REVIEW: DVD Release: Life Is Beautiful























Film: Life Is Beautiful
Release date: 22nd January 2001
Certificate: PG
Running time: 122 mins
Director: Roberto Benigni
Starring: Roberto Benigni, Nicoletta Braschi, Giorgio Cantarini, Giustino Durano, Sergio Bini Bustric
Genre: Comedy/Drama/Romance/War
Studio: Miramax
Format: DVD
Country: Italy

Winning three Academy Awards, Life Is Beautiful was, for the most part, considered a great achievement by many critics. That's not to say it came without some harsh criticism from a few, who considered mixing comedy with themes such as the holocaust to be in bad taste. Life Is Beautiful is a film of two parts, opening with a light-hearted, comic first act, before moving into much darker territory. The film's second half explores the human spirit and its ability to survive, even in the face of one of the harshest environments imaginable - a German death camp.

The film is directed and co-written by Roberto Benigni, who also stars as Guido, a Jewish hotel waiter in 1930s Italy. Guido sports a larger-than-life personality, using his humorous disposition to free himself from many a sticky situation, and befriend those he meets on his adventures. Arriving in a new town, he quickly becomes infatuated with a beautiful woman named Dora (Nicoletta Braschi, Benigni's real-life wife), who is engaged to the town clerk. Dora soon falls for his charms, opting to leave her fascist fiancé for Guido.

Years pass, and Guido and Dora have a 5-year-old son named Joshua (Giorgio Cantarini). But there are stark differences to the town we witness earlier in the film. It's 1945, nearing the end of the war, and anti-Semitic graffiti adorns Guido's bookshop. As the town's Jews are rounded up and forced onto cramped trains, Guido, with his inexhaustible positive outlook on life, instinctively tries to turn the traumatic events into a game to comfort his son, Joshua.

Arriving at the death camp, Guido offers to stand as translator for one of the German guards, despite not being able to speak a single word of German. Guido seizes the opportunity to create an elaborate game for his son, explaining that the first person to reach 1000 points will be awarded a tank (not a toy tank but a real one). By creating such a fiction for his son, Guido is able to shield Joshua from the brutal realities of the death camp, laughing off suggestions that the German's are gassing Jews and turning them into soap.

Whilst Guido struggles with his son, he is also aware that his wife (who is not Jewish but insists on being taken to the camp along with her family) is imprisoned in another section of the camp. Guido juggles his responsibilities toward his son, whilst attempting to contact the woman he loves via any means at his disposal…


Life Is Beautiful is certainly a unique film, but, as some critics have asked, is this unique mix of themes necessarily a good thing? Roberto Benigni offers up some wonderfully comedic moments - that cannot be disputed. Guido offers a positive outlook on life that is certain to warm the hearts of many viewers. But what truly makes this film such an achievement is its ability to show that the human spirit can prevail in even the harshest of environments.

Life Is Beautiful is not a film about the holocaust - if it were, it would be a failure. The film is an exploration of a man’s ability to overcome extreme hardship. It achieves this, quite masterfully, by presenting us with the most high-spirited character imaginable, and throwing him into an unimaginably soul destroying environment.

Despite the film's comic outlook on the world, Life Is Beautiful respectfully handles its sensitive subject material. It never attempts to make wide, sweeping statements about the holocaust but, from the very outset, presents itself as an exploration of the human character.

Whilst there's a definite contrast between each half of the film, both complement each other perfectly. The first half offers some colourful, physical comedy, whilst initiating and developing relationships which are crucial to the latter half of the film. Sure, the film's second half features many comic moments, but we never forget the relationships forged in the film's first act and, as a result, truly sympathise with the characters as they are separated and forced into the German death camp.

The film's characters are vibrant and loveable, and there are wonderful performances from the entire cast, most notably Roberto Benigni and his onscreen son, Giorgio Cantarini. The film's memorable and witty dialogue only adds to the impressive performances, truly bringing the film to life.


Given what Benigni set out to achieve, he was right to mix light-hearted comedy with such dark themes. There are so many places where Benigni could have gone wrong with Life Is Beautiful, but he pulls it off perfectly. The film is unique, inspiring and deserves the credit it has been awarded by many critics. ME


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