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The movie opens with a party in progress on Jep's deck : this one is to celebrate his 65th birthday ... not that this crowd really need an excuse to party all night. The scene is like one glorious carnival with its cast full of eccentrics and oddities and with everyone intent on their version of what constitutes a good time. They are all completely self-absorbed which makes Jep their natural leader as he has the biggest ego of them all. It's a tale of decadence and gross self-indulgence of heavily botoxed middle-aged Euro-trash who are still living as they did in the past before resorting to be titled aristocrats for hire.
Sorrentino sets up a series of scenarios, some of which like the dinner party with the cooking obsessed Bishop are hilariously funny, and others with a Japanese tourist dropping dead in the midday sun at the mere sight of Rome, are a tad too obscure. Together they all add up to what is like the libretto of a grand opera, with its dependence on such high drama, which hits you hard with its sense of love and loss, and for its intense, unbearable melancholy at the end.
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The Great Beauty is one of those rare movies that so utterly overwhelm you with awe and unfettered amazement that you simply have to view it a second time (at least) . It has been quite rightly nominated for a Golden Globe as Best Foreign Language Movie : go see it ..... at least once.
★★★★★★★★★★
★★★★★★★★★★