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  • Kurosawa said a truly great movie should be enjoyable. That's certainly the case with "Il Sorpasso". You can watch it as a comical road movie. Or you can watch it as a snapshot of Italy's economic boom and carefree euphoria of the 1960s. Or you can watch it as a coming of age film. Or you can watch it as a profound philosophical commentary on living in the moment. One way or another, just watch it.

    "Bruno" (Vittorio Gassman in his first comic role) is a smooth talking, fun-loving, overgrown adolescent who lives his life hour by hour. By chance he encounters "Roberto" (Jean-Louis Trintignant) who is a shy, sheltered introvert. Somehow Bruno shanghais his reluctant young passenger into a cross country road trip. The rest is anybody's guess.

    Many have credited this film as kick starting the road movie genre. "Easy Rider" which came out in 1969 was directly influenced by this film, as are films as recent as "Sideways" (2004). Strangely enough, in the 70 years since "Il Sorpasso" I don't think any road movie nailed one particular defining quality as well as director Dino Risi did here. Although this film is very episodic, with characters fleeting in and out like in all road movies, Risi and the camera take extra care to give importance to even the most trivial characters. People who don't even say a word but whose presence imply entire stories unto themselves.

    This also adds a tremendous amount of interest and intrigue to this otherwise breezy presentation. The 2 German girls from the beginning... will they show up again? What about the waitress "Dark Eyes" who gave Roberto such a meaningful, lingering stare? Or Aunt Lidia, whom the camera graces through a window as they're driving off and she mournfully puts her hair back up in a bun... what's her story? The film is packed full of moments like that, and we realize that this movie isn't just about our 2 main characters and a handful of others, but it's about everyone whom the camera catches.

    You'll notice this almost immediately. The film begins in a completely deserted Rome where the 2 protagonists meet, and from there almost every person they meet is significant, all the way up to its memorable conclusion. Guaranteed you won't forget this film.
  • In the hot Roman summer law student Roberto casually runs into Bruno a strange but amusing man who is heading in his fancy sports car to a nearby beach to meet with friends. Bruno insists and Roberto decides to join him for the day. "Il Sorpasso" is about the relationship -of just that day- between two such a characters. Bruno thinks of nothing but enjoying life and is self confident, sort of a person that refuses to admit the pass of time (he's already in his forties and hasn't settled at all yet); Roberto, much younger, is a classic guy, sort of shy and obedient of his family's wishes about his future. At first Roberto doesn't approve of Bruno's idea of fun by insulting and humiliating people, but as they go together he turns into a sort of rebellion against his all planned and predictable life and shows a bit of admiration for the older man who doesn't go along with social premises.

    Shot in beautiful Italy in the sort of "pop" early sixties, "Il Sorpasso" is a wonderful film which deals with true life and true characters. Dino Risi carries the film perfectly and shows us a great variation of common real life characters that one way or another get involved with Bruno and Roberto. The movie appears clearly as a comedy -and a real amusing one too- but at the very end it turns into drama and makes you think a lot. Classical 60's Italian music fits perfect.

    Gassman is outstanding as the intelligent and sort of mean Bruno (I can't think of any other actor that could have played the role so perfectly) and Trintignant does a very good job too as the insecure and strcture minded Roberto.

    A great movie worth seeing. You'll sure enjoy it.
  • Bruno (Gassman) is bored beyond his considerable wits revving about in sports car around a deserted suburb of Rome when he comes across law student Roberto (Trintignant), a nerd if ever there was one, and promptly decides to bring Roberto out of his shell.

    Clearly, Bruno is moved by good intentions but they are far surpassed by his selfishness. Life really centers around Bruno and what he wants. He invites Roberto for a spin and to a meal at a smart restaurant, but poor Roberto has to foot the bill, and from that moment on you realize that Roberto has been ensnared in the spider's web of Bruno's charm-laden selfishness.

    Bruno is a dedicated womanizer, to the point of trying to pick up his own daughter, who he has not recognized, and who has to remind him of her status - but he is certainly not embarrassed by that, or by any of his many self-centered blunders, and disrespect for anything legal, speed restrictions and traffic cops included.

    And so the trip in the sports car becomes a road trip, taking Roberto ever further away from the safety of his studies paid by his parents, and into a revolving society that merges post-war Italy with the 1960s, all to glorious soundtrack that includes songs like "Guarda come dondolo" and "Cuando Cuando Cuando," among others.

    Photography is effective and economic, never getting in the way of the development of the story.

    The acting is uniformly outstanding, even minor characters grab one's interest. Gassman is brilliant as he gate-crashes parties and breezes in and out of everyone's life. Trintignant is the reserved counterweight, mesmerized and sapped of will by Gassman's magical personality and sleight of hand. In between, one has a glimpse of Italy's fast-changing society and inevitable shortcomings.

    Direction is superb. The great Dino Risi was certainly at his best in this celebration of life, a timeless masterpiece that not even the B&W photography or the 1960s time capsule can hold down.

    Enjoy the wonderful ride - but keep your eyes peeled and learn from it!
  • Bruno (Gassman), pushing forty, is a no-good con artist, a "vitellone": loud, hyperactive, exhibitionist, self-centered, narcissistic, immature, confrontational, untrustworthy and...irresistible. He leads the "easy life", his talent to cause trouble is only surpassed by his talent to disentangle himself from it — not always unscathed. One mid-summer holiday (the "Ferragosto"), he meets by chance Roberto (Trintignant), a young law student in his early 20s, terribly shy, slightly bored, docile, self-effacing and inexperienced. Bruno practically drags Roberto to his convertible Lancia Aurelia and together they hit the road from Rome to Lazio and Tuscany, an initiation trip for Roberto — and when it's over, you know this movie will remain in your heart and mind forever.

    "Il Sorpasso" is THE definitive combination of tragicomedy and road movie, and quite simply miraculous: how can a film be so funny AND emotional, light AND thought-provoking? I'd point out some of the reasons:

    -- The fabulous script. Dino Risi (a bona-fide graduated psychiatrist, as his eye for psychological details shows) and experienced writing duo Ettore Scola/Ruggero Maccari (who had by then written about 18 scripts together!) create two of the most fascinating, three-dimensional characters in movies: Bruno's layers coming off and Roberto's self-discovery building up before our eyes. Bruno may be crass but also very smart: he outguesses all the dynamics of Roberto's country family instantly. Roberto may be the prey but a conniving one. The film excels in hilarious confrontational situations, finely drawn supporting characters (including gorgeous 17y.o. Catherine Spaak as Bruno's sensible daughter; and Luciana Angiolilo as Bruno's no- nonsense, mature ex-wife); endlessly quotable lines (including side-splitting remarks on Antonioni's "L'Eclisse" and the very spicy mating dance between Bruno and the Commendatore's wife); the underlying criticism of Italian society, which faced the last breath of the economic boom of the 1950s that ultimately deepened the gap between rich x poor, bourgeoisie x proletariat, North x South, leading to chaos in the 1970s; and, surely, the heart-stopping finale.

    -- Gassman and Trintignant's performances are nothing short of magical: they know these are once-in-a-lifetime roles and they squeeze all the juice out of them. Gassman (who said Bruno was probably his favorite film performance) builds Bruno with tour-de-force physicality and boundless energy, from risky-driving, water-skiing and doing handstands to highly elaborate body work (his "choreography" as he gets out of the ladies' toilet is worth a 1,000 lines). When was a scoundrel so complex and irresistible? Contrastingly, Trintignant (at 32 but completely convincing as a young student) goes inwards, acting with practically his eyes and mouth only, and yet we can see the full blossoming of his fascination with Bruno (notice the worshiping glow in his eyes as he listens to Bruno at dusk). When was a shy man ever performed with such intelligence, sensitivity and charm? To top it all, their interplay is wondrous: when they laugh heartily at the riotous hick twist party you know these two men have really bonded!

    -- Direction/cinematography: film encyclopedias affirm road movies existed long before "Il Sorpasso", but which, again? THIS is the first MODERN road movie: no back projections, no studio stuff, no dinosaur automobiles, no stunt doubles, but two stars really driving that triumph-of-design convertible Lancia Aurelia with its matchless horn sound on the real desert streets of Rome on a real Ferragosto holiday, and then on Italian roads doing real, risky "sorpassi". The film takes places in just over 24 hours and the lighting is always spot on.

    -- the music: back in 1962, it was not that usual to use pop hits as a commentary for the action. But listen to the words of "Guarda Come Dondolo" (Look How I Swing) and how it perfectly matches Bruno's swinging behavior. Vianello, di Capri, Modugno...who can resist those Italian pop songs of the 60s?

    In the Brazilian DVD extras, Risi recalls the idea for "Sorpasso" came when he went on a road trip with a trouble-making, hyperactive producer, who would drive to Switzerland just to buy a pack of cigarettes. The film's finale was disputed during shooting: the producer wanted a happy ending to save expenses with the last scene (you'll know why). "Il Sorpasso" finally opened to unenthusiastic critical reception and mild box-office but immediately became a word-of-mouth fever and a smash hit in Europe, Latin America and the U.S., having influenced generations of road movies world- wide, most notoriously Dennis Hopper's "Easy Rider" (from the title to the finale) and Wim Wenders' masterpiece "Im Lauf der Zeit" (whose protagonists were named Bruno and Robert).

    Since this is a film to watch over and over again, purchase your own copy and notice the innuendos concerning Bruno and Roberto's sexual profiles. You may laugh at how sex-deprived they are: Bruno brags a lot but he doesn't score once, not even with the waitress -- he's so sex starved he attacks the Commendatore's wife, his own ex-wife and even his own daughter in a black wig; Roberto is obviously a virgin. Or, if you're in such a mood, count the numerous gay undertones: Bruno, the narcissistic 40ish mamma's boy, using the ladies' toilet without a blink; Bruno teaching aunt Lidia how to apply cat-eye make-up; Bruno and Roberto's body contact especially after the night-club fight; Bruno giving up potentially easy conquests, such as the German girls and the waitress; Bruno instantly recognizing Occhio Fino is gay; Bruno jokingly to Roberto: "Well, you know, I don't fancy men but if even if I did you're not my type"; or "When we get back to Rome I'll introduce yo to mamma and we can see each other every day" etc). It's just one more way to enjoy the richness of this brilliant comedy.

    DO NOT MISS this insightful, hilarious, influential, fascinating, ageless film. "Il Sorpasso" is one of the finest character studies of all time, a legitimate masterpiece from an era when Italian cinema was the best around.
  • donlazaro8 October 2006
    This is simply one of the greatest films of all time. Yes, up there with "Modern Times" and "Los Olvidados," but for entirely different reasons. It is a convincing celebration of life that I have never experienced in any other movie. Gassman will move you to tears and laughter in a beautiful performance. The plot? An attempt to introduce a nerd to the world of chromatic living and accelerated emotion. Do the consequences matter? Yes? No? You'll love it anyway. If you can't get an English version, it doesn't matter. Listen to the original Italian and marvel at the significance of the depth and the architecture that penetrates the screen.
  • The first time you see this film, it might just pass you by as light-hearted, but the ending will force you to dwell on it. This is what happened to me. A closer look revealed that this is a profound, double-sided, paradoxical film. Vittorio Gassman and Jean-Louis Trintagnant project opposite perspectives throughout the film, so that each scene contains both joy and sadness, intoxication and contemplation. As they drive from place to place, Gassman's life force is placed at a critical distance by Trintagnant's presence. Both performances are brilliant. A great film, poetic, bitter-sweet, unforgettable.
  • When Bruno hits the road in his Lancia Aurelia B24 sport with the nerdish Roberto, it's a whirlwind ride for the audience as well, with your emotions riding high throughout. Gassman's "Bruno" is as perfect a portrait as one can imagine of the Italian who just floats through life, never taking things or others very seriously, always finding shortcuts and discovering truths that others disparage or fear. He's the classic embodiment of the Italian "furbo" (wise guy), who thinks he knows how to "play" the world and all the people in it. One of the greatest cinematic explorations of the stuff of contemporary life you'll ever see and the possibilities (all too limited) of overcoming the alienation inherent in it.
  • acerf6 November 2002
    I will only say for now, this is one SERIOUSLY GREAT MOVIE. Dino Risi must have been going through a good period in his life because never before or since have movies under his care (as Director) come out this well.

    The story of a middle aged playboy and his short-lived, would be, apprentice, a shy student ... Vittorio Gassman, Jean-Louis Trintignant, are brilliant and 17 year old Catherine Spaak turns in a mind-blowing performance, surely the best "teenage" performance, ever, (think the Breakfast Club X 100) setting a very high, difficult bar for herself in the process.

    As the previous reviewer said, 10 out of 10; now if we can only get a real re-release, not a damn bootleg.

    ** You know you're watching a ground-breaking movie when a guy, the playboy protaganist, "exhuberant" throughout, suddenly gives the game away. It happens in a scene at a beach shower, where he is singing zestfully - "a man in love with life," and then suddenly stops altogether, the game up and shrugs his shoulder. I don't know such a thing had ever been tried before in all of Cinema. The stunning effect when Vittorio Gassman, as the playboy, drops the mask that all wear (in Italy, literally one's "second face") is overwhelming, like a pistol shot on a deserted street.

    Groundbreaking in every way and not a little frightening, like a summer day suddenly ruined by an angry quarrel! (pick a metaphor). SEE IT!
  • IL SORPASSO is referred to by many comments as a comedy. There are a few amusing moments, but this is far from a comedy. The word "sorpasso" connotes overtaking, or passing, as in a vehicle passing another on the road. Bruno (Vittorio Gassman) is a man who lives--or thinks he lives--life to the fullest. He's headstrong, opportunistic, manipulating and selfish. He's also charming, and has the narcissistic ability to make other do what he wants. When he encounters Roberto (Jean-Louis Trintignant) he sees someone who needs to be awakened to the carefree joys of life. It sounds good at first, as the men speed down highways and through small towns, passing every other car, hell-bent to go nowhere. No plans, something that Bruno impressed on Roberto: it's the way to live your life. Throughout, we hear Roberto's thoughts in voice-over--should he go along with this impulsive person, or insist on going back home to his quiet life as a law student? At a couple of points, Roberto does intend to leave on his own, but circumstances and Bruno's persuasive nature pull him back into the older man's sports car. It's all fun to watch, until they reach Castiglioncello, where Bruno "knows some people''. The people turn out to be his ex-wife and his daughter. The former wife (Luciana Angiolillo) knows Bruno all too well and sees through his raving and protestations. Daughter Lilli (Catherine Spaak) is still under her father's spell. His antics still entertain her and perhaps she has sought a responsible version of him in her much older suitor, whom she plans to marry. In this setting, Roberto finally sees Bruno for what he is--and he insists on returning to Rome. But as they begin the journey home, Roberto comes to a realization: he has just had the two best days of his life and he tells this to Bruno. The film is in high gear at this point. NO SPOILERS -- Both actors are brilliant, even with French Trintignant dubbed by an Italian voice actor, and they compliment each other perfectly. We see a lot of Italy: Rome, the countryside and the coast, as well as numerous ordinary citizens. A strong, often beautiful film.
  • qormi6 February 2019
    One of my favorite films of all time. It is as if the characters and all the people they interact with are real, and you are a bystander witnessing this instead of sitting there watching actors. Very original screenplay and the dialogue is so real and the acting so natural. Vitorio Gassman's charisma carries the film, and his acting was Oscar worthy. Very funny movie, just watching various slices of everyday life in Italy, 1962. The St. Tropez Twist...and other Italian pop songs added levity to the film, as did that ridiculous car horn on the Lancia.
  • What at first seems to be a lighthearted film turns, like so much Italian cinema, into a deeper, more introspective journey. Roberto, a serious law student, is bombarded by Bruno, a 40-ish bon vivant. Fate (or luck) throws the two men together and into Bruno's little convertible Lancia for an 'avventura' leading from Rome to the Tuscan coast. Andiamo! But Bruno's sadness is hidden under the surface of his relentless smooth talking and double-dealing. He constantly beeps the car's horn, a lyrical bap-bap-bad-a-bap, which soon becomes a thread leading them to the end of the line. Once on the coast and crashed out at Bruno's estranged wife's house, Roberto gets a glimpse of a more decadent type of bourgeois good life: beautiful women, bikinis and boats. By the end of the day and despite his button down shirt and loafers, Roberto has succumbed to Bruno's infectious freedom of mind. At a price. This is a beautiful little film that feels ahead of its time, even timeless. Both Roberto and Bruno are sympathetic characters, forcing the viewer to seize life and look inside and behind it. Grazie, Signore Risi!
  • Italian movies are all the same. Sometimes you laugh, sometimes you cry. No thrills, you never really HANG to your seat. This is an example for what italian cinema was meant to be but never was. This was avant-garde, with powerful acting and a great script. This was universal cinema, while nowadays is all partisan movies and mafia movies and tragic movies, even the world famous benigni gives a poor image of the potentials of Italian cinema. This is one of the BIG movies from italy, and even if Risi filmography aint full of masterworks, this is a movie that can make his name a BIG name in Movies History. Gassman and Trintignant and even Catherine Spaak dominate the scene and the country roads of Lazio and Toscana play their part as well. The tragedy is way before the final, and is all found in the unsatisfying way of life both main carachters are living. Italian tragicomedy at its highest peak, no competition at all! 10 out of ten.
  • Robert (Jean Louis Trintignant) is a shy law student who meets a sponger person named Bruno Cortona (Vittorio Gassman), this is a forty and some years old man , a real Bon Vivant and convinces him to travel around Rome and Toscan in the summer 1962 . Later on , they go to Castiglioncello where lives his ex-wife (Luciana Angelillo) and daughter (Catherine Spaak) .

    This splendid film deals about a voyage that undergo two different characters and describes the Italian reality by that time . It's a tragic-comedy satire with surprising finale and one of the best Italian comedies of the 60s. The pictures does a perfect portrayal of the main roles . Roberto is a very timid person, quite the opposite to bewildering Bruno, who serves as counterpoint to his disconcerting personality . The personality of hustler Bruno is special , he's a veteran who has failed at everything , as he spends all his time traveling in his sportscar and takes under his wing the timid student to teach him how to have amusement. The characters of Bruno Cortona and Roberto are magnificently interpreted by Vittorio Gassman and Jean Louis Trintignant . The two players around Rome and its surroundings for two days vibrating, in full Italian "Ferragosto" . All the screenplay develops a gentle humor but steady, which does to maintain the smile throughout the movie while showing a portrait of a wonderful Italy of the 60s , which includes the sensational musical score by Riz Ortolani , plenty of marvelous songs , Saint Tropez twists and other sounds of those years, happy and funny . Furthermore , an evocative white and black cinematography by Alfio Contini . It is a motion picture in which I have entertained a lot, a great wisdom of its director and writer Dino Risi along with Ettore Scola and Ruggero Maccari . Risi is an expert on ¨Comedia allá Italiana¨, such as he proved in ¨How funny can be sex?, The scent of woman , Tiger and the pussycat¨ and of course ¨The easy life¨ or its original title ¨Il Sorpasso¨, a tragic-comedy that achieved a big success.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    The dynamic in this movie is created by the interplay between the extrovert Bruno (in his early forties) and the introvert Roberto (in his early twenties). Roberto, who meets Bruno coincidentally, is sucked into accompanying him on a two-day road trip from Rome to Tuscany. The theme of an extrovert bringing an introvert out of his shell is not an uncommon one--for example, see "Zorba the Greek" and "A Separate Peace." Most of the time the introvert imagines a more exciting life by the exposure to the extrovert, but sometimes holds his own as an equal, for example in "My Dinner with Andre" and "Master and Commander." In this movie Roberto is taken in by Bruno and his transformation in the span of two days was hard for me to believe. Introversion is a personality trait that is almost as embedded in a personality as sexual orientation.

    Reviewer debblyst makes the comment: "Bruno (Gassman), pushing forty, is a no-good con artist, a 'vitellone': loud, hyperactive, exhibitionist, self-centered, narcissistic, immature, confrontational, untrustworthy and...irresistible." I agree with all of the adjectives here except "irresistible." I found Bruno contemptible and irritating and would give such a person wide berth if I encountered him, as Roberto would have been wise to have done. Much of the movie takes place from the vantage point of Bruno's car where he seems to feel that he is in a race with every driver on the road, hurling insults at everyone he passes, including bicyclists. Picture the biggest ass you have ever encountered on the road and Bruno would qualify. His car had a musical horn that drove me nuts every time it was sounded. By the end of the movie the damn horn was so obnoxious to me that I almost had to bail.

    Many have commented on how valuable this movie is for its social commentary on the times in Italy in the early 60s. If this is so, then it was mostly lost on me. If you view Bruno as a metaphor for Italy, then I suppose the message is that hedonism leads to unfortunate consequences. I did not need to spend two hours to finally get that message. I very much liked "La Dolce Vita" and I think any social commentary in "Sorpasso" pales in comparison to that earlier movie. In fact Fellini's movie is superior in almost all respects: cinematography, story, acting, depth, and score.

    I am not immune to the charms of Catherine Spaak (who plays Bruno's daughter)--she was one of the few high points for me.

    It is hard to be positive about a movie where I find the main character to be so unlikeable. At the end of the movie I can picture Bruno haggling over scrap metal prices.
  • I've seen this movie hundreds & hundreds of time, and I'm not tired yet to watch it, and this just because this movie represents how we italians were in the sixties and how we still are. It is probably one of the ten best italian movies ever made. If you are able to understand Italian, watch it in its original version.
  • Although to all intents and purposes this film from Dino Risi is a brilliant example of Commedia all' Italiana it remains a 'Road' movie in all but name. The Road in this case is the Via Aurelia that runs from Rome to Tuscany and the title refers to the aggressive overtaking indulged in by the free spirited Bruno behind the wheel of his Lancia Aurelia Sport. His passenger here is the shy, mild mannered law student Roberto.

    This film really struck a chord with Italian audiences and despite negative reviews it was word of mouth that made it such a spectacular success. Sixty years on it still packs a punch and has had an immeasurable influence on later directors.

    This marvellously constructed piece gets better as it goes on and like Risi's previous masterwork 'La Vita Difficile', gives us a beautifully observed picture of the Italy of the new prosperity known as 'Il Boom'. Bruno and Roberto look as if they might have been inspired by Dean and Sal in Jack Kerouac's seminal 'On the Road'. Just a theory of course.

    There are some finely drawn performances throughout but its strength of course lies in the relationship between the unlikely buddies Bruno of Vittorio Gassman and Roberto of Jean-Louis Trintignant. To see two such exceptional actors playing off each other is an absolute joy. Gassman has the showiest part and his magnificent performance is further testament to his excellent working relationship with this director. Trintignant brings his customary air of mystery to the role and is no less effective. Good writing makes good actors even better and the script by Risi and Ettore Scola is superlative, by turns introspective and hilarious. It is a work full of paradoxes and ironies, climaxing in the cruellest irony of all.

    Surprisingly the bleak ending did not affect its popularity. "It's a bit cruel," said Risi, "but that's Life. A beautiful vacation that ends in tragedy."
  • Probably the best "costume satire" film ever made. Vittorio Gassman is perfect in the role of Bruno. Great cast especially the supporting role of J. L. Trintignant. Adorable and very sexy the beautiful teenager daughter of Bruno played by Catherine Spaak. Il Sorpasso depicted in great reality the sweet bitter life of the 60's in Italy. The perfect road movie, filled with deep characters and great locations between Rome (deserted during the peak summertime vacation of "ferragosto" and the overcrowded countryside of the coast between the Capital and the Tuscan Riviera). This film is filled with humor and sadness (If you don't understand Italian, you'll miss something but the movie language is international, and the subtitles will help you). DO NOT MISS IT! Bravo Dino Risi!
  • dbdumonteil25 February 2007
    Warning: Spoilers
    I've seen Dino Risi's road movie several time and with the same pleasure.The Gassman/Trintignant team superbly works :if they made a remake (God preserve us) it would be very difficult to find back the rapport they had .

    All along the road (I say it again it's a road movie,and it is to be ranked among the best of the genre) ,the two characters change and we have the strange feeling that the more we see them the less we know them.Roberto is the educated boy but his naiveté and his ingenuousness are so beaming that he is totally kept down by Bruno.My favorite scenes take place where Roberto used to spend his holidays .He was so childish he did not realize that his aunt preferred the farmer and that the servant was gay(Bruno's lines are much fun!) But things are not what they seem.We soon discover that Bruno is not the strong man he pretends he is.Non-intellectuals will appreciate the slap at the "serious" directors (Antonioni' s "l'eclisse" ) .As for the ending,it comes as a shock.Completely unexpected.What do you suppose that means?Perhaps the end of Bruno's childhood,Roberto representing another himself ,the one he wanted to be or the one he used to be.
  • Actually it was a Lancia Aurelia B24 sport....It was one of the three main characters in this movie, so please let there be no misunderstanding about this marvelous car. The car represents the somewhat broken state Bruno is in when Roberto meets him. The paintwork is patched-up and the body is dented, but the the engine, character and spirit are still in top condition! Please also note that all the in-car shots were made on the road and not in the studio. This movie depicts how Italy in the beginning of the sixties was recuperating from the poverty resulting from war and fascism.

    (Great movie!!!)
  • I've seen quite a few Italian films from the very early 1960s that explore the effect of widespread industrialisation and rampant consumerism during the economic boom in contemporary Italy. It is very interesting to notice the attitude of each filmmaker to this particular issue. Ermanno Olmi in 'Il Posto' doesn't completely denounce the changes taking place in Italy(urban Italy to be more precise), but he does ornament the film with a rich sense of melancholy and a yearning for innocence in a place and time where a boy is forced to lose his youth prematurely. Fellini in 'La Dolce Vita' for the most part uses farce and overt loud farcical scenes to mock the superficial nature of the elite class and the aristocracy, and then juxtaposes that with scenes which spell out their loneliness. Antonioni in 'L'Avventura' uses a coldness to express the protagonist's alienation in the new times. Dino Risi's attitude is distinct too because he remains ambivalent and indecisive since he neither condemns, nor embraces the new Italy. Among all the films I've mentioned, the one that I gravitate to the most will be 'Il Posto' which I think is a stone cold masterpiece. But I have to say Risi's 'Il Sorpasso' comes very close to replicating the kind of reaction that 'Il Posto' got out of me. This is a near-masterpiece.

    In a basic sense, 'Il Sorpasso' is a road movie. Just like other films belonging to the sub-genre of 'Commedia all'italiana', it uses light-hearted comedy and comedic scenarios to move the narrative forward. However I'd disagree with anyone who thinks the film doesn't have enough thematic depth beneath the comedic surface. The film uses the 'odd couple' trope by bringing two completely dissimilar people together and explores their differences and the effects they have on each other. Bruno is an energetic, boisterous, eccentric and potentially reckless individual who believes in living in the moment. Roberto on the other hand who is shy, introverted, self-conscious, reserved and a somewhat uptight individual. Bruno, just like the force of nature he is, takes Roberto on a ride in a thematic as well as literal sense. There is a risk, that using the juxtaposition of two such characters of extreme contrast, might end up being a little too on-the-nose and superficial. But what prevents it from becoming jarring, is Dino Risi's sensitive treatment of both characters and of course absolutely masterful performances from the two central actors. Vittorio Gassman and Jean-Louis Trintignant are absolutely pitch perfect in this film. I believed in their chemistry and both characters felt like living breathing human beings.

    Yes, Bruno and Roberto are humanised by Risi as well as the actors. But it is undeniable that they also serve as the representations of two different Italies. Bruno represents the new modernised Italy. He is loud, he is energetic and he pretty much has no time for sentimentality(he disrespects Christian priests and nuns). Roberto represents the pre-economic boom Italy with his regard for discipline, an organised lifestyle and sentiments. Dino Risi as I have mentioned before neither vilifies nor glorifies either of them. Bruno can be an ignorant jerk, but he can be sympathetic as well as a good friend to Roberto too. Roberto is well mannered and disciplined, but he can be far too tentative and awkward in his social attitude. I especially loved how the film takes its time to throw more light on the lives of both the characters apart from what can be picked up from their behavioral traits. Bruno enlightens Roberto on how the memories of his childhood could be a little too idealised and distorted and his relatives might not have been what he remembered them to be. On the other hand, the film also gives us a look into the consequences and a possible future that awaits for someone who lives life with the same irreverent, carefree attitude like Bruno when his family gets introduced. The great thing is, these elements in the narrative work both on a character-specific level as well as on a broader societal level.

    I have only two gripes with the film that prevents me from giving it a perfect score - one very minor, the other somewhat major. The minor complaint will be the use of Roberto's voice-over narrations that appear from time to time in the film which I think was completely unnecessary. Trintignant's subtle mannerisms and gestures were enough to convey everything that needed to be conveyed. I don't think his thoughts required to spelled out. But the major gripe I have is the final scene - not the ultimate finale of the scene that ends the film, but a certain turn, a certain transformation that takes place in the attitude of one of the characters. The ultimate consequence serves a thematic purpose since it conveys that sometimes forcing someone to change his inherent traits, ideas and attitude could end up proving to be problematic. But I think the turn itself needed a little more time and few more scenes underlining the transition gradually taking place to feel completely believable.

    One or two gripes aside, I genuinely think 'Il Sorpasso' is a special film that explores that consequences of Italy's economic boom and finds a way to do it in a very sensitive, humane and funny way. Highly Recommended.
  • This is probably the most undervalued of all the great Italian films made during the boom period following the late 1950s economic revival. The others you already know--"La Dolce Vita," "Rocco and His Brothers," "L'Avventura" and Antonioni's next few, "Divorce Italian Style" and "Seduced and Abandoned". But Risi's film, though considered archetypal in Italy, has not reached nearly as many viewers. This is a shame, since it's a movie that everyone can enjoy while it raises many serious issues about responsibility, adulthood, the pursuit of happiness, and the perils of always trying to "fare la bella figura".

    "Il Sorpasso" is above all a character study, in the best sense. Bruno is charming, witty, obnoxious, deluded, lovable, manic--all of these things at once. Gassman gives the performance of a lifetime. I can think of few film performances that soar through the comic bits but also fully suggest the tragic dimension of the empty soul. Trintignant is very good also--a perfect foil.

    I hope that everyone will get a chance to see this movie. The one time I saw it was on video in a poor print a few years ago. Criterion, Rialto, New Yorker Video: please, do a deluxe set! This one is ripe for rediscovery by everyone.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    "Il sorpasso" is an Italian, mostly Italian-language movie from 1962, so this one is way over 50 years old already now and it was directed by Dino Risi, who is also one of the writers here. The other two writers are Scola and Maccari, soccessful in their very own right. And by the way, over a decade later Risi and Maccari collaborated again on a script/movie that gave them their one and only Oscar nomination. But lets talk a bit about this movie now. It runs for approximately 105 minutes and is entirely in black-and-white, not too uncommon for 1962, even if there were more than just a few films in color already. The two lead actors are Victorio Gassmann and a certain Jean-Louis Trintignant, who turns 90 soon and was in his early 30s at that point, only so you see how long he''s been in films already. These two play characters that meet early on in the movie and could not be any more different. Bruno is the one enjoying life and everything that comes with it, women parties, alcohol... while Roberto is a rather introvert character who's got nothing planned except studying for his law exam. These two get together by coincidence as Bruno has to make a phone call (to a girl of course) and Roberto lets him. And not much later, they end up in a car together going on a most unusual journey, at least for Roberto. Bruno does that every day probably. Anyway, I will not go too much into detail what happens on said journey. Just a bit. There are several references to the title with one car overtaking another, also at the crucial ending, so scene with cars driving down the really broad streets are not a rarity here and I was surprised how much I liked these scenes as honestly I couldn't care less for cars in general. What else? Oh yeah they meet each other's families. We find out a most likely revelation about Roberto's family members and who may be the father of whom and eventually we also meet Bruno's wife and daughter in a really long sequence. Boy was Catherine Spaak stunning. Anyway, there is not too much to say about Roberto as we basically join him in watching Bruno throughout the entire film. You could say the latter is a bit of a survival artist (eventually even in the truest sense of the word as he managed to get out of a falling car in time. Will this event change him? Not in a million years!) getting as much fun as possible from life. But is he happy? It is not clear. There is one moment when he says he is all alone and has no friends, but the next moment we see him with a ridiculous mask joking around, so you can never be sure how serious you can take the man after all. But yeah, the magic with his wife seems long gone as we find out eventually. Clearly he can only make an impact for a little while only it seems. But this impact is majestic. He is not scared of meeting beautiful girls or rejection. And he does not envy others as we find out in that scene when he says something along the lines that Roberto should have tried to be with the waitress as she would not have rejected him as she did with Bruno.

    This is a most light film mot of the time. The only more dramatic struggles (except the ending) are about cars racing against each other, broken toilet room handles and a bit of a brawl that really does not end up violently or anything at all. Well, maybe this is just the untrained eye and you can find some drama or misery on other occasions and depth when it comes to the characters like Roberto realizing he has never really lived life the way he wanted to, but perhaps just wasted it most of the time doing stuff he had to do as a reliable citizen, but not stuff he really wanted to do, maybe because he didn't even know he wanted to do these things. he learns now during his road trip with Bruno. But there is a bitter awakening. As happy as realizing this may seem, there is an abrupt ending to his plans. It is really tough to say what Risi had in mind with that. To show us how fugacious life can be and start living? Well this is just one theory and there are probably a million others honestly. It will all depend on your personal approach and perception how you see this film. With this exact ending, it is of course not just a comedy, but also a tragicomedy. And it did come very unexpected for sure. A bit of a pity that there was a speaker before my showing who talked a bit about the film's background and she really spoilered the ending most irresponsibly. Anyway, I still think it was a good choice to watch this film on the big screen. However, I definitely do believe the rating here is way too high because honestly I think that makes it one of the highest-rated Italian films of all time and such it is not in my opinion. But it is a good watch and there are several reasons and aspects to enjoy the film. The music was amazing for example. And I must admit I never would have recognized Trintignant here. Some actors you easily recognize the face from their younger years now that they have grown old (like Redford for example), but Trintignant I don't think so. A slight criticism I would also add is that I felt the two main characters did not have the most amazing chemistry and I did not feel that they really grew as close as the film wanted us to think. As a consequence, I also felt the change of thought process in Roberto's mind did not feel entirely realistic to me and his extroverted unleashing towards the end about what the time with Bruno did with him did not win me over. But yeah, other than that I had a fun time watching and the one thing I also learned is that if you chase after beautiful girls, be always prepared that they may be heading into the direction of a cemetery, which can make things really awkward. I think this one is worth seeing. Like with many other old films that lack today's blockbuster approach, this is certainly not a movie for everybody, but if you manage to get sucked in by the story (and I did, quicker than expected in fact) and Gassmann's character, then you will not be disappointed. I give it a thumbs-up!
  • petra_ste25 February 2014
    Warning: Spoilers
    A delightfully barbed, bittersweet parable, Il Sorpasso sees right through the "Great Italian Miracle" - the dazzling decades in which Italy rose from the ashes of WWII in an apparent economical and moral renovation. Risi's razor-sharp script follows Bruno (Gassman, rarely better), thirty-something, divorced, happy-go-lucky deadbeat - like a Mediterranean Jeff Lebowski - drawing shy student Roberto (Trintignant in a subtle, understated performance) with him in an epicurean journey with unpredictable consequences.

    Bruno is a magnet: a charismatic, good-natured casanova, instantly likable in spite of his many flaws (crass, unreliable, amoral), in a few hours he bulldozes through the younger man's existence, and Roberto is drawn to his lifestyle like a moth to a flame.

    A deconstruction of the mentor trope and of the Bildungsroman/on the road/buddy movie genres, Il Sorpasso seemingly toys with a sunny "seize the day" lesson, only to take in its last act a turn which is at first melancholic - in a visit to Roberto's relatives, Bruno sees right through their secrets, which he casually reveals to his oblivious friend - and then unapologetically dark.

    To careful viewers, though, the movie shows its claws long before that - even throwaway moments have bite, like Bruno on the beach hitting on an attractive girl who turns out to be his rarely seen and now surprisingly "all grown up" daughter (a radiant Catherine Spaak).

    Il Sorpasso manages to capture both the exhilaration of the feast and the humiliation of the following hangover, often in the same scene and sometimes - courtesy of the magnificent Gassman/Trintignant duo - in the very same instant.

    9/10
  • An entertaining buddy/road picture made about an energetic, middle-aged extrovert (Vittorio Gassman), taking a younger, shy student (Jean-Louis Trintignant) under wing. The dynamic recalls "Zorba the Greek," the 1946 novel by Nikos Kazantzakis, soon to be made into the 1964 film, but, unlike Zorba, no cogent philosophical argument is presented; the music just stops playing.
  • I know that I am in the minority here but, as Mr. Mark Twain wrote, difference of opinion is why we have horse races.

    I found this entire film tedious and probably outdated even at the time of its release, but time has not done it any favors.

    Of course the film has nothing in common with Fellini's later surrealism, such as 8 1/2. But compare this film to Fellini's earlier films, such as I Vitelloni or especially La Dolce Vita. It's supposed to be a powerful expose of a modern Italian culture yet most of what happens in the film would have bored college kids even in the 1940s or '50s, much less when the film was released.

    Presumably speed racing, drinking, defying social norms, and (unbelievably) a silly scene of people doing the twist, is supposed to be "shocking" in 1962? There are traces of Jack Kerouac's "On the Road," but that novel was prophetic, as were the James Dean and early Brando films. Keep in mind, that this is several years AFTER the sexually controversial plays of Tennessee Williams. Those were truly subversive characters. The transgressive character played by Vittorio Gassman seems nothing but a tedious frat boy in comparison. Halfway through the film I lost interest.

    The film belongs to the genre named after the masterpiece, "Divorce Italian Style," which truly delivers on its satirical premise. This film doesn't I have no idea why the film is considered a masterpiece in the genre, nor why Gassman is considered a great actor, at least not on the basis of this film alone. The film, in my view, is saved by Jean-Louis Trintignant expressively modeled and low-key performance, the real acting in the film.

    Also puzzling is the lack of a great movie underscore. If any film needed a main theme repeated throughout, especially in the road sequences, this one is it. Yet for entire stretches on the road there is no underscore.

    Compare this film with another genre film, just two years before, called *Pillow Talk*. There is nothing dated in that film. It comes across as funny and "recognizable," despite all the sexual revolution since, as it did in 1960. But everything seems dated in Il Sorpasso. On the other hand I can view Divorce Italian Style without any loss of excitement that I felt viewing it for the first time. Another contrast with the two films is the two underscores. The score for Divorce Italian Style, by Carlo Rustichelli, is one of the greatest Italian film scores ever written. The score for this film sounds more like a pastiche.
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