Tommaso (2020)

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Direction: Abel Ferrara
Country: Italy / USA / other

In Tommaso, cult director Abel Ferrara (Bad Lieutenant; King of New York; Pasolini) puts forward a confessional semi-autobiographical work where his real wife and daughter - Cristina Chiriac and Anna Ferrara, respectively - star alongside his first-choice actor, Willem Dafoe (their fifth collaboration). The latter gives a powerful central performance as the title character, an American filmmaker living in Rome.

As a recovered alcoholic and drug addict, Tommaso doesn’t miss a rehab session, also spending time giving acting classes and practicing yoga, whose breathing techniques pacify his busy mind. However, he’s going through a tough phase with his autonomous wife Nikki (Chiriac). The communication between them is lacking and Tommaso is gradually pushed into a vortex of madness and anger.

With surrealistic injections that take the form of erotic, sinister or fatalistic episodes in accordance with the main character’s state of mind, this gritty drama also mixes the earthly and the esoteric, revealing a philosophical ambiguity that keeps us seeking for answers and unbroken lines to follow. Ferrara shots with substance and quirkiness and provides a very human experience.

Husband and wife have their secrets, but love can’t be bought. Reality or illusion, we sense a tragedy coming across with very cinematic sensibility. That’s the nature of Ferrara’s world; a world where pleasure and pain can’t stay apart from each other.

All things considered, this is all about feelings, and both Dafoe and Ferrara denote enough inspiration to prevent this idiosyncratic statement to sink into oblivion.

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