Los Angeles Times

A sublime romantic tragedy

- — Kevin Thomas

The late Luchino Visconti’s stately, sensual “L’Innocente,” freely adapted from an 1892 Gabriele D’Annunzio novel, proves to be a fitting and majestic finale to a remarkable career that embraced neorealism and period romanticis­m with a grand yet discipline­d operatic style.

It was a visual style that at once expressed and resolved the director’s aristocrat­ic background and his Marxist political leanings. It was Visconti’s special gift to be able to evoke privileged, often decadent worlds of great luxury and elegance just at the moment of their disintegra­tion. The grand, fatal passions experience­d by his people usually foreshadow­ed the larger historic and cataclysmi­c events about to overtake them.

This is especially true of “L’Innocente,” which takes place at the height of La Belle Epoque, which was to be destroyed by World War I.

Giancarlo Giannini is a turn-of-the-century Roman aristocrat infatuated by his mistress (Jennifer O’Neill), a glamorous widow, and patronizin­g toward his wife (Laura Antonelli). However, O’Neill’s capricious­ness and independen­ce combine with the attraction Antonelli elicits in a young writer (Marc Porel) to rekindle Giannini’s passion for his wife. Just when he and his wife are experienci­ng ecstacies they have never known before, he learns from his mother (Rita Morelli) that his wife is pregnant. There is no way he could be the father.

The couple are then plunged into an emotional abyss, tormented by conflicted feelings of love and hatred. Their agony reflects the convention­s and beliefs of their time and place, and for Visconti it is significan­t that they are members of that portion of Italian society most responsibl­e for the rise of fascism.

Giannini’s miserable, jealous husband has been an avowed atheist and libertine, a man who attempts to disregard all that is held sacred in his world. Consequent­ly, “L’Innocente” becomes a romantic tragedy, exquisitel­y modulated by Visconti and culminatin­g on a note of horror (which Visconti effectivel­y compounds in a departure from D’Annunzio).

As in all Visconti period pictures, “L’Innocente” has the most sumptuous settings and lavish costumes. The score incorporat­es appropriat­ely elegiac selections from Chopin, Mozart and Liszt.

“L’Innocente” is the kind of opulent, passionate drama that risks folly to attain the sublime. Giannini and Antonelli are equal to the challenge while O’Neill provides a dispassion­ate counterpoi­nt.

A version of this review originally ran in The Times on May 3, 1979, when the 1976 film was first released in the U.S. as “The Innocent.” The 2020 reissue is a digital HD restoratio­n.

“L’Innocente.” In Italian with English subtitles. Not rated. Running time: 2 hour, 9 minutes. Playing: Laemmle Royal, West Los Angeles.

 ?? Film Movement ?? “L’INNOCENTE” stars Giancarlo Giannini.
Film Movement “L’INNOCENTE” stars Giancarlo Giannini.

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