The Leopard (Il
Gattopardo) (1963)
Runtime: 186
minutes
Directed by:
Luchino Visconti
Starring: Burt Lancaster, Claudia Cardinale, Alain Delon, Paolo Stoppa, Rina Morelli
From: Several
different Italian and French companies
Would people be AGHAST that this was my first Luchino Visconti film?
For the newer followers, I haven’t viewed much classic cinema as of late
but in the thirteen (!) years I’ve been on Letterboxd, what’s been
reviewed has run the gamut. It’s everything from The Room and Birdemic
to some cinephile musts from the likes of Kurosawa, Tarkovsky, Fellini,
Bergman, John Ford, Fritz Lang, Ozu, Truffaut, etc.
Yet, I
imagine a few of the serious scholarly cinephiles will be surprised that
Visconti was a blind spot until last night. A few weeks ago, the FXM
movie channel during their retro block (meaning, unedited movies &
no commercials) played The Leopard; despite a 3-hour runtime of a motion
picture concerning a topic I knew little of-the unification of Italy in
the 1860’s. I shouldn’t have been concerned when there was time last
night to play the DVR recording.
To copy & paste the plot
description currently on Letterboxd: “As Garibaldi’s troops begin the
unification of Italy in the 1860s, an aristocratic Sicilian family
grudgingly adapts to the sweeping social changes undermining their way
of life. Proud but pragmatic Prince Don Fabrizio Salina allows his war
hero nephew, Tancredi, to marry Angelica, the beautiful daughter of
gauche, bourgeois Don Calogero, in order to maintain the family’s
accustomed level of comfort and political clout.”
The film takes
its time as the story slowly unfurled, presenting a tale where the
particulars of Italy’s unification isn’t necessary-a viewer is not
required to do even a bit of Wikipedia research beforehand, although
that could be done for those curious beforehand or after viewing. The
film was a rapturous experience as the end of an era is coming &
Burt Lancaster’s Prince has difficulty accepting that truth. On the
other hand, young cad nephew Alain Delon is more ambitious and probably
will succeed in this new Italy, along with Don Sedara, a precursor to
what later would be a Mafia Don.
The rest of the cast was also
swell: Claudia Cardinale (a belated RIP to her; I never noted the death
of this European starlet last fall) as the stunning lady from a rival
family who is married to Delon for political reasons. There’s also
Terence Hill in a supporting role, so early in his career that he’s
billed under his birth name of Mario Girotti.
The showstopper is a
long ballroom scene 45-minutes in length where my attention never
wavered-rather, it highlighted several key components: there’s the lush
score from Nino Rota, the great costumes, the lavish sets. Then, the
film’s conclusion was note-perfect. The Leopard was well worth the long
journey. Fascinating was that Visconti (who was from a noble family
himself) and Lancaster (his hiring was forced on the director by the
producers) initially did not get alone but after Ol’ Burt bowed up &
yelled at the director, suddenly they were pals for the rest of
Visconti’s life. Undoubtedly, in the far-future I’ll view another film
from a great director I shouldn’t have overlooked for so long.