Friday, December 26, 2025

Mussolini: Son Of The Century Review - Spectator Surrealism On Steroids

  

"The old world is dying, and the new world struggles to be born: Now is the time of monsters..." ~ Antonio Gramsci, Prison Notebooks 

 In a ferociously conceived, back to the future insanely embellished cautionary tale, Joe Wright's simultaneously delirious and calculatingly crafted dramatic series based on Antonio Scurati's works and airing on Mubi, Mussolini: Son Of The Century  sidesteps traditional biopic and historical pageantry for something much more - and far less as well.

Reigniting the persona of the notorious Italian fascist dictator and his combo crafty and maniacal seizure of power, actor Luca Marinelli is nothing less than brilliant, terrifying, and somehow a dangerous and daffy buffoon as well. Add to that the early 20th century backdrop bathed in the period coarse brown and tinted hues of early photography back then, and the 'you are there' captive audience point of view - signaling a deliberately conceived hypnotic, repulsive and somehow involuntarily conspiratorial entertainment as well.

And in what will play out as repeated inescapable audience complicity in the ensuing political horrors playing out historically, Mussolini tears through the fourth wall continually to proclaim, once with an in your face scary, seductive lure, 'Follow me - you'll become fascists too.' And like the masses who could not resist his hypnotic charisma, you've become one of them as well, out of spectator on steroids irresistible curiosity's thirst for more. Not to mention, could Mussolini, and Hitler as well, have been inflicted by PTSD maniacal rage and resentment - both wounded in WWI.

But while the mastery of this production is undeniable, conceptual issues loom - and not just related to how the potent dramatic momentum is inevitably diluted by artificially thinning out the repetitive content over the prescribed eight hour series. That narrative padding could have been infused with, say, the actual, tremendously revealing background history of the time - and that flows, not through arbitrary timelines defining the artificially imposed beginning to end style of Hollywood storytelling, but the endless momentum reality of world events. 

And what could have been that driving force giving rise to both that traumatic period in Italy along with the impact on Mussolini in seizing that moment opportunistically - the Russian Revolution. Signifying the influence of that revolution on the subsequent imploding uprisings. Though to grab that powerful moment as his own rather than as an ideological follower, Mussolini chose fascism instead, manipulating those WWI physically and mentally destroyed, bitter veterans with an illusion of power that ironically only he held over their rage, directed to his advantage. Along with the powerful capitalist class, in need of the antidote he can provide to potential social upheaval threatening their existence.

And an offscreen irony never acknowledged in Son Of The Century, the communists who in the end brought the historical proceedings full circle when publicly hanging the executed fascist leader upside down - a significance intimating that presence of that other son of the century surviving elsewhere to this day - Lenin. Though in a further irony, a brewing communist revolution suppressed, not by the fascists, but by the arriving American troops in Italy.

Prairie Miller


Thursday, December 11, 2025

We Shall Not Be Moved - Sedentary Cinema At The Oscars

 We Shall Not Be Moved - Sedentary Cinema At The Oscars


Don't expect the usual demeaning caricatures sidelining female elders in this deplorable Mexican international Oscar entry this year, when not monsters on the menu of horror fare. In fact far worse, at least when it comes to that other usual 'out of context cinema' bypassing history in progress all around it.

For starters, the misleading title, whether intentional or not - an insult to the historic US Civil Rights Movement anthem. In other words, in a case of detrimental double meaning, dismissing both popular struggle and the honoring of those who sacrificed enabling those causes as a kind of psychological impairment - embracing collective sedentary amnesia as the path forward instead.

Symbolizing and central to this drama's cynical historical hypothesis, is Socorro (Luisa Huertas), a seemingly senile alcoholic, chain smoking Mexican lawyer. The bitter, bedraggled Socorro is portrayed as psychotically obsessed with finding and murdering the unindicted officer who tortured to death her brother nearly six decades ago during the 1968 student uprising culminating in the Tlatelolco Massacre. And though her family is dismissive of what is portrayed as a toxic mix of geriatric fantasy and dementia, Socorro proceeds on her determined mission. This while soliciting the assistance of local hitmen, when not staging a homicidal dress rehearsal murdering a neighbor's cat. And the rest is history - or rather, not.

Much more a reflection of perhaps pessimistic and derisive younger generations today, the film sets itself squarely, when it comes to the real world all around them, a flinching Mexico bowing beneath the bullying, increasingly imposing threats of the US that began with renaming the Gulf Of Mexico. And which has progressed to internal signaling of that potential invasion of the country, under the pretext of wiping out their neighbor's domestic criminal activity - along with the simultaneous encroaching US occupation of the entire Caribbean with their massive military fleet, and engaged in assassinating alleged fishing boat suspects in the surrounding waters. 

Thus signaling a not unrelated allegory of a film promoting historical passivity and amnesia as the cure, culminating in a cynically rehabilitated Socorro ultimately breaking with the past in creating a funeral pyre out of a symbolic photo of both criminal perpetrators and victims. And likely palatable simultaneously to US movie audiences - that is, the Oscars...

Prairie Miller


Tuesday, August 26, 2025

 LILLY

"Diving into the glut of superhero-saturated cinema, a workplace feminist slips in...



https://wbai.org/upcoming-program/?id=11944