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Sin(Il peccato)

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Russia, Italy · 2019
2h 14m
Director Andrei Konchalovsky
Starring Alberto Testone, Umberto Orsini, Nicola Adobati, Massimo De Francovich
Genre Drama, History

A gritty, powerful biopic of legendary Italian Renaissance artist Michelangelo Buonarroti. Rather than focusing on the glamor of his art, the film focuses on the difficulty of trying to survive and create art amidst poverty, political turmoil, and his fractured loyalty to the warring Medici and Della Rovere families fighting for control of Italy.

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What are critics saying?

70

Variety by

Neither glowing hagiography nor gritty apologia, Sin wallows instead in Michelangelo’s melancholy, his vanity and later his paranoia.

70

The New York Times by Ben Kenigsberg

An austere, demanding sit, Sin — a Russian-Italian coproduction with Italian dialogue — nevertheless has a stubborn integrity in exploring the competing forces of patronage and creative inspiration that Michelangelo confronted in the 16th century.

70

Screen Daily by Demetrios Matheou

Dramatically the film can feel a little one-note and overlong. But it stands comparison with Derek Jarman’s Caravaggio as a fascinating portrait of an artist fighting to survive in the cut and thrust of times quite unlike our own.

75

Slant Magazine by Pat Brown

Andrei Konchalovsky’s film is fascinated with the creation of great art in the midst of socio-political turmoil.

70

Los Angeles Times by Robert Abele

Neither agonizing nor ecstatic, but solidly cinematic, Andrei Konchalovsky’s Michelangelo biopic Sin sees the veteran Russian filmmaker tackling the mystery of genius with what might be described as sumptuous grit.

75

Movie Nation by Roger Moore

It’s a gritty, lived-in film that feels like a smelly, life-is-nasty-brutish-and-short for anyone not in the ruling classes depiction of the Renaissance — beautiful and painterly even in it’s ugliness.

50

Austin Chronicle by Steve Davis

Renaissance man extraordinaire Michelangelo Buonarroti is frequently accused of greed in the incohesive historical drama Sin, but the only real transgression is his pride, whether it’s nurturing his own divine genius or badmouthing the mediocrity of contemporaries like Leonardo and Raphael.

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