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The Hand of God(È stata la mano di Dio)

✭ ✭ ✭ ✭   Read critic reviews

Italy · 2021
2h 10m
Director Paolo Sorrentino
Starring Filippo Scotti, Toni Servillo, Teresa Saponangelo, Luisa Ranieri
Genre Comedy, Drama

Based in part on the life of director Paolo Sorrentino, this film tells the story of awkward teenager Fabietto who lives at home in Naples with family. Fabietto spends his days listening to music and watching Diego Maradona play for his home team, little suspecting the fateful role the soccer superstar will play in his his own life.

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40

TheWrap by Dan Callahan

It might be hoped that the passage of time could give him some fond or melancholy distance from such material, but Sorrentino serves up his memories in an unappealingly inert and flat manner.

83

IndieWire by David Ehrlich

The Hand of God doesn’t always find the clearest way of knotting these various stories together, and the film’s second half — replete with so many highs — also feels like it leaves a number of important characters dangling in the wind.

100

The Hollywood Reporter by David Rooney

It’s the work of a director in full command of his gifts, from the kaleidoscopic vignettes of family life that make the first half such a constant delight through the supple modulation of tone midway, when shocking tragedy prompts a shift into a more ruminative mood.

80

Screen Daily by Jonathan Romney

The boisterousness remains, as does the unreconstructed maleness that has often been a jarring mannerism in his work. But new intimacy also yields a lightness and tenderness that are a welcome addition to Sorrentino’s palette.

50

Variety by Owen Gleiberman

The Hand of God has some good scenes, but it’s the kind of portrait-of-an-artist drama where you watch the insults, the clashes, the assaultive attitude of it all and you think: Is this what it was actually like for the young Sorrentino growing up in Naples? Or does he simply have an aversion to scenes that don’t hit you over the head

80

The Telegraph by Robbie Collin

Sorrentino and his cast make these teenage recollections twinge with freshness. Like our own sharpest memories of adolescence, the haze of nostalgia doesn’t dull their edge.

100

The Playlist by Rodrigo Perez

It’s a lovely, charming, vibrant, sad, bildungsroman tale and roman-fleuve that pays small tribute to Maradona. But more importantly, it manages to both memorialize this agonizing turning point in his life and warmly reminisce on the bliss that came before it.

60

The Guardian by Xan Brooks

The Hand of God, no surprise, is Sorrentino’s most nakedly personal film to date, almost to a fault in the way it jettisons the cool distance of The Great Beauty or Il Divo in favour of a sweaty, close-up evocation of youth. It’s a picture only Sorrentino could make. But that doesn’t necessarily make him the safest pair of hands.

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