Cinema series at Lincoln Center June 2008, this is Zanasi's fourth feature.
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7/10
mismanaged money makes many go nuts but some learn a lesson and live on.
dr_araman5 April 2009
Warning: Spoilers
Every actor has done well in this movie and the direction and editing a re complemented by fine cinematography. An enjoyable drama and pleasant ending, despite difficult situations to many characters in the story. the dolphins add a nice break from the seriousness of the storyline and provide a soothing effect. In a surprise move the golf-playing patriarch provides the easy solution to the financial problem plaguing the family business, run by an inefficient team-head who doesn't like doing what needs to be done.

The movie doesn't disappoint us and is a family entertainment with some meaningful dialogue and pleasant outdoor shots. For those fed up with mafia movies and violence from Hollywood mega productions, this is a welcome change.
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10/10
A big breath of fresh air
Dr_Nightfly16 September 2007
I previewed this funny, ironic, human, moving movie at the Venice Film Festival 10 days ago.

I would have never even approached the theatre because, up until then, I had a personal loathing of Valerio Mastandrea, the actor in the protagonist's role. How wrong I was! Mastandrea delivers one of the most refreshing performances I have witnessed in a long time. The whole movie is interpreted by extremely credible actors. The result is impressive.

What pushed me to go and see it were the news in one of the Festival's dailies that, during a previous screening, it had received 23 applauses "open scene", during the projection - a very rare feat. I did not count the bursts of clapping from the audience during my screening, but the impression was that the number 23 was short of the quantity of exceptionally well crafted hilarious, comic, or ironic moments. Many more moments were worth a thought and special recognition to the scenario, directing and acting in the movie.

I simply could not believe that an Italian movie was so well accepted, and, notwithstanding my personal prejudice towards the main character's potential, I went with my partner - whose knowledge of the Italian language definitely undermined the chances for her to enjoy the film's jokes fully - and I saw her laugh just as many times as I did. This movie's antics obviously transcend the "lost in translation" syndrome.

I was so pleased that it was an Italian movie. Especially in comparison with the otherwise poor to appalling showing of other Italian productions.

To me, this is a very probable candidate for a Hollywood remake. Unfortunately, I feel it will not be until then that Italians go see and finally enjoy this story. I really do not know why the team who produced it did not enter it into the competition. I definitely think the jury would have regarded it as worth a mention.

Regarding Mastandrea, I feel I must apologize for my trouncing prejudices. His performance is reminiscent of the best moments of a master actor whose art we prematurely lost - Massimo Troisi - but without the Neapolitan connotation which possibly made his genius less understood in the northern part of Italy, or abroad. He moved me and the audience. He made us all laugh with a gesture, a glance, a detail. A laughter never directed at him or the other characters, but with him at the things and situations that anyone would feel they can share - or indeed do share in our not-so-extraordinary lives. He delivered the most credible "prodigal son" figure I have seen on screen, and did it all with a flair and irony which is unfortunately lost in most of the current production - whether Italian or international.

I loved all the bittersweet touches in the movie, from the speed bumps in front of his house, the speed radar in front of the ice cream parlour and its phenomenal use in the movie, up to the suspended ending which leaves every spectator with a free choice in themselves about how this story should end.

Maybe it is too early to call this "genius", but its simplicity and the directness with which this movie speaks to us is definitely very close to it. I hope that the "serious" critics do not oppose and that this movie can represent a bit of my country, a bit of the life of a "regular guy's life" of the 21st century in that strange "boot" of a nation, to other Film Festivals, including Academy Awards.

Go see this movie. It is good for your heart. It is good for your outlook on life. Just one day after seeing it, someone stole my PC. Of course I was not pleased, but "Non pensarci" ("Do not think about it") even provided me with a bit of solace which I sorely needed. Thank you.

PS - A disclaimer: I do not work for the producers, nor have any financial interest in the success of this movie. I just liked it intensely and immensely.
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10/10
More than fun
bojanmitrovic55516 December 2009
Warning: Spoilers
“The pain you are feeling inside is not real, it just seems like that…take this place for example, it just looks like an Irish pub...” We are in Rimini, Italy, the Never-Ever Land of the declining bourgeoisie where all things fall in place only when the elderly father waves the magic golf-bat, whilst anything that his (or not entirely his) middle-aged offspring might try to do proves to be completely pointless and futile. Playing in a punk-rock band, nursing dolphins, continuing the family business or running for Parliament are games for should-be adults still daydreaming of the things they will do when they grow up. Starting with the title (if you - “do not think about it” – someone else will) the movie is a wonderfully amusing funeral oration to responsibility. The lead character, Stefano, gets fed up with being a punk precisely in the moment of realizing what this means (no fun, loathing of the audience, standing alone etc.) and - of course - quits. He runs for cover to his rich parents and family that are, however, facing bankruptcy. Stefano’s transformation into an unwilling co-administrator of the family business is, fortunately, only a minor part of the plot. The three siblings (Stefano the rocker, Alberto the manager and Michaela the dolphin trainer) are all bruised by quitting, and Stefano’s influence within the family is based on the fact that no one really suspects he gave up as well. By contrast, the three firm characters in the general mayhem are: Nadine the hooker, Francesco the banker and Walter, the father. While Nadine’s episode is mostly a farcical bracket within the drama, Francesco seemingly provides for the Italian context. In the bank meeting he accuses Alberto (the manager-brother) of not being attentive enough in constructing a network of social relations that could have saved him from failure. In other words, what you do matters much less than who you know. It is in this context that the father, Walter, becomes much more interesting. Throughout the movie he is presented as a wonderful old man, peace loving and comprehensive with his children. Yet he ultimately resolves the family crisis by tapping on his social network. Furthermore, Francesco the banker names Walter as someone who, by contrast to Alberto, “sa come muoversi” (knows how to exploit his friendships). Among the questions the open ended final leaves us with, probably the most important is the one concerning Walter. How much is this elderly gentleman actually responsible for creating a mafia-like environment among the local entrepreneurs, the same environment that pushed his quality-searching son Alberto to the brink of failure?

Again fortunately, Zanasi does not seem to be an explicitly engaged director. The true mastery of the movie lies in wrapping the critique of the Italian mafia gerontocracy in the bitter-sweet coat of family relationships, communication problems and small-town social dynamics. The end result is that, above all, the movie is fun. Much more than this review.
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