various and nefarious forms of love
by
Douglas Messerli
Marco
Filiberti (screenwriter and director), Il
compleanno (David's Birthday) / 2009
Visiting
her brother’s box during the intermission, Shary convinces Leonard to join the
quartet on their annual vacation spot at a beach house at the foot of Mount
Circeo, a promontory of a small archipelago of four islands, Ponza, Palmarola,
Zannone, and Gavi off the southwest of Italy.
Shary
is an intelligent and forceful woman who is married to the man-child Diego, a
macho fool who has played little part in raising their now teenage son, and who
instead of seeking out his own career has simply given into his father’s
demands and joined his firm where he is quite unhappily employed. His lack of
sophistication is made evident even in the earliest of scenes when Matteo
argues there is too much Schopenhauer in Wagner’s opera, Diego responding “Where?”
while the others giggle in response. Because of his childlike behavior and his
lack of intellectual pursuits he is jealous of his friend Matteo and somewhat
unhappy also in his marriage, since Shary has devoted most of her attention to
raising their son David, placing him in a good university in New York City.
I should also add that in his selfish and
childish behavior Diego has been regularly unfaithful to Shary who has invested
her love in David and Leonard. Still, when the two join in sex most evenings,
it is with lust and passion, while Matteo and Francesca only occasionally
have sex, which sometimes seems to almost mock a rape of the someone frigid
Francesca.
David, returning to Italy after several
years for the summer, also plans to join the quartet and his uncle Leonard.
For his part Leonard is presented rather
vaguely; all we really know about him is that he has lost his wife Isabelle,
whom apparently he passionately adored, to suicide and is still suffering the
consequences.
Accordingly, these variously unhappy figures, represent the perfect mix for a melodramatic few weeks together, as if they wandered in from some Nordic country instead of being native to Rome. Indeed, the opera they attend in the first scene is, if not precisely Nordic, based of the Medieval Celtic romance reinterpreted by Richard Wagner in his Tristan and Isolde.
If nothing else that opera explains the
slow pace of this actually quite simply plotted film. And clearly it at the
heart of what happens to shift the entire focus away from the quartet once the
now truly handsome young boy, David arrives, now a truly beautiful grown teen (Thyago
Alves), such a stunning beauty, in fact, that he has already served as a model
for a swimwear company.
Yet the most fascinated of David’s admirers
turns out to be a man he has practically known as his uncle, Matteo, who is clearly
stunned by the beauty and from the moment he encounters him in their pool can barely
focus on anything else. He watches, gets drunk, pouts, and suffers long periods
of sexual frustration and guilt for the rest of this tale.
The strange behavior Matteo exhibits from
almost the moment he lays eyes on David causes deep tensions between all of the
adult vacationers, particularly Francesca who interprets his even greater
distance from her as being yet another sign of his intellectual hauteur.
Discovering the photos of David in
swimwear, Diego, always the macho fool, is outraged that his son has been
involved with such a feminine-like activity as modeling. He is quickly quieted
by Shary, who reminds him that he has played almost no part in his upbringing,
and whose course manners and narrow thinking are precisely what she has
determined to save David from in sending him away for a superior education. But
later he observes that his son abnormally turns away all the girls that he
seems to kiss without engaging in any normative sexual activity.
At first, only Shary perceives something going
on between her friend Matteo and her son, a suspicion that is quickly quieted,
however, when she also observes David kissing one of the eager young girls as
he momentary hangs out with the younger crowd on the islands.
That ride which quickly shifts from simple
touches, to a deep bodily embracement by the rider of the driver makes it
rather apparent that David is searching for the love not only of a sort of
missing father, but of men in general.
And so begins an almost jealous stalking
of David by the now head-over-heels in love Matteo, who although at moments
painfully attempts to keep his distance, simply cannot control his emotions,
like Tristan fallen in love with his gay version of Isolde.
On
the beach he spots his patient who has been telling him of her hatred of her
daughter, only to discover that she has been lying, that her child, in fact, is
a mentally challenged boy with whom she performs a nearly incestuous
relationship, not so very different from that of Shary and David’s.
Leonard, it is hinted, may have actually
been involved in his beloved Isabelle’s death, and hints as much to Matteo that
he may have actually killed her in his veiled confession of having done
something terribly wrong in the past that he will forever regret, appearing at
the same time to caution Matteo from continuing what has perceived is occurring
between him and David.
About to leave for Sicily, he implores David
to join him, perhaps just to lure him away from the dangers of Matteo’s love,
but maybe because he himself is attracted to him. We have only to wonder
whether he might not have killed his suicidal wife, who had already tried to
kill herself several times, in order to free himself to be able to seek out
another relationship, perhaps also homosexual. It is clear that David is quite attracted
to him, and he is, after all, a quite comely man.
David seems eager to join his real uncle,
but his birthday is coming up and he has promised to celebrate it with his
mother, father, and their friends, assuring Leonard that he will soon after
join him in Sicily.
But we also know that he is still
intrigued by Matteo, perhaps even equally compelled—as if he too has taken a
love potion—to play out the emotions between them.
By now our psychological melodrama has
transmuted into an entirely different genre, an operatic tragedy at the very
moment that all the occupants of the villa, save our loving couple, have gone
shopping for David’s birthday party.
Francesca, having finished buying the
birthday cake, however, returns before the others. Having forgotten her keys,
she cannot enter the building from the front gate, but most enter from the wing
in which David’s bedroom is located. Hearing the groans of lovemaking, she
opens his bedroom door to observe her husband ejaculating in the young boy’s
ass.
Rushing out of the building with her
husband running after her naked, she races into the street only to be
immediately struck down and killed by an automobile—nicely removing her from
the scene.
A day or so later, Shary, Diego, David,
and Matteo are sitting around the communal table, all of them still in shock
over what has occurred. Shary quietly directs a question to Matteo: where was
he when Francesca was killed?
If at least the gay men do not die in this
version of impermissible and still rather unfullfilled love, we nonetheless
feel the whole weight of Italian machismo in this now tragic cinematic tale.
Like Leonard, Matteo and David both will perhaps have to face their intense
guilt for having gone outside the cultural boundaries of love, even though Filiberti
has made clear in his slow telling just how various and nefarious love is
between all the individuals portrayed in his film. In this work there is no
such thing as a pure and innocent form of love.
Los
Angeles, January 5, 2026
Reprinted
from My Queer Cinema blog (January 2026).







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