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To Want to Fly
Maurizio works in a dubbing studio and puts sound effects into cartoons. One day his hands turn into cartoon ones, with a life of their own.
Release : | 1993 |
Rating : | 6.7 |
Studio : | Cecchi Gori Group Tiger Cinematografica, Bambú Cinema e TV, |
Crew : | Production Design, Director of Photography, |
Cast : | Maurizio Nichetti Angela Finocchiaro Mariella Valentini Patrizio Roversi Lidia Biondi |
Genre : | Fantasy Comedy |
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Horrible, fascist and poorly acted
I wanted to like it more than I actually did... But much of the humor totally escaped me and I walked out only mildly impressed.
True to its essence, the characters remain on the same line and manage to entertain the viewer, each highlighting their own distinctive qualities or touches.
Mostly, the movie is committed to the value of a good time.
Martina has an unusual job satisfying her eccentric clients' sexual fantasies. Maurizio 'Sbaffino' (Maurizio Nichetti) spends his time collecting sounds from the world. He dubs cartoons while his brother does less innocent films with a bevy of beauties. He happens upon Martina during one of her jobs. As they connect, he's horrified to find himself turning into a cartoon as the cartoon world collides with the real world.Maurizio has such an unique clownish look and he is a charismatic performer. Angela Finocchiaro is a sassy broad and a great partner. It's ridiculous. It's silly. There are no hot babes dubbing in their lingerie in the real world. This is simply a fun screwball comedy with a fun pair.
***SPOILER WARNING*** There are some movies that are so abstract and off-kilter that you want to like them just on sheer audacity. Sometimes that is true even when the film has you scratching your head. Volere Volare, is a bawdy confection of styles; animation, slapstick, bizarre sound effects and the kind of bizarre otherworldliness that Tex Avery perfected. Yet, for a film with so much trickery, you understand that the filmmaker is walking a very fine line, cross that line and your movie goes over the edge and tries our patience.Volere Volare is the work of a director named Maurizio Nichetti whose previous work I am not familiar with. What I learned about his technique (from just this film) is that he seems to have a rye sense of humor and a knack for defying all logic to make his comedy truly bizarre.Nichetti stars as a character named Maurizio who works as a sound effects artist for classic cartoons. His perverted brother is a fellow sound engineer who hires women to provide the moans and groans for porn films. This alone could have made for a very wicked comedy by itself but once the idea is introduced, Nichetti doesn't do anything with it.Instead he introduces us to another element that could have made an entire movie. We meet a prostitute named Martina who specializes in very weird clients who get to play out their sexual fantasies even if they don't always fit the classic definition of erotic (some have to be seen to be believed).Up until this point Nichetti seems to be setting the elements of a great comedy in motion. We wait to see how he will tie these three characters together but instead he throws in a very strange development, which trashes the second half of the movie. Maurizio begins to exhibit signs of turning into an animated version of himself and, eventually, he does. Unfortunately, he does so just as he is about to have sex with Martina. This is an interesting idea as the springboard for another comedy but Nichetti uses that as his climax and we sense an opportunity lost.My affection for bawdy comedy kept me confident with what worked in 'Volare Volere' but I sensed that he didn't have a direction in mind. This is a movie all the pieces in place with a director who hasn't supplied himself with a direction in which to carry them. The movie doesn't end, it just kind of peters out. Volere Volare, alas, is one of those movies that leaves you saying "Well . . . okay then." Rating: ** (of four)
Do I have to compare? With Roger Rabbitt or Mask? Please, don't! Because this great Italian film have more than Hollywood movies mixing humans with cartoons: it had cinematographic qualities, a simple but strong story, and originality. American models had only special effets. Nichetti puts his European sensibility and savoir-faire in a delightfull comedy, full of pretty funny gags (as an other viewers says, don't miss the dubbing of the blue movie!) See it again and again! It's better every time!One of the true original comedies of the 1990's.
A lightweight, intermittently appealing movie of more than dubious sexual attitudes (are we supposed to think that Martina's prostitution -- for that's what it adds up to -- is charming just because the clients are weird? And their fetishes are not so terribly original.) However, there are some extremely funny moments. The dubbing of the blue movie is not to be missed.