Corpo Celeste | Telescope Film
Corpo Celeste

Corpo Celeste

Critic Rating

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13-year-old Marta struggles to find her place in southern Italy after growing up in Switzerland. She joins a catechism class at a local church but feels alienated and restless, constantly conflicting with her mother, sister, and teachers. A coming-of-age story about pushing boundaries at home, at school, and in the Catholic Church.

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What are critics saying?

80

Village Voice

Rohrwacher almost overplays her metaphors, but her understated characterizations, cinematographer Hélène Louvart's rapturous range, and especially Vianello's eerie grace combine to make Corpo Celeste the ideal cinematic antidote to the summer doldrums.

80

Time Out by Eric Hynes

Alice Rohrwacher's debut fictional feature is an uncommonly insightful portrait of nascent womanhood, assisted in no small measure by Vianello's disarmingly naturalistic performance.

80

Total Film by Tom Dawson

With echoes of the Dardennes and Lucrecia Martel, Corpo Celeste's acute sense of place, feel for adolescent confusion and miraculous resolution suggest that Rohrwacher is a talent to watch.

80

Empire by David Parkinson

Quietly compelling, the cerebral slice of social realism is well worth hunting down.

80

Village Voice by Mark Holcomb

Rohrwacher almost overplays her metaphors, but her understated characterizations, cinematographer Hélène Louvart's rapturous range, and especially Vianello's eerie grace combine to make Corpo Celeste the ideal cinematic antidote to the summer doldrums.

75

Slant Magazine

Once Corpo Celeste began to recede a little in my rearview mirror, my initial impatience softened a little.

75

San Francisco Chronicle by Walter Addiego

For those willing to overlook its few slips into heavy-handedness, Corpo Celeste tells a compelling story of a 12-year-old girl thrust into a strange new world.

75

Slant Magazine

Once Corpo Celeste began to recede a little in my rearview mirror, my initial impatience softened a little.

70

Variety

Rohrwacher's picture offers a Dardennes-esque look at a working-class teen's growing pains in a backwater parish in southern Italy. Minor tonal inconsistencies are overcome by this intimate tale's naturalistic thesping and loose lensing style.

70

Variety by Boyd van Hoeij

Rohrwacher's picture offers a Dardennes-esque look at a working-class teen's growing pains in a backwater parish in southern Italy. Minor tonal inconsistencies are overcome by this intimate tale's naturalistic thesping and loose lensing style.

60

Time Out London by Cath Clarke

Stick with it and writer/director Alice Rohrwacher’s first feature reveals another side: taking a small town as a microcosm of Berlusconi’s something-rotten-at-the-core Italy.

60

The Guardian by Peter Bradshaw

An accomplished debut.

50

The New York Times by Rachel Saltz

Ms. Rohrwacher combines a documentary impulse (effective in family scenes) with a more allegorical one. Her film gets clunky when allegory has the upper hand, and that means Corpo Celeste often stumbles, along with its 12-year-old heroine, Marta (Yle Vianello).