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Drama

Loro

- Everything is not enough.

Internationally released Director's Cut of "Loro 1" and "Loro 2", which were released separately as two movies in Italy. The film talks about the group of businessmen and politicians – the Loro (Them) from the title – who live and act near to media tycoon and politician Silvio Berlusconi in the years between 2006 and 2009.

Release Date : 2018-09-13

Language :Italian

Adult : false

Status : Released

Production Company : Indigo FilmFrance 2 CinémaPathé

Production Country : FranceItaly

Alternative Titles :

Cast

Toni Servillo

Character Name : Silvio Berlusconi / Ennio Doris

Original Name : Toni Servillo

Gender : Male

Elena Sofia Ricci

Character Name : Veronica Lario

Original Name : Elena Sofia Ricci

Gender : Female

Riccardo Scamarcio

Character Name : Sergio Morra

Original Name : Riccardo Scamarcio

Gender : Male

Kasia Smutniak

Character Name : Kira

Original Name : Kasia Smutniak

Gender : Female

Euridice Axén

Character Name : Tamara

Original Name : Euridice Axén

Gender : Female

Fabrizio Bentivoglio

Character Name : Santino Recchia

Original Name : Fabrizio Bentivoglio

Gender : Male

Roberto De Francesco

Character Name : Fabrizio Sala

Original Name : Roberto De Francesco

Gender : Male

Dario Cantarelli

Character Name : Paolo Spagnolo

Original Name : Dario Cantarelli

Gender : Male

Anna Bonaiuto

Character Name : Cupa Caiafa

Original Name : Anna Bonaiuto

Gender : Female

Giovanni Esposito

Character Name : Mariano Apicella

Original Name : Giovanni Esposito

Gender : Male

Ugo Pagliai

Character Name : Mike Bongiorno

Original Name : Ugo Pagliai

Gender : Male

Ricky Memphis

Character Name : Riccardo Pasta

Original Name : Ricky Memphis

Gender : Male

Duccio Camerini

Character Name : Rocco Barbaro

Original Name : Duccio Camerini

Gender : Male

Yann Gael

Character Name : Michel Martinez

Original Name : Yann Gael

Gender : Male

Lorenzo Gioielli

Character Name : Senatore Valori

Original Name : Lorenzo Gioielli

Gender : Male

Alice Pagani

Character Name : Stella

Original Name : Alice Pagani

Gender : Female

Caroline Tillette

Character Name : Violetta Saba

Original Name : Caroline Tillette

Gender : Female

Mattia Sbragia

Character Name : Fedele Confalonieri

Original Name : Mattia Sbragia

Gender : Male

Max Tortora

Character Name : Martino

Original Name : Max Tortora

Gender : Male

Milvia Marigliano

Character Name : Signora Telefonata

Original Name : Milvia Marigliano

Gender : Female

Roberto Herlitzka

Character Name : Crepuscolo

Original Name : Roberto Herlitzka

Gender : Male

Giulia Alberti

Character Name : Presentatrice Tv

Original Name : Giulia Alberti

Gender : Female

Yohana Allen

Character Name : Ragazza Sudamericana Gf

Original Name : Yohana Allen

Gender : Female

Federica Ambrogio

Character Name : Attrice Raccomandata

Original Name : Federica Ambrogio

Gender : Male

Demetra Avincola

Character Name : Ragazza Fori Imperiali

Original Name : Demetra Avincola

Gender : Male

Anna Bagnasco

Character Name : Ragazza Palestra

Original Name : Anna Bagnasco

Gender : Male

Brenda Bagni

Character Name : Ragazza Palestra

Original Name : Brenda Bagni

Gender : Male

Daria Baykalova

Character Name : Estintorina

Original Name : Daria Baykalova

Gender : Female

Arianna Bertoncelli

Character Name : Ragazza Palestra

Original Name : Arianna Bertoncelli

Gender : Male

Carolina Binda

Character Name : Candida Pascià

Original Name : Carolina Binda

Gender : Female

Marika Borrello

Character Name : Ragazza Palestra

Original Name : Marika Borrello

Gender : Male

Angelica Bosca

Character Name : Ragazza Palestra

Original Name : Angelica Bosca

Gender : Male

Arianna Bosio

Character Name : Ragazza Palestra

Original Name : Arianna Bosio

Gender : Male

Paolo Buglioni

Character Name : Ernesto Morra

Original Name : Paolo Buglioni

Gender : Male

Angelica Cacciapaglia

Character Name : Sposa

Original Name : Angelica Cacciapaglia

Gender : Male

Laura Calvo

Character Name : Ragazza Palestra

Original Name : Laura Calvo

Gender : Male

Denis Campitelli

Character Name : Invitato Festa Villa Morena

Original Name : Denis Campitelli

Gender : Male

Alessandra Chiodini

Character Name : Ragazza Collana

Original Name : Alessandra Chiodini

Gender : Male

Agostino Chiummariello

Character Name : Senatore Rizzo

Original Name : Agostino Chiummariello

Gender : Male

Eleonora Cilia

Character Name : Ragazza Palestra

Original Name : Eleonora Cilia

Gender : Male

Fabiola Cimminella

Character Name : Ragazza Palestra

Original Name : Fabiola Cimminella

Gender : Male

Fabio Concato

Character Name : Himself

Original Name : Fabio Concato

Gender : Male

Gabriele Coppola

Character Name : Invitato Festa Villa Morena

Original Name : Gabriele Coppola

Gender : Male

Laura Cremaschi

Character Name : Ragazza Margot

Original Name : Laura Cremaschi

Gender : Female

Katy Monique Cuomo

Character Name : Ela

Original Name : Katy Monique Cuomo

Gender : Female

Marina Dainotto

Character Name : Ragazza DJ

Original Name : Marina Dainotto

Gender : Male

Tanya Davolio

Character Name : Ragazza con Chitarra

Original Name : Tanya Davolio

Gender : Male

Rosaria De Cicco

Character Name : Madre di Noemi

Original Name : Rosaria De Cicco

Gender : Female

Adua Del Vesco

Character Name : Veronica a 24 anni

Original Name : Adua Del Vesco

Gender : Female

Massimo Di Michele

Character Name : Invitato Festa Villa Morena

Original Name : Massimo Di Michele

Gender : Male

Vincent Django

Character Name : Invitato Festa Villa Morena

Original Name : Vincent Django

Gender : Male

Andrea Dolcini

Character Name : Luigino

Original Name : Andrea Dolcini

Gender : Male

Marina Evangelista

Character Name : Presentatrice Prodotti Locali

Original Name : Marina Evangelista

Gender : Female

Marika Esposito

Character Name : Ragazza Discoteca

Original Name : Marika Esposito

Gender : Male

Alessia Fabiani

Character Name : Fidanzata di Riccardo Pasta

Original Name : Alessia Fabiani

Gender : Female

Giuliana Ferraz

Character Name : Maschera Teatro

Original Name : Giuliana Ferraz

Gender : Male

Tommaso Foglio

Character Name : Nipote di Silvio (as Tommaso Fogli)

Original Name : Tommaso Foglio

Gender : Male

Davide Fornaro

Character Name : Invitato Festa Villa Morena

Original Name : Davide Fornaro

Gender : Male

Marylin Gallo

Character Name : Ragazza catatonica

Original Name : Marylin Gallo

Gender : Female

Anna Gargiulo

Character Name : Ragazza Palestra

Original Name : Anna Gargiulo

Gender : Male

Bianca Giannasso

Character Name : Ragazza Spot Automobile

Original Name : Bianca Giannasso

Gender : Male

Giovanna Gianolli

Character Name : Donna in Camice SPA

Original Name : Giovanna Gianolli

Gender : Male

Maria Ester Grasso

Character Name : Ragazza sul Ring

Original Name : Maria Ester Grasso

Gender : Male

Anna Jimskaia

Character Name : Invitato Festa Villa Morena

Original Name : Anna Jimskaia

Gender : Female

Sumi Jo

Character Name : Cantante Festa Araba

Original Name : 조수미

Gender : Female

Antigone Kouloukakos

Character Name : Palmira, la Regista

Original Name : Αντιγόνη Κουλουκάκου

Gender : Female

Matteo Lai

Character Name : Tecnico Tv

Original Name : Matteo Lai

Gender : Male

Chiara Carlotta Leonetti

Character Name : Fischiatrice

Original Name : Chiara Carlotta Leonetti

Gender : Male

Ileana Macrì

Character Name : Assistente Mago

Original Name : Ileana Macrì

Gender : Male

Paola Maffioletti

Character Name : Moglie di Santino

Original Name : Paola Maffioletti

Gender : Female

Daisy Mancini

Character Name : Ragazza Palestra

Original Name : Daisy Mancini

Gender : Male

Claudia Mancinelli

Character Name : Ragazza Ginnastica Ritmica

Original Name : Claudia Mancinelli

Gender : Female

Beatrice Marchetti

Character Name : Margottina

Original Name : Beatrice Marchetti

Gender : Male

Chiara Mocci

Character Name : Ragazza Palestra

Original Name : Chiara Mocci

Gender : Female

Lino Musella

Character Name : Napoletano Quarantenne

Original Name : Lino Musella

Gender : Male

Shôko Nakahara

Character Name : Massaggiatrice

Original Name : 中原翔子

Gender : Female

Chiara Napoli

Character Name : Danzatrice del Ventre

Original Name : Chiara Napoli

Gender : Male

Valeria Nardilli

Character Name : Estintorina

Original Name : Valeria Nardilli

Gender : Male

Beniada Nishani

Character Name : Ragazza Serpente

Original Name : Beniada Nishani

Gender : Male

Bob Noceti

Character Name : Mago

Original Name : Bob Noceti

Gender : Male

Maria Francesca Nunziata

Character Name : Ragazza Antennista

Original Name : Maria Francesca Nunziata

Gender : Male

Oprea Diana

Character Name : Margottina

Original Name : Oprea Diana

Gender : Male

Giulia Pagnacco

Character Name : Jane Mansfield

Original Name : Giulia Pagnacco

Gender : Female

Alessandro Pala

Character Name : Maggiordomo Giovanni

Original Name : Alessandro Pala

Gender : Male

Chiara Pasqualini

Character Name : Danzatrice Danza Araba

Original Name : Chiara Pasqualini

Gender : Male

Donata Pasqualone

Character Name : Anziana Terremotata

Original Name : Donata Pasqualone

Gender : Male

Elisa Pepè Sciarria

Character Name : Ragazza Palestra

Original Name : Elisa Pepè Sciarria

Gender : Male

Alina Person

Character Name : Invitata Festa Villa Morena

Original Name : Alina Person

Gender : Male

Immacolata Pirone

Character Name : Ragazza Palestra

Original Name : Immacolata Pirone

Gender : Male

Ginevra Francesca Pisani

Character Name : Ragazza Palestra

Original Name : Ginevra Francesca Pisani

Gender : Male

Melissa Ramirez

Character Name : Ragazza Palestra

Original Name : Melissa Ramirez

Gender : Male

Beatrice Restelli

Character Name : Ragazza Palestra

Original Name : Beatrice Restelli

Gender : Male

Jessica Piccolo Valerani

Character Name : Antonellina

Original Name : Jessica Piccolo Valerani

Gender : Female

Clive Riche

Character Name : Arturo, Capo Cameriere

Original Name : Clive Riche

Gender : Male

Giulia Rinallo

Character Name : Cubista

Original Name : Giulia Rinallo

Gender : Male

Monica Riva

Character Name : Tennista

Original Name : Monica Riva

Gender : Male

Lodovica Mairè Rogati

Character Name : Manuela Barletta

Original Name : Lodovica Mairè Rogati

Gender : Female

Massimo Romano

Character Name : Medico Villa Morena

Original Name : Massimo Romano

Gender : Male

Fabio Rossini

Character Name : Maresciallo Scorta Santino

Original Name : Fabio Rossini

Gender : Male

Annamaria Sambucco

Character Name : Vicina di Casa

Original Name : Annamaria Sambucco

Gender : Female

Pasqualina Sanna

Character Name : Noemi Letizia

Original Name : Pasqualina Sanna

Gender : Female

Federica Sarno

Character Name : Margottina

Original Name : Federica Sarno

Gender : Male

Gigi Savoia

Character Name : Elio Letizia

Original Name : Gigi Savoia

Gender : Male

Alessandra Scarci

Character Name : Ragazza sul Ring

Original Name : Alessandra Scarci

Gender : Female

Thomas Semeraro

Character Name : Bodyguard Hotel Taranto

Original Name : Thomas Semeraro

Gender : Male

Andrea Simonetti

Character Name : Invitato Festa Villa Morena

Original Name : Andrea Simonetti

Gender : Male

Francesca Solombrino

Character Name : Ragazza Spot Cinghia Dimagrante

Original Name : Francesca Solombrino

Gender : Female

Alessandro Tedeschi

Character Name : Attore Telepromozioni Salumi

Original Name : Alessandro Tedeschi

Gender : Male

Giulia Todaro

Character Name : Miss Lato B

Original Name : Giulia Todaro

Gender : Female

Aurora Tonea

Character Name : Ragazza Spot Materassi

Original Name : Aurora Tonea

Gender : Male

Claudia Tosoni

Character Name : Ragazza Telepromozioni Salumi

Original Name : Claudia Tosoni

Gender : Male

Andrea Trapani

Character Name : Invitato Festa Villa Morena

Original Name : Andrea Trapani

Gender : Male

Francesca Turrini

Character Name : Moira

Original Name : Francesca Turrini

Gender : Female

Alessandra Valenti

Character Name : Ragazza Palestra

Original Name : Alessandra Valenti

Gender : Male

Elisabetta Ventura

Character Name : Ragazza Palestra

Original Name : Elisabetta Ventura

Gender : Female

Romina Zadi

Character Name : Ballerina di Fila

Original Name : Romina Zadi

Gender : Male

Manuela Zero

Character Name : Invitata Festa Villa Morena

Original Name : Manuela Zero

Gender : Female

Michela Cescon

Character Name : Marinella Brambilla (uncredited)

Original Name : Michela Cescon

Gender : Female

Federica Strozzi

Character Name : Invitata Festa Villa Morena (uncredited)

Original Name : Federica Strozzi

Gender : Male

Reviews

S

Stephen Campbell

@Bertaut

2021-06-23

**_Very, very Sorrentino_** > _I am the Jesus Christ of politics. I am a patient victim, I sacrifice myself for everyone._ - Silvio Berlusconi; Campaign dinner (February 11, 2006) > _I am without doubt the person who's been the most persecuted in the entire history of the world and the history of man._ - Silvio Berlusconi; Press conference (October 8, 2009) > _When asked if they would like to have sex with me, 30% of women said, 'Yes', while the other 70% replied, 'What, again'?_ - Silvio Berlusconi; Press conference (March 30, 2011) > _They can tap my telephone calls. I d__on't give a fuck. I'm getting out to mind my own fucking business, from somewhere else, and so I'm leaving this shitty country, of which I'm sickened._ - Silvio Berlusconi; Tapped phone conversation with Valter Lavitola (July 13, 2011) > _Silvio Berlusconi first came to power for the same reasons Trump and other populists have been coming to power around the world: Voters were disgusted by a governing elite that seemed corrupt and out of touch. They felt swamped by waves of immigrants, frustrated by economic stagnation and disgusted by the cultural values of the cosmopolitan urbanites._ > _In office, Berlusconi did nothing to address Italy's core problems, but he did degrade public discourse with his speech, weaken the structures of government with his corruption and offend basic decency with his bunga bunga sex parties and his general priapic lewdness._ > _In short, Berlusconi, like Trump, did nothing to address the sources of public anger, but he did erase any restraints on the way it could be expressed._ - David Brooks; "The Chaos After Trump" (_New York Times_) (March 5, 2018) _Loro_ [_Them_], the latest film from Italian _auteur_ Paolo Sorrentino, is what can only be described as very, very Sorrentino, insofar as it's a pure distillation of his overriding thematic concerns and an inclusive anthology-like compendium of his stylistic tendencies. By way of comparison, think of _Terrence Malick_'s _To the Wonder_ (2012), _Knight of Cups_ (2015), and _Song to Song_ (2017), in which he all-but-abandons plot and character arcs in deference to emotional beats, esoteric voiceover, and metaphysical tone; think of David Lynch's _Mulholland Drive_ (2001), _Inland Empire_ (2006) and _Twin Peaks: The Return_ (2017), his most sustained expressions of cinematic surrealism and fractured identity since _Eraserhead_ (1977); or, in a very different sense, think of Michael Mann's _Miami Vice_ (2006), with its jargon-heavy dialogue and thematic focus on obsessive (male) professionalism, coupled with Mann's continued experimentation with digital photography and expressive _mise en scène_. One thing these films all have in common is that they unapologetically establish very early on they are playing by their own rules, and if you don't buy in pretty quickly, you won't buy in at all. So too _Loro_; this is Sorrentino at his most Sorrentino-like. Very much a thematic companion piece to _Il divo_ (2008), his examination of seven-time Italian Prime Minister Giulio Andreotti, whilst stylistically similar to the Oscar-winning masterpiece _La grande bellezza_ (2013), _Loro_ is more interested in extravagant hedonism and Dionysian excess than the former and more bitingly satirical than the latter. Visually stunning, with a towering central performance from Toni Servillo (working with Sorrentino for the sixth time), some will criticise the film as all style, no substance; some will decry the lack of a strong forward-moving plot; some will take issue with the fact that Sorrentino seems reluctant to condemn Berlusconi outright; some will argue that in attempting to satirise the commodification of the female body, Sorrentino simply reproduces such commodification, as well as legitimising the concomitant male gaze; some will find it too glossy and unrealistic; some will find it vulgar; some will find it sordid; some will regard the aping of Fellini as too on the nose. And there's validity in each position, to one degree or another. In other words, it's very, very Sorrentino! Written with his regular writing partner Umberto Contarello, _Loro_ tells the "partly fictionalised" story of Silvio Berlusconi (Servillo) from just after the April 2006 general election (which saw _L'Unione_, the centre-left coalition led by Romano Prodi, narrowly defeat _Casa delle Libertà_, the centre-right coalition led by Berlusconi) and concluding with the April 2009 L'Aquila earthquake and Berlusconi's return to power. As the film begins, we're introduced to Sergio Morra (Riccardo Scamarcio), a pimp from Taranto. Hoping to ingratiate himself with Berlusconi, Morra heads to Sardinia, and rents a villa bordering Berlusconi's summer residence. Populating it with his escorts, who he encourages to party as much and as publicly as possible, he sits back and waits, knowing Berlusconi won't be able to stay away from so many scantily clad women for long. However, unbeknownst to Morra, Berlusconi's attention is elsewhere. Finding himself in a political position to which he is unaccustomed (leader of the opposition), he is at something of a loss as to how to fill his day. On a more personal level, his marriage to Veronica Lario (Elena Sofia Ricci) is breaking down, despite his best efforts to salvage the relationship. Meanwhile, his old friend, Ennio Doris (also Servillo), points out that due to how tight the 2006 election was (_L'Unione_ took the _Camera dei deputati_ by a margin of .1%), if Berlusconi could persuade six sitting senators to switch to the opposition, Prodi's government would collapse. Meanwhile, Veronica heads to Cambodia, leaving Berlusconi unsupervised at home, and by now he's very aware of who is living next door. A controversial film in Italy from the moment of its announcement, Sorrentino was unable to secure funding from his usual financier, Medusa Film, which is co-owned by Berlusconi. Released in Italy in two parts, _Loro 1_ (104 minutes) and _Loro 2_ (100 minutes), the film was released internationally as one piece, running 145 minutes. More formally inventive than any of Sorrentino's previous work, the visual structure of _Loro_ is not entirely dissimilar to that employed by Adam McKay in _The Big Short_ (2015) and _Vice_ (2018), with the cast even breaking into a full musical number at one point. And, as will come as a shock to precisely no one, _Loro_ looks absolutely amazing. There's the gorgeous and vibrant cinematography by Sorrentino regular Luca Bigazzi, rendering Sardinia as a lazy, sun-kissed nirvana bathed in the verdant green of the foliage and the rich blue of the ocean and sky, with the colours in general so vibrant as to make Luca Guadagnino's _Call Me by Your Name_ (2017) seem practically black and white in comparison. The richness of the film's visual aesthetic is helped immeasurably by the luxurious and gaudy production design by Stefania Cella (_What Just Happened?_; _Downsizing_; _White Boy Rick_), the decadent and seductive wardrobe by Carlo Poggioli (_Cold Mountain_; _Van Helsing_; _Divergent_), and the makeup by Maurizio Silvi (_Moulin Rouge!_; _Hannibal Rising_; _Zoolander 2_), hilariously recreating Berlusconi's waxen surgery-enhanced features and permatan, effectively turning Servillo into a human Ken doll. Indeed, the film is almost _too_ beautiful. Sorrentino employs such lush, over-the-top beauty because he is satirising soulless elegance (and soulless tack); that which is aesthetically pleasing but metaphysically empty. By all-but drowning the audience in extraordinary, but ultimately meaningless, opulence, could he be accused of recreating and thus partially validating that which he is mocking? Yes, he could, although the counter-argument would be that he's too smart a filmmaker and too consummate an artist to 'accidentally' stumble into legitimising that which he is attempting to satirise. Take, for example, how he employs female nudity, of which there is a huge amount, almost all void of much in the way of narrative justification. On the surface, it's gratuitous nudity-for-nudity's sake. However, the lack of any meaningful rationale for showing such nudity is precisely the point; to show that the characters dispassionately view women as commodities. Every male in the film, and even some of the females (for example, Morra's business partner Tamara (Euridice Axen) and Kira (Kasia Smutniak), an acquaintance of Berlusconi's with whom Morra becomes infatuated) look at the escorts as objects whose bodies are for nothing beyond satisfying the lust of lascivious men and generating profit for their pimps. The sight of so many beautiful young women degrading themselves for lecherous old men leaves a nasty aftertaste, precisely as is intended. The film opens with a bizarre scene depicting a lamb wandering into Berlusconi's villa. After a moment, the air conditioning turns on, and the lamb literally freezes. It's an absurdist scene right out of Franz Kafka, Luis Buñuel, or Roy Andersson, and it immediately sets the tone for the film, alerting the audience that this is not going to be a typical warts-and-all biopic; instead, it's going to be surreal and strange, slightly out of sync with the real world. Is Sorrentino saying that the only way one can parse a man such as Berlusconi is by placing him in a reality not quite our own, by fictionalising him and rendering him absurd? Perhaps. However, the film closes by intercutting the L'Aquila earthquake with his return to power; Italy is literally shaking to its core as he regains his authority, and there's little absurdity about this sequence. One of the most interesting facets of the film is how relatively lenient Sorrentino is – Berlusconi is not exactly sympathetic, but neither is he what you would call a villain. In this sense, the film reminded me of Oliver Stone's _W._ (2008), in which Stone takes an unexpectedly even-handed approach in his depiction of the presidency of George W. Bush. Part of the reason Berlusconi comes across as not completely reprehensible is because of Toni Servillo. A performer of immense talent, Servillo is too intelligent and nuanced to allow any part lapse into caricature, and so, even when Berlusconi is at his most irredeemable, Servillo never allows us to forget there is a soul in there somewhere, however well-hidden it may be. A good example is a scene showing us Berlusconi at his most licentious, as he attempts to seduce Stella (Alice Pagani), a quiet and somewhat withdrawn young escort. As Servillo plays it, the scene is more pathetic than anything else; a sad old man unable to see how shameful his behaviour really is. Servillo's Berlusconi remains always a bully, but he's also a man horrified by the fact that he's growing old, and his refusal to go gently into that good night is mixed with the occasional bout of regret. Servillo also lets us see just how much it genuinely hurts Berlusconi when his marriage breaks down, as he is still desperately in love with Veronica, despite the fact that his behaviour has led her to despise him. As he realises her mind is not for changing, he is able to get her to admit that she still loves him. However, she also says that he is not the same man she married, telling him, "_you never reveal yourself. You are one uninterrupted performance._" Tellingly, he isn't quite sure how to respond to this, and it's a legitimately painful moment. In this sense, the film essentially challenges the audience not to hate the man, despite his many reprehensible actions and characteristics. On a more superficial level, Servillo perfectly captures Berlusconi's ridiculous grin, his obsession with opulence, his disdain for etiquette, and his ability to spin anything to make himself look good, irrespective of the facts clearly showing that he's lying (and yes, it's supposed to remind us of a certain pathological liar currently living at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue NW). And although the film does feature Noemi Letizia (Pasqualina Sanna), it ends prior to the commencement of the alleged "bunga bunga" parties (supposedly mass orgies involving up to 20 women, who would perform African sexual rituals with Berlusconi). The first of these was not until February 2010, so there's also no Ruby Rubacuori, and the film addresses little that would later be cited in Berlusconi's 2013 trial for soliciting an underage prostitute. Thematically, a major issue is acquisition; of capital, of property, of power, of influence, of anything. The driving force of so many of the characters (especially people like Morra, Tamara, and Kira) is simply "more". These are people who can literally never be satisfied. Indeed, on three separate occasions, a character says, "_Having it all isn't enough_". Another theme is the normalisation of decadence, a theme conveyed primarily by how Sorrentino shoots certain scenes. For example, we see cocaine being consumed so often that by the time we get to the last half-hour or so, we don't even register it anymore. This isn't the case of a filmmaker accidentally overexposing a trope. Rather, overexposure _is_ the trope; something like this should never be normalised, yet in this environment it most certainly is. Speaking of decadence, the first half of the film is so full of sensationalist hedonism as to make the _milieu_ of _La grande bellezza_ look Puritan by comparison. Cocaine being snorted off escorts' bodies is a recurring motif, and naked or near-naked women are in the background so often you don't even see them after a while. In one brilliantly staged scene, as Morra and his escorts are walking through Rome, a garbage truck crashes and explodes, throwing its contents into the air before it rains down on the escorts. However, just as the garbage reaches them, the film cuts to a pool party in Morra's Sardinian villa, and instead of garbage falling from the sky, the escorts are instead in the middle of a shower of ecstasy tablets. Make of that metaphor what you will. The _milieu_ is almost entirely devoid of morality; drugs are universal; sex is transactional; politicians are corrupt, petty, and venal egotists; innocence is something no one even remembers. Berlusconi's own attitude to holding public office is brilliantly dramatised in arguably the film's best scene. After deciding to return to politics, he tests himself to see whether he still has "it." Bearing in mind that he made his fortune and reputation successfully selling real estate in a hostile buyers' market, he randomly cold-calls a gloomy housewife and proceeds to sell her a luxury apartment that he readily admits hasn't even been built yet. It's a Servillo acting masterclass, and it's very funny, but it's also very telling - rather than brushing up on policy, or trying to clean his act up, this is how he prepares himself to attempt to topple the sitting government. However, for all its strengths, _Loro_ is nowhere near the quality of Sorrentino's recent English-language output - _This Must Be The Place_ (2011), the horrifically underrated _Youth_ (2015), and the glorious _The Young Pope_ (2016), whilst it pales in comparison to its closest stylistic precursor, _La grande bellezza_ (for my money one of the top twenty films of the century, thus far). Sure, everything that makes a film a "Sorrentino film" is present and accounted for (as I said in the introduction, this is perhaps the most quintessential Sorrentino film yet) - there's the visual opulence, the hedonistic _milieu_, the undercurrent of corruption and greed, the casual sexuality. However, unlike, say, _La grande bellezza_ or _The Young Pope_, in _Loro_, the visual panache can often come across as an end unto itself, rather than serving the story and/or themes. The biggest problem, however, is that structurally, the international cut is unable to escape the bifurcated narrative design of the original. Very much a film of two halves, the first half focuses on Morra and a group of politicians and hangers-on (the eponymous "loro"), as they position themselves within Berlusconi's orbit, and the second focuses more tightly on Berlusconi himself (who doesn't actually appear on screen for almost an hour), especially his relationship with Veronica, and his attempts to once again become prime minister, with the film rarely leaving his Sardinian estate. And as you can probably imagine, the transition is not entirely smooth, especially insofar as entire subplots are abandoned without explication or resolution, and seemingly important characters fade into the background and often disappear (Morra himself features in only a couple of scenes in the second half), which does have the effect of making the whole thing feel a little scattershot at times. That said, however, this is still Sorrentino, so no matter the problems, there's always going to be much to admire. He's a master _auteur_ who always has something fascinating to say, and here turning his attention to perhaps Italy's most notorious post-War politician, he gets plenty of inspired mileage out of the tawdry subject matter. Very much a chronicler of the darkness behind Italy's sparkle, Sorrentino suggests that Berlusconi, and men like him, are driven by vanity and a desire for power as its own reward. Yes, the storyline is a little slack, and, yes, it somewhat unexpectedly finds humanity in the man, and yes, it's Sorrentino's weakest film for a while. But it's also a Sorrentino film. And for that, if nothing else, it's worth a look.