Reviews Name That Flick Movie Quote Challenge Movie Wallpaper Message Forum
Home Top Voted Movies Articles Contests Interviews chat Links
Welcome
Log Out | Control Panel

Search by:


National Treasure: Book of Secrets
Semi-Pro
Be Kind Rewind

Speed Racer
Visitor, The
Son of Rambow
Iron Man
Forbidden Kingdom, The
I Know Who Killed Me
National Treasure: Book of Secrets
War and Peace (1968)
Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street
Space Movie, The
La Vie en Rose
Eastern Promises

The Visitor
Street Kings
The Chronicles of Narnia: Prince Caspian
Where In the World Is Osama Bin Laden?
Star Trek
The Ruins
The Happening
Indiana Jones
Iron Man
Get Smart
Redbelt
The Dark Knight

Movie Wallpaper

Free Movie Content
Link to Us

Name That Flick
Movie Quote Challenge
Chat Room
Contests

Looking for the ideal casino for games like blackjack, gokkasten, roulette and other known casino games, then try Mijn Online Casino for tips and tricks and everything you need.
Casino Information
A full list of casino and online casino games including the worlds favorit online poker rooms for you to enjoy.
Looking for an casino or bingo ? Read casino and bingo reviews. Get your casino bonus today. Read about jack vegas reviews.
Den besten Casino Bonus finden Sie hier. If you want the best online casinos you are here fine. Das casino 888 ist sehr gut zum online Bingo spielen.
Spelstrategier.com is an online casino guide with unique strategies for Blackjack, Roulette and more. If you prefer Bingo you find it here too.
Play online casino games, online backgammon games and also online pool. Enjoy playing online slots for real money or for fun.
Bingoon

Play bingo online.
Bingo - fun game online.
Read about bingo and play bingo for free.


Casino
Texas Holdem
casino
Casinos accepting us players
Vinn och Tjäna Pengar
vind penge
Casino

Advertise Here

First hand poker and casino resource for all game and card lovers. Beat the odds!



Tea with Mussolini
Movie Info:

 (6/10) Runtime: 117
Public Rating: 5.91 (23 votes) Director: Franco Zeffirelli
Your Rating:   MPAA Rating:
Genre: Drama/Comedy Year: 1999
Writer(s): Franco Zeffirelli and John Mortimer, from Zeffirelli's autobiography
Distributor: 1
Reviewed by: Friday and Saturday Night Critic
 
Review:

Starring Cher, Dame Judi Dench, Joan Plowright, Dame Maggie Smith, Lily Tomlin, Baird Wallace, Charlie Lucas, Mino Bellei, and Paolo Seganti

No one in the movies ever says “this war is going to last forever,” except that one brooding guy in the corner that everyone else thinks is a killjoy.

The “homefront” movie, about civilians during wartime, is a respectable genre that shows no sign of aging. We learn what life was like before the war, how everyone survived during the hostilities, and how they came out, if not tougher, then at least more concentrated. Life before the war is usually somewhat frivolous, with hints dropped here and there about the gathering storm, and, when the fighting is about to erupt, someone always says “it’ll be over in a few weeks!” Moron. Gone With the Wind follows Scarlett O’Hara and her plantation through, in, and out the Civil War, Hope and Glory does the same with London children in the 1940s, and The Pianist is about Jews in Poland.

Tea With Mussolini is about a circle of affluent British ladies—well-preserved widows, biddies, and old maids—living in Florence in the 1930s and 1940s. In many ways, the movie picks up where A Room With a View left off, perhaps a generation or two later, with English women who have turned Italy into their own little toy, populated by what they see as a child-like, vaguely primitive culture that somehow “came into” a land full of sculptures and Dante. The ladies savor the climate, the art, and the countryside, while still remaining essentially English and spending a lot of time telling the Italians how they should live.

The presence of Maggie Smith in both Mussolini and A View serves as a handy connection; here she plays the widow of the British ambassador and, six years after his death, still expects to be treated deferentially. She is joined by Judi Dench as the artistic one and Joan Plowright as the moral one, who actually has a job. Their never-ending vacation is disrupted by the rise of the Fascists and the appearance of affluent American women, including Cher as a larger-than-life gold-digger and Lily Tomlin as an archaeologist, searching for artifacts that dare not speak their names. Maggie doesn’t much care for Cher, not so much for being amoral as for being ostentatious.

Their tribulations during wartime bring them all down a few pegs, throwing the snooty Brits and the loud Americans together, and get them to appreciate life without quite so many frivolities. There are angry mobs smashing windows, black-clad and impossibly handsome resistance fighters, and flag-waving processions around triumphant Scottish tanks.

The movie is seen through the eyes of a young orphan boy (Baird Wallace and, later, Charlie Lucas) who is probably based on filmmaker Franco Zeffirelli’s (the 1968 Romeo and Juliet and Mel Gibson’s Hamlet) own experiences. Tea With Mussolini is neither about the boy nor the women, but about the boy’s view of the women. This is a tough trick to do well and the result is a muddy, rambling, episodic narrative. Slicing off the right bit of life is no easy feat, and Zeffirelli’s film begins threads that do not end, or come out of nowhere as if the movie is and has been about them all along.

Tea’s fascists are mostly pushovers. They can spread across Europe like a plague and send millions off to death camps but they’re powerless in the face of daffy old ladies in big hats. The movie also seems to suggest that it’s good those dumb Italians have Brits to show them how to live, first before the war, and then saving them afterwards. Maybe that’s too cynical; cultures, like individuals, are not self-sufficient, do not have all the answers, and need help from others to build themselves.

Tea With Mussolini is a sweet, good-natured film, including a few gentle laughs about how Maggie’s grandson is kept from the fighting, and more bits with a dog involving Judi Dench. Zeffirelli and his movie know the women’s plight is not nearly as dire as that of a lot of other people in 1940s Europe and does not hype their condition. The ladies, despite their initial selfishness, band together to protect the Jew in their midst as well as the old art and cathedrals that are threatened, and come out of the fighting better people for it.


Finished January 25, 2004

Copyright © 2004 Friday & Saturday Night

Printable Version


Your Thoughts:

Do you agree/disagree with this review of Tea with Mussolini? Let your opinions be heard in our forum.

Related Merchandise:


Buy the Poster of Tea with Mussolini (Click Here)




About Us   Legal   Advertise   Privacy Policy   Jobs   Contact Us

Copyright © 2000-2006 Movie-Vault.com. Part of Merendi Networks.