Cape Argus

SOPHIA LOREN HAS STILL GOT IT

Award-winning actress returns at 86 to inhabit new role with vulnerabil­ity and majesty

- ANN HORNADAY | The Washington

SIMONE Signoret won a César award for her performanc­e in the 1977 film Madame Rosa which leads to an inevitable question when it comes to making The Life Ahead: Why bother?

Like Madame Rosa, The Life Ahead is adapted from Romain Gary’s novel The Life Before Us. Unlike the earlier version, this one features Sophia Loren in the lead role. Which answers the ‘Why bother?’ question.

When Loren says she thinks she might be right for Madame Rosa, you listen to her. And you make the movie. In this case, the filmmaker who listened was Loren’s son, Edoardo Ponti, who has directed The Life Ahead with understate­d skill, attention to atmosphere and oldschool humanistic values.

The story is a classic: Madame

Rosa, now transplant­ed from La Pigalle in Paris to a seaside town in Italy, is a former prostitute who serves as a caretaker and mother figure for the children of her erstwhile colleagues in the sex-work industry. One day, she is asked to take on a particular­ly challengin­g case: A 12-year-old Senegalese immigrant named Momo (Ibrahima Gueye), with whom she has immediate, volatile chemistry. The two fight, tussle and argue, two wounded souls who, when they finally begin to let their guards down, are much more alike than different.

For Madame Rosa, this means disclosing a secret she’s kept buried for decades, as well as another, more recent one that’s obvious to anyone paying attention.

At 86, Loren inhabits the role with both vulnerabil­ity and majesty: As one of our final links to cinema’s Golden Age, she is simply magnificen­t, both physically and in terms of her craft.

In many ways, The Life Ahead harks back to the actress’ finest work with her mentor, Vittorio De Sica, not only by way of its historical memory of World War II, but in its plea for tolerance and mutual understand­ing.

A creeping sentimenta­lity threatens The Life Ahead at nearly every turn, and some departures into magical realism don’t always work. (Ponti co-wrote the script with Ugo Chiti and Fabio Natale.)

But as long as the film is focused on Madame Rosa and Momo and their unlikely friendship, it’s on rocksolid ground. One of Loren’s greatest strengths as a movie star has always been her generosity as a collaborat­or, and that’s on full display from the moment Madame Rosa meets her antagonist-turned-protege, with Loren and Gueye developing their own utterly unforced rhythms and rapport. Gueye makes an impressive debut as a man-child who is equal parts tough and heartbreak­ingly needy; always attuned to those conflictin­g current, Loren infuses every interactio­n with her singular brand of sensitivit­y, dignity, worldweary loss and maternal compassion.

The Life Ahead might be a familiar story, but as a showcase for Loren’s sensuality, star power and unfailing instincts, it feels both classic and exhilarati­ngly new.

She’s still got it, and as this performanc­e reminds us at every turn, she always did.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa