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Luna

Original title: La luna
  • 1979
  • R
  • 2h 22m
IMDb RATING
6.4/10
5.8K
YOUR RATING
Jill Clayburgh and Matthew Barry in Luna (1979)
While touring in Italy, a recently-widowed American opera singer has an incestuous relationship with her 15-year-old son to help him overcome his heroin addiction.
Play trailer0:35
1 Video
85 Photos
Psychological DramaTragedyDrama

After the sudden death of his father and a move to Italy, 14-year-old Joe loses his way and gets addicted to heroin.After the sudden death of his father and a move to Italy, 14-year-old Joe loses his way and gets addicted to heroin.After the sudden death of his father and a move to Italy, 14-year-old Joe loses his way and gets addicted to heroin.

  • Director
    • Bernardo Bertolucci
  • Writers
    • Franco Arcalli
    • Bernardo Bertolucci
    • Giuseppe Bertolucci
  • Stars
    • Jill Clayburgh
    • Matthew Barry
    • Veronica Lazar
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.4/10
    5.8K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Bernardo Bertolucci
    • Writers
      • Franco Arcalli
      • Bernardo Bertolucci
      • Giuseppe Bertolucci
    • Stars
      • Jill Clayburgh
      • Matthew Barry
      • Veronica Lazar
    • 47User reviews
    • 40Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 win & 2 nominations total

    Videos1

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 0:35
    Official Trailer

    Photos85

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    Top cast35

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    Jill Clayburgh
    Jill Clayburgh
    • Caterina Silveri
    Matthew Barry
    Matthew Barry
    • Joe Silveri
    Veronica Lazar
    Veronica Lazar
    • Marina
    Renato Salvatori
    Renato Salvatori
    • Communist
    Fred Gwynne
    Fred Gwynne
    • Douglas Winter
    Alida Valli
    Alida Valli
    • Giuseppe's Mother
    Elisabetta Campeti
    • Arianna
    Franco Citti
    Franco Citti
    • Mario
    Roberto Benigni
    Roberto Benigni
    • Upholsterer
    Carlo Verdone
    Carlo Verdone
    • Caracalla opera director
    Peter Eyre
    Peter Eyre
    • Edward
    Mustapha Barat
    • Mustafa
    • (as Stéphane Barat)
    Pippo Campanini
    • Innkeeper
    Rodolfo Lodi
    • Maestro Giancarlo Calo
    Sara Di Nepi
    • Concetta
    • (as Shara Di Nepi)
    Jole Silvani
    • Wardrobe Mistress
    • (as Iole Silvani)
    Francesco Mei
    • Barman
    Ronaldo Bonacchi
    • Caracalla assistant director
    • Director
      • Bernardo Bertolucci
    • Writers
      • Franco Arcalli
      • Bernardo Bertolucci
      • Giuseppe Bertolucci
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews47

    6.45.7K
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    Featured reviews

    mortiis25

    Ultimate Beauty in it's Purest Form.

    Well well well, what do we have here? Another one of Bertolucci's earlier films? Yes and No. This is one of Bernardo Bertolucci's earlier films (1979), but it is unlike anything that he had done before or ever did again.

    La Luna is something that is a gem of film-making history, even though it is virtually impossible to get on video (and it will most probably never be shown on Television again).

    It tells the sad, depressing (yet beautiful) tale of a young boy's growth into adolescence , while experimenting with drugs and eventually (as they always do) ends up becoming addicted to Heroin.

    His Mother(played ever so beautifully by Jill Clayburge), in an effort to try and 'wean him' off the drugs develops an incestuous relationship with her son.

    Shocking as the description above may sound at first, please do not let it put you off seeing this fantastic film, as it is only a small slice of the cinematically glorious outing that this film is!

    The photography portrayed in this film is the best that bertolucci has ever achieved (Yes, even the fantastic The Last Emperor and Little Buddah). When I say a film is utterly breath-taking (I am a hard person to please when it comes to films, just read my other reviews here!), then you know you're in for a treat and a half.

    But, what is the point of this review unless people have a chance to witness the sheer beauty for themselves?

    I saw this film when I was 15 years of age. I am now 26 and have never forgotten a single FRAME of La Luna. Every word, every scene sticks in my mind like a vivid memory, and I in some ways feel that I was in the film somehow and was able to feel all the anger, all the pain and all the love that surrounded it.

    For a film to make this much of an impression on someone and for that impression to still be fresh in the person's mind eleven years later, you also know this film has to be a good thing.

    You people, I am very sad to say, will probably never have the chance to see this film (as it has not been released on Video - I have tried nearly every day for eleven years to find a copy!!!).

    But let what I have said stick in your mind, just as La Luna hopefully will some day...
    Tim-120

    A very odd and disturbing movie

    This was an odd movie that I am still not quite sure how to evaluate. The first time I saw it I was merely disgusted. The second time, I got more out of it, but I am not certain that it was worth the effort. Despite some good, and risky, performances, the story simply does not hold together well. By the end of the movie, it is very hard to care about any of the characters or the plot, despite the undeniable beauty of the film. Give it a try if you are in the mood for something different, but don't expect too much.
    6Quinoa1984

    it's a flawed, schizophrenic artistic feat

    In a way I feel sorry for Bernardo Bertolucci's La Luna, though maybe more for Bertolucci than the film itself. Having come off of the monumental undertaking of 1900, he probably wanted to still keep the challenging creative juices flowing, and in doing so concocted an idea surrounding a mother and son who lose their closest significant other and go to Rome, only to get dragged into their own created mire of drug addiction, self-absorption, and incest. This, of course, sounds quite meaty dramatically, at least when first heard. Executed on film it's another story, and the final script is probably what ends up making the film one of the weakest- if not THE weakest- I've seen from the director yet.

    This still means that there's good chunks in there, even really wonderfully sordid moments of incredible familial dysfunction between mother and son. But unlike, for example, Malle's Murmur of the Heart, there's a lack of cohesion to any sense of firm psychology with either mother or son, and while things are fascinating and potent in dramatic spontaneity in the first two-thirds, there's a moment when things start to go downhill. By the end, I wondered if Bertolucci was about to break into the end of 8 1/2.

    We're given a character study, that's for sure, and quite the two f***ed up characters. The mother is Caterina (Jill Clayburgh, a quasi Diane Keaton look-alike, however only sometimes talented and convincing), who's husband (in a great bit part by Fred Gwynne) dies suddenly while driving a car. Though both mother and son are devastated, they go to Rome so she can sing in the opera there. The son, meanwhile, is at that absolutely abhorrent age in anyone's life- 15- and at first is into some nothingness abound with a girl, and soon enough into a dead-end mind-set of heroin.

    This alarms her mother, to be sure, and perhaps the most perfect scene of the film (whether this means it will shock or unsettle is another matter), is when the son plays piano for a moment when the mother tries to get her son to tell her about his drug problem, peers for a moment under his shirt, and then he erupts at her with physical violence. Finally it ends, and she goes to one side of the room with a look like 'what the hell just happened', and he goes off to do more junk. There's even the brilliant little insinuation, which is all that's needed, of a notion of desire when she's trying to peer at his arm.

    Now, if there had been more scenes like this, consistently, it might even be one of Bertolucci's masterpieces. But, however, this is not to be. Towards the middle things even become shaky, as the same randomness of mind and spirit with the mother and son, this chronic sense of equal parts of nihilism, despair, gallows humor, and the oddness of bourgeois discontent with dark pasts, becomes something that Bertolucci isn't fully able to grab a hold of. And unlike in Last Tango in Paris, there's no Marlon Brando here to make things incredibly appealing with totally believable dread in the face of loss. Matthew Barry is decent in the part of Joe, the son, but also teeters on being annoying (which maybe is part of the desired effect, but still).

    And the sense of how their push and pull relationship with his drug addiction as the center isn't fully resolved with the mother. Clayburgh's Caterina just isn't sympathetic, or empathetic, enough to get into her mind-set, because despite being interesting in her part of a somewhat un-fit parent who loves her son perhaps in the worst possible ways, and that both are crazy, it isn't enough to sustain what happens at the 2/3 mark...which is when Bertolucci and his writers pull out the "son, I'll take you back to your roots, and find your *real* father who made you a bastard" card, and everything goes downhill from there.

    It's a mark of downhill quality that has almost been building, and it's troubling especially since a lot DOES work in morbid detail of the characters, and how operatic intonations somehow become involved in their plights. But Bertolucci tends to put the hammer down in both technique and substance, and only in the former does it really work. His and Vittorio Storaro's eye in this film is just as sharp and succulent as in their other collaborations, with the camera gliding seamlessly in some crucial ways, providing movement to just the slightest moments of emotional upheaval. Yet even in the least effective spot of the film, there are the moments, like when Joe plays drums with his fork and spoon at the table. Or the very awkward silence after the mother's sexual advances go very unheeded. In the end La Luna becomes more worthwhile to see for what doesn't work as opposed to what does.

    While some might come away from it feeling that it's an uncompromising work of genius, I wouldn't, though it's not a failure either. It's a curious work of bravura testing of the limits of what people- in this case Americans- can be in such a European environment, and that the psychologies therein are as wobbly as a bad table leg.
    7howie73

    A riposte to Freudianism?

    Not many discuss Bertolucci's La Luna as one of his most challenging films but I beg to differ. In 1979 I presume the film's campy allure had not been registered but today it's all to be seen; call it kitsch or ironic, but la Luna encapsulates two worlds Bertolucci tried to negotiate in most of his films - the world of appearances and surfaces against the inner world of the protagonist. La Luna plays both against each other as a masquerade, because what we think we are getting is not what we really are seeing. Bertolucci presents the first part as a post-Freudian fable in late 70s Rome where an Opera singer and her son indulge in an Oedipal relationship. Bertolucci then introduces the lost but real father to the scene as if to eradicate Freudian psychoanalysis as a spurious retelling of Greek myth. It seems the son only wants his father's recognition and love, while the mother is marginalized. It's a very masculine thesis for Bertolucci, one that reinforces the illusory fundamentals of Patriarchy, while negating the matriarchal as a mere bypass to the final journey(father's love).

    Jill Clayburgh's acting is off-key most of the time but this unwittingly invests the film with its latter-day camp quality, while Matthew Barry looks dazed and confused throughout the entire film. Rome is undoubtedly the best part of the film as well as the sumptuous visuals that capture its sun-drenched beauty and decaying but grand monuments.
    8videorama-759-859391

    La Bertolucci

    Another memorably visual movie piece to add to this cult director's belt, and again, I was not disappointed, and more so appeased, as I really enjoyed this one, more than I thought I would, by some stretch. If you analyze the story, it actually makes sense. Let's face it, mother-son incest, is not too appealing, but this movie doesn't exploit, but more rationalize it, in a tame and poignant way. The wonderful Clayburgh, really carries this film, with such a roping performance, as a widowed mother and opera singer, who lost her husband (Gwynne) of all people, to a heart attack. She and young son, move to Italy, and it's not the best choice, as son merges with the wrong crowd of friends, and falls victim to heroin, supplied by a local town punk or playboy, who Clayburgh confronts later, and throws him an offer. Such a strong message is plastered across the screen about parent neglect, and we so much feel for the poor son, any mother would be proud to have, who's just drowning in a sea of self worthlessness, and there are moments, when we really hate Clayburgh's character, but we know why she has become, like this. The chosen locations of Italy are beautiful, especially the night shot ones. The opening scene, was beautifully shot and unexpecting, but totally pulled me in, part metaphor if you decide to watch this film , which I highly encourage you to do. Son and mother performance are equally impressive, and Clayburgh, is like a hot potato. You don't know how she'll react, and what she'll do next. The ending is mesmerizingly thought stirring, visually as well. I suggest you take a good look at La Luna. I'm glad I did. A stand alone, stylish, original treasure.

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    Related interests

    Jim Carrey and Kate Winslet in Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind (2004)
    Psychological Drama
    Casey Affleck and Michelle Williams in Manchester by the Sea (2016)
    Tragedy
    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The movie was a Bertolucci family affair. Giovanni Bertolucci produced the film; Giuseppe Bertolucci was a writer and an uncredited 2nd assistant director; Lilletta Bertolucci was a unit publicist in Italy; Bernardo Bertolucci was a writer and director whilst his wife Clare Peploe was also a writer.
    • Quotes

      Joe Silveri: Your face is a mess. I'll clean it up.

      [starts licking her face]

      Caterina Silveri: It's good.

      Joe Silveri: Hold still.

    • Alternate versions
      After being banned in the Canadian province of Ontario. 20th century fox agreed to make cuts to 7 scenes showing incest and the film was given a 'Restricted' rating.
    • Connections
      Featured in Sneak Previews: Meteor/Luna/And Justice for All/The Silent Partner/Nosferatu the Vampyre (1979)
    • Soundtracks
      Night Fever
      Composed by Barry Gibb, Robin Gibb and Maurice Gibb

      Performed by The Bee Gees

      Courtesy of RSO Records Inc.

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • September 30, 1979 (United States)
    • Countries of origin
      • Italy
      • United States
    • Languages
      • English
      • Italian
    • Also known as
      • La luna
    • Filming locations
      • Caracalla Thermals, Rome, Lazio, Italy
    • Production companies
      • Fiction Cinematografica
      • Twentieth Century Fox
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 2h 22m(142 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono

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