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La Sapienza

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France, Italy · 2014
1h 40m
Director Eugène Green
Starring Fabrizio Rongione, Christelle Prot, Ludovico Succio, Arianna Nastro
Genre Drama

An architect that has lost his inspiration goes looking for the motivations that pushed him as a youngster to take up the profession. Inspired by the baroque movement and all of its artifices, this is a love story that develops between architecture, artistic inspiration and feelings.

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What are people saying?

What are critics saying?

70

Los Angeles Times by

The pace can feel plodding, but the observations on human frailty and redemption more than make up for it. Despite forays into the head, it's the movie's heart that makes it special.

70

The New York Times by A.O. Scott

The movie is an unapologetically rarefied undertaking and at the same time a gracious and inviting film. And it embodies an elegant and melancholy paradox: What looks like tourism is really the pursuit of truth and beauty, and vice versa.

75

Slant Magazine by Carson Lund

The mannered direction is at its most effective when it inspires an enhanced sensitivity to the import of every gesture, visual or verbal.

60

Time Out by David Ehrlich

Combining the knowingly arch style of Abbas Kiarostami (whose "Certified Copy" towers over and belittles this film) with the didactically educational passion of your favorite art professor, La Sapienza alternately feels like a self-reflexive love story or a haunted history lesson—its best scenes play like both.

100

RogerEbert.com by Godfrey Cheshire

Easily the most astonishing and important movie to emerge from France in quite some time. While its style deserves to be called stunningly original and rapturously beautiful, the film is boldest in its artistic and philosophical implications, which pointedly go against many dominant trends of the last half-century.

60

The Dissolve by Noel Murray

While La Sapienza is unsatisfying as drama, it’s frequently beautiful just as a tour through architecturally significant Italian buildings. And it’s intellectually engaging as an elaboration of their larger meaning.

90

Variety by Scott Foundas

The unresolvable tension between logic and feeling animates Eugene Green’s La Sapienza, an exquisite rumination on life, love and art that tickles the heart and mind in equal measure.

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