the happy saint
by Douglas Messerli
Alice Rohrwacher (screenwriter and
director) Felice Lozarro (Happy as Lozarro) / 2018
Unlike the Scottish village, whose citizens joyously are brought back to
life for one day in each century, the Inviolataese work hard every day for the
bitter Marchesa Alfonsina De Luna (Nicoletta Braschi), the self-described
cigarette queen, who also raises other vegetables which help to make her rich,
while her citizenry are kept ignorant and in debt. Each month her overweight overseer (Natalino Balasso) arrives to declare each of them
guilty of spending far more than the amount of pay for their labors owed to
them, creating an indentured world that might almost match the Jim Crow US
South.
At the very lowest level of this horrible hierarchy is Lozarro, who is
never offered anything to eat at these celebratory occasions—and, in fact,
consumes no food throughout the film. He is the go-for of their world, the one
they order about to fetch up the tobacco leaves they pick from the fields, to
lift their crates, to carry off the crippled grandmother who appears to be his
only relative. At one point, Lozarro runs off to fix coffee for the field
workers only to discover, upon his return, that they have all wandered off.
Strangely, none of this abuse disturbs the happy Lozarro in the least.
He works endlessly and willingly, always with a smile pasted to his face. And
he is also one of the few villagers invited into the Marchesa’s house—for she
too makes use of his absolute servility—and it is there he meets her most
unhappy son, Tancredi (Luca Chikovani), who has been brought home after,
apparently, several debauched years, and is now locked away in the virginal
world of Inviolata.
The frail, young blond Tancredi, who appears to be suffering from
consumption, or, perhaps, is just suffering lung cancer from smoking too many
of his mother’s cigarettes (as he explains to the innocent Lozarro, “Every time
I cough, I need to smoke a cigarette.”) slyly befriends Lozarro and seduces him
into helping to pretend that he has been kidnapped in order to get the money to
escape her clutches.
Lozarro takes his new and perhaps only “friend” away to his version of
the Wuthering Heights’ Peniston Crag,
a high mountain crevice where he has secretly made his own place of escape.
Bringing his new friend there is as close to a sexual rendezvous that Lozarro
will ever encounter, and in his attempt to feed his new friend, who has now
moved into a deep ditch (a symbolic burial grounds), after Lozarro has fallen
into a “fever”—surely not just a sudden illness, but a psychological reaction
to his new-found friendship—results in this saint’s fall from a high cliff.
With both boys having now gone missing a maid calls the police, who
discover a village that in its horrific conditions that stands against all
Italian modern codes of living, clear out the town, arresting, presumably the
Marchessa who has created these insufferable conditions.
Most of the critics writing about this film, who I read, suggest that
there is now an incredibly sudden shift in the film, concerning which, as A.O.
Scott, for example, writes:
“Midway through, just as we’ve
accepted the semi-fantastical parameters of Lazzaro’s world — his half-secret
friendship with the Marchesa’s son, Tancredi (Luca Chikovani); his chaste
infatuation with a young woman named Antonia (Agnese Graziani) — our perspective
changes. We suddenly see the landscape from above and hear an ancient folk tale
in a woman’s voice, and the film takes a double swerve, into harsher realism
and more explicit magic.”
But, in truth, Rohrwacher takes us quite gently into to this new world
by suggesting that the police have ousted most of the previous Inviolata
tenants simply in order to save them, to allow them entry into the modern
world. Only Lozarro—who like Lazarus and a bit like Rip Van Winkle, wakes up
again into life, after having been sniffed out and rejected by a wolf (a major
metaphoric figure in this film) who refuses to eat him, declaring that he has
sniffed out a totally “honest man”—returns to the village to find thieves
removing whatever they might find of value in the Marchesa’s abandoned house.
If he frightens them, he still innocently leads them to her drawer of
“cutleries,” and even begs them for a ride into the urban future. When they
reject him, he walks into a world he might never have imagined. And it is a
wonderment to behold, as he discovers, still dressed in his light sweater and
loosely knit pants, huge power-lines and gigantic towers of communication.
The world he discovers in Milan and other northern cities is made up of
the same people of his small village, now, given their newly established
hierarchical roles, forced to steal and sell their gains in the underground.
Only there is now a very big difference: they have all aged terribly, almost
forgetting their past, while the happy Lozarro has remained ever young. Not
only do they, at first, not recognize him, they reject him—until Antonia, the
woman who was serenaded in the very first scenes of this film (now played by
Alba Rohrwacher, the director’s sister) recognizes him, and forces the others
to allow him into their own current metallic hovel.
Here, Lozarro, despite the same conditions, essentially, in which he has
suffered in the past, is still in love with life, eagerly willing to help out
with everything. But his sad re-encounter with Tancredi, where we perceive the
young blond now as an old, stringy-haired barfly, says everything. The wolves
have won, and the old world he knew is about to die.
Throughout the film, Lozarro is seen as
going into a kind of trance during lonely removals from the world in which he
exists during which he seems, despite everyone else’s perception of his
intelligence, to be considering things, to be evaluating a world in deep
concentration.
Near the end of the film, when his
fellow travelers suddenly hear a heavenly music that has left the local
cathedral simply to follow them, the innocent turns away again in deep thought.
They joke about returning to Inviolata to reclaim what is left to them as
squatters. But we know these now somewhat agèd street-folk will never be able
to reclaim their virgin state. And, so too, must Lozarro know that the past
cannot be reclaimed.
Yet he attempts just that, awkwardly
trying to enter a bank, setting off their alarms as he approaches through the
wrong door. Behaving, as he does always, rather oddly, the customers suddenly
determine that he is armed, and in terror, move away from him. When he
perceives their own odd behavior, he moves toward them, trying to explain to
himself why they are so fearful; all he wants, as he pleas the tellers, is that
everything left behind be returned the Tancredi—not, evidently, even a customer
of that particular bank.
When the terrified customers perceive the intruder’s innocence, and that
the gun they thought he was carrying is simply a slingshot, a gift of Tancredi,
they attack him, and one by one, beat him to the ground. The wolf reappears,
evidently now ready for his feast. By the time the police arrive, the “holy
innocent” is bleeding and appears to have died.
The movie leaves us with the notion
that, if he is to survive and come to life again, it can be only in our belief,
in our imagination. I wept for his death, as I would for Christ. Happiness is
such a rare thing.
Los Angeles, December 3, 2018
Reprinted from World Cinema Review (December 2018).




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