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The Italian

Simple, well-acted, ever-so-slightly flawed
By CHRIS WANGLER  |  January 24, 2007
3.0 3.0 Stars

070126_italian_main
THE ITALIAN: Simple and well acted

At the outset of Andrei Kravchuk’s debut fictional feature, a wealthy Italian couple adopt a resilient six-year-old orphan named Vanya (Kolya Spiridonov). This would be an ideal scenario for any one of Russia’s 700,000-plus orphans, but “The Italian,” as he is quickly nicknamed, becomes determined to track down his birth mother. The outcome of this simple, well-acted, ever-so-slightly flawed tale is less important than the post-Soviet world it lays bare, one reminiscent of Lukas Moodysson’s Lilya 4Ever. Hopeless but not entirely inhumane, the orphanage is a dank, Dickensian place crammed full of prematurely old children who are destined for petty crime, prostitution, or sale by the cold-blooded, money-grubbing madam (Mariya Kuznetsova). The world outside is no better, but at least it offers Vanya the freedom to search, courageously and on his own terms, for a sense of home.

  Topics: Reviews , Lukas Moodysson
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