We're not quite talking Luca Guadagnino levels of copybook-blotting here, but abundance has inarguably dulled the lustre of the Paolo Sorrentino filmography these past few years. Too-easy funding begat far too many movies, few of which sustained the bracing formal rigour of this director's 2004 breakthrough The Consequences of Love, most of which merely restated whatever Sorrentino was getting at with The Great Beauty a decade or so ago. Yet La Grazia marks an appreciable change of tack, and the return of Sorrentino the political junkie, previously front and centre in 2008's Il Divo and 2018's Loro. After a lengthy preamble that briefs us on the legal powers and responsibilities of the Italian President, we're reintroduced to Toni Servillo - baleful as ever - on the rooftop of the presidential palace in Rome, from where his fictional head of state Mariano De Santis gazes out over the country he's been appointed to keep an eye on; from this high vantage point, the presidency would appear as ceremonial a position as the gargoyles carved into the building's walls.
De Santis, we learn, has been nicknamed Reinforced Concrete: "it's flattering", his top general assures him, although some of that tag's implied dullness lingers. An aging bureaucrat, a sometime judge, widowed and still heartbroken with it, he's a decent cove, broadly liberal in his opinions, far from a tyrant, but even he has to admit "I'm the most boring person I know", a verdict Sorrentino underlines by surrounding De Santis with his usual Felliniesque hangers-on. He has six months left in office - a period he shares with an Italian astronaut orbiting the Earth - so the question becomes what to do with that time. He puts off a proposed Vogue interview about his style choices and threatens to dodder off into his own memories, before his daughter-slash-assistant reminds him he still has official business on the table: two potential pardons, which formalise the grace of the title but are complicated by human emotion and the political climate, and a euthanasia bill which likewise requires delicate handling. Suddenly, thanks to the grace of Sorrentino's framing and Servillo's central performance, this grey old man, who might otherwise strike the eye as an Italianate John Major, becomes an unexpectedly compelling protagonist: someone trying to resist the inevitable, seize the moment, find peace and make a real and positive difference in this world. Just one of those goals would usually be tough enough.
Servillo, one of the great minimalist actors of our time, once more conveys multitudes with a melancholy gaze, a shrug, a reset of the jaw. This De Santis fellow is a man out of time in every sense: agonised by issues of legacy, he's like a better paid (and naturally far better appointed) variant of the wearied salarymen played by Takashi Shimura in Ikiru and Bill Nighy in Living. But he's also a character who speaks fruitfully to the present moment, awash as that is with hands-off politicians elected to oversee managed decline rather than bring about real change, preferable though these may still be to the dogwhistling nostalgia merchants. When we first encounter Mariano De Santis, he appears jaded indeed - as he confesses in passing, he's a man who no longer dreams at night - but Sorrentino's plotting obliges him to look ahead: he has a vision of something, however modest, and then works to make it a reality and Italy a better and more compassionate place. You couldn't quite call La Grazia an example of late style - not least because Sorrentino is a relatively youthful 56 - but it looks and feels like a transition to a more mature mode: a director's recognition that a filmmaker of his standing can, after all, turn down the superficial dazzle to ensure his words and gestures matter and thereby arrive at some greater beauty besides. As the case of Mariano De Santis demonstrates, it's really never too late.
La Grazia is now streaming via MUBI.






