Padre Padrone Explained

Padre Padrone
Director:Paolo Taviani
Vittorio Taviani
Producer:Giuliani G. De Negri
Starring:Omero Antonutti
Cinematography:Mario Masini
Distributor:Radiotelevisione Italiana
Cinema 5 Distributing (USA)
Artificial Eye (UK)
Runtime:114 minutes
Country:Italy
Language:Italian
Sardinian
Latin

Padre Padrone is a 1977 Italian film directed by Paolo Taviani and Vittorio Taviani. The Tavianis used both professional and non-professional actors from the Sardinian countryside.[1] The title (pronounced as /it/) literally means "Father Master";[2] it has been translated as My Father, My Master[3] or Father and Master.[4] [5]

The drama was originally filmed by the Taviani brothers for Italian television but won the 1977 Palme d'Or prize at the 1977 Cannes Film Festival.[6] [7]

The film depicts a Sardinian shepherd who is terrorized by his domineering father and tries to escape by educating himself. He eventually becomes a celebrated linguist. The drama is based on an autobiographical book of the same title by Gavino Ledda.

In 2008, the film was included on the Italian Ministry of Cultural Heritage’s 100 Italian films to be saved, a list of 100 films that "have changed the collective memory of the country between 1942 and 1978."[8]

Plot

The film opens in a documentary style at the elementary school in Siligo, where six-year-old Gavino (Saverio Marconi) is attending. His tyrannical peasant father (Omero Antonutti) barges in and announces to the teacher and the students that Gavino must leave school and tend to the family sheep. Under his father's watchful eyes and the victim of his sadistic behavior, Gavino spends the next fourteen years tending sheep in the Sardinian mountains. There, he begins to discover "things" for himself and rebels against his father.

Gavino is rescued from his family and isolation when he is called for military service. During his time with the army, he learns about electronics, the Italian language, and classical music, yearning all the while for a university education.

When Gavino returns home, he declares to his father that he will attend university. His father is against this and tells him that he will throw him out of the family home. They have a nasty fight, but Gavino eventually attends university and emerges as a brilliant student. He becomes a linguist, specializing in the origins of the Sardinian language.

The film ends again in a documentary style as Gavino Ledda himself explains why he wrote his book and what Sardinian children may expect as inhabitants of a rural area with close ties to the land.

Cast

Music

Critical reception

Janet Maslin, film critic for The New York Times, praised the film and wrote, "Padre Padrone is stirringly affirmative. It's also a bit simple: The patriarchal behavior of Gavino's father is so readily accepted as an unfathomable given constant that the film never offers much insight into the man or the culture that fostered him. Intriguingly aberrant behavior is chalked up to tradition, and thus robbed of some of its ferocity. But the film is vivid and very moving, coarse but seldom blunt, and filled with raw landscapes that underscore the naturalness and inevitability of the father-son rituals it depicts."[9]

Variety magazine wrote, "Around the initiation of a seven-year-old boy into the lonely life of sheep herder until his triumphant rift at the age of 20 with a remarkably overbearing father-patriarch (Omero Antonutti), the Taviani brothers have for the most part succeeded in adapting a miniature epic...In a long final part, accenting the boy's iron will to learn right up to a high school diploma, the final showdown between patriarch and rebel son is perhaps a more consequent narrative."[10]

On review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, the film has an approval rating of 100% based on 6 reviews with an average score of 7.3/10.[11]

The Japanese filmmaker Akira Kurosawa cited this movie as one of his 100 favorite films.[12]

Awards

Wins

Nominations

Notes and References

  1. .
  2. Web site: Padre Padrone. Philip. French. 23 September 2007. the Guardian.
  3. Web site: PADRE PADRONE: My Father My Master by Gavino Ledda - Kirkus Reviews.
  4. Web site: Padre Padrone (Father and Master). 1977. Written and directed by Paolo Taviani, Vittorio Taviani - MoMA. The Museum of Modern Art.
  5. Web site: Padre Padrone. cohenfilmcollection.net.
  6. Web site: Festival de Cannes: Padre Padrone . 2009-05-10. festival-cannes.com.
  7. Curran, Daniel, ed. Foreign Films, film review and analysis of Padre Padrone, page 135, 1989. Evanston, Illinois: Cinebooks. .
  8. Web site: Ecco i cento film italiani da salvare Corriere della Sera. 2021-03-11. www.corriere.it.
  9. https://movies.nytimes.com/movie/review?_r=1&res=9D07EEDA1F3AEF33A25757C2A9649D946690D6CF&oref=slogin Maslin, Janet
  10. https://www.variety.com/review/VE1117793826.html?categoryid=31&cs=1&p=0 Variety
  11. Web site: Padre Padrone (1977) . . . April 22, 2017.
  12. Web site: Thomas-Mason . Lee . From Stanley Kubrick to Martin Scorsese: Akira Kurosawa once named his top 100 favourite films of all time . Far Out Magazine . 23 January 2023.
  13. Web site: Ente David di Donatello - Accademia del Cinema Italiano. 14 January 2011. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20131021043753/http://www.daviddidonatello.it/english/schedaanno.php. 21 October 2013.