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67 of 69 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars An old fashioned love story
There are so many reasons why this is a great film. The hero of the story is a 35 year old man who is attracted to women but
extremely shy of them. His father, the tailor to the Catholic Pope, is very sexual so he cannot understand what the problem is with his son. Nevertheless, he directs him to go to Bologna in the 1920's where the man teaches Greek and Latin...
Published on May 30, 2006 by Gerard D. Launay

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19 of 22 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars A well-directed, beautifully shot really bad soap opera (spoliers inside)
I am Italian, and I loved the way Bologna is shot in this movie (Bologna is a beautiful city between Florence and Venice which deserves more attention from tourists than it currently has). It is clear that there was a good director behind this movie. However, the story is very very soap opera-like and the main characters' acting is stunningly inept.

The...
Published on June 4, 2008 by Sabad One


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67 of 69 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars An old fashioned love story, May 30, 2006
By 
This review is from: Incantato (DVD)
There are so many reasons why this is a great film. The hero of the story is a 35 year old man who is attracted to women but
extremely shy of them. His father, the tailor to the Catholic Pope, is very sexual so he cannot understand what the problem is with his son. Nevertheless, he directs him to go to Bologna in the 1920's where the man teaches Greek and Latin to students preparing for university. At a chance encounter, he discovers a beautiful woman without sight who enchants him. He falls in love at first glance.

My favorite part of the movie is the love scene. I have NEVER seen one done properly with an extremely shy man experiencing his first sexual encounter. Too often a film will treat the encounter comically not romantically. The scene is touching, sensitive, and erotic. This European director gets it right.

Finally, the cinematography is gorgeous, particularly the scenes of glittering palaces and restaurants in Italy. In my book the movie is a winner.
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19 of 22 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars A well-directed, beautifully shot really bad soap opera (spoliers inside), June 4, 2008
This review is from: Incantato (DVD)
I am Italian, and I loved the way Bologna is shot in this movie (Bologna is a beautiful city between Florence and Venice which deserves more attention from tourists than it currently has). It is clear that there was a good director behind this movie. However, the story is very very soap opera-like and the main characters' acting is stunningly inept.

The "love" story is really a one-sided thing between Nello, one of the dumbest characters you will ever see on screen and Angela, a beautiful but shallow and ruthlessly manipulative woman. Even in a movie world where love is blind (pun not intended) the dumbness of Nello is astounding. The fact that his love is purely due to Angela's appearance makes his character even less likable. He just deserves what he gets, and he's even happy at the end.

But the unlikeable two main characters and the annoying "love story" are not the worst thing of this movie. There are, after all, several exceptional movies centered around unlikable characters. The acting is what's really terrible here. Minor characters are, in most cases, played very well by serious actors (Angela and Nello's fathers, the director of the school where Nello teaches). But Nello and Angela are impersonated by stunningly bad actors. Incontrada, not being Italian, has been dubbed, and unfortunately the woman who gives Angela her voice is as bad as she could be. She delivers every sentence as if she were in a soap commercial.

I love well-made Italian movies based on small, personal stories, and I loved the images of Italy in this one, but I really cannot recommend "Incantato" at all, and indeed I am somewhat surprised by the positive reviews I found here.
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9 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Romantic Love in Incantato, February 8, 2008
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This review is from: Incantato (DVD)
Incantato is a marvelousl movie about how love can transform us and make us a better person. It is the story of Nello, a thirty five year old professor of Latin and Greek. A lonely bachelor, his father and mother push him to leave his native Rome and to go to Bologna with the hope of finding a soul mate. With a series of comic miscalculations and flip flops, Nello finally encounters his dream woman in a clinic for the blind. Angela, a beautiful woman from the upper class is the incarnation of all of Nello's dreams. However, her father and others warn Nello that Angela is not suited for him but he persists. Another touching subplot is how the quiet, unassuming Nello captivates his students in his Latin class with his daring interpretations of love poems and his defiance of the State's boring curriculum. Beautifully photographed, with a lush romantic soundtrack, Incantato is surely a wonderful movie about love, passion and heartbreak.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Setting surpasses story., February 12, 2011
This review is from: Incantato (DVD)
Lush scenery and gorgeous decor do not disguise one more insipid Italian male fantasy movie.

An immature, virginal man falls in love/lust with a temporarily blind, shallow, young socialite who well knows how to manipulate and excite men. The movie fails as comedy because Nello lacks any gravitas and his lust is merely pathetic. The movie fails as tragedy because Nello's experience does not change him. Instead of gaining maturity from his experience, Nello ends up happily sewing garments for the Pope in his father's shop - no more having an independent, creative life in Bologna.

Most damning, it is impossible to identify with the main characters since they are so unrealistic. But perhaps in Berlusconi's Italy, a whorish young beauty and a feckless,immature man who never grows up are standard fare.
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9 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Sometimes, love is an elusive personage!, July 11, 2007
This review is from: Incantato (DVD)
This is essentially, a lesson of life instead a love story. The main feature is a very talented profesor who dominates in notable extent Latin language as well as classics such as Virgilio and lucrecio among others. He is a very shy man who having reached his 35 still have not gotten a couple worthy of his affection, until that day comes, when a blind woman will engage and inspire in him the best of his feelings. There is a notable appearing of Giannini as his father, sailor of several Popes, who makes a terrfic performance spicing the movie of deserved status.

But additionally the impressive beauty of+this new Goddess of the Italian cinema Vanessa Incontrada, is a very important factor to take it into account.

The secondary roles work out at perfection, Avati immerses the spectator and handles the camera as a silent witness to make us to know those intimate and unsaid details behind stages.

This a priceless author piece that must be seen, and I am very glad because after a decade of modest proposals, Italy seems to reencounter with itself as a real market of artistic possibilities and new stories to tell and enjoy.

After you leave the cinema hall, you will remind that smart reflection of Balzac: "The love: the eternal toy that women pretend to give and men to deserve."
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4 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Incantato, January 25, 2008
This review is from: Incantato (DVD)
It,s a good movie, excellent play and interesting the subject. My only problem was that it is so sad, almost like the Postino. But that does not decrease the artistic value
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5.0 out of 5 stars Best Italian Movie Since..., May 31, 2011
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This review is from: Incantato (DVD)
If you loved Cinema Paradiso you are sure to love Incantato, but in a very different kind of way. Both are memorable love stories, but the similarities end there. I won't spoil the surprise, except to say that you will really enjoy this movie. It's certainly one to add to your video library.
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4.0 out of 5 stars Italian Language film, January 23, 2011
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This review is from: Incantato (DVD)
Note first of all that the spoken language of this film is Italian, with English subtitles. As usual, the subtitles actually vary a bit from the words being spoken, but do not actually change the overall meaning. This film has some really beautiful, romantic scenes and content, but then there is also a point of betrayal. I think the film is better for Italian speaking audiences than for those reading the subtitles. Well acted, videography is good, sound is a bit lacking at a couple of points, I had to turn the sound up, and back down a time or two, to hear what the actors were saying.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Endless love, Italian style . . ., July 22, 2009
This review is from: Incantato (DVD)
This bitter-sweet love story is like a folk tale from another era - at least a century before the 1920s in which it is set. A 35-year-old tailor's son, played superbly by Neri Marcorè, with a modest innocence almost never associated with Italian men, is sent from Rome to Bologna to take a job as a classics teacher and to find a wife. There he meets and falls hopelessly in love, for the first time in his life, with a self-absorbed society girl, who happens to be blind - and in love with another man. Their relationship is both painful and poignant - played out at an almost dreamy pace against the more comic sexual antics of the supporting characters. Veteran actor Giancarlo Giannini, as the father, provides a comic energy of his own. As tailor to the Pope, he represents a vocation that has to my knowledge never been seen in a film before. The photography is lovely and the music rapturous. Be prepared for a lump in your throat in the final scene.
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Incantato
Incantato by Pupi Avati (DVD - 2006)
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