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IMDbPro

The Belly of an Architect

  • 1987
  • R
  • 1h 59m
IMDb RATING
6.9/10
6.6K
YOUR RATING
The Belly of an Architect (1987)
Home Video Trailer from MGM
Play trailer1:32
1 Video
66 Photos
Drama

An architect supervising an exhibition starts to have mysterious stomach pains while his life slowly falls apart.An architect supervising an exhibition starts to have mysterious stomach pains while his life slowly falls apart.An architect supervising an exhibition starts to have mysterious stomach pains while his life slowly falls apart.

  • Director
    • Peter Greenaway
  • Writer
    • Peter Greenaway
  • Stars
    • Brian Dennehy
    • Chloe Webb
    • Lambert Wilson
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.9/10
    6.6K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Peter Greenaway
    • Writer
      • Peter Greenaway
    • Stars
      • Brian Dennehy
      • Chloe Webb
      • Lambert Wilson
    • 37User reviews
    • 40Critic reviews
    • 56Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 2 nominations total

    Videos1

    The Belly of An Architect
    Trailer 1:32
    The Belly of An Architect

    Photos66

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    Top Cast20

    Edit
    Brian Dennehy
    Brian Dennehy
    • Stourley Kracklite
    Chloe Webb
    Chloe Webb
    • Louisa Kracklite
    Lambert Wilson
    Lambert Wilson
    • Caspasian Speckler
    Sergio Fantoni
    Sergio Fantoni
    • Io Speckler
    Stefania Casini
    Stefania Casini
    • Flavia Speckler
    Vanni Corbellini
    • Frederico
    Alfredo Varelli
    Alfredo Varelli
    • Julio
    Geoffrey Copleston
    • Caspetti
    Francesco Carnelutti
    Francesco Carnelutti
    • Pastarri
    Marino Masé
    Marino Masé
    • Trettorio
    • (as Marino Mase)
    Marne Maitland
    Marne Maitland
    • Battistino
    Claudio Spadaro
    Claudio Spadaro
    • Mori
    Rate Furlan
    • Violinist
    Julian Jenkins
    • Old Doctor
    Enrica Maria Scrivano
    • Mother
    Ricardo Ussani
    • Little Boy
    Stefano Gragnani
    • The Nose Man
    Andrea Prodan
    • Young Doctor
    • Director
      • Peter Greenaway
    • Writer
      • Peter Greenaway
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews37

    6.96.6K
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    Featured reviews

    6boblipton

    When Is Too Much Not Enough?

    Brian Dennehy and Chloe Webb come to Rome. He's an architect who has been working for ten years on an exhibit about Etienne-Louis Boullee, and it has reached the stage where the physical labor has to be done. As the project moves sluggishly forward, Dennehy can't figure out where the money is going. All he knows is that Roman architect Lambert Wilson is carrying on an affair with Miss Webb, angling to take over the exhibit, and he has new and distressing pains in his gut.

    Peter Greenaway directs High Art films that flirt with the limits of watchability -- I've never been able to get past the initial image in PROSPERO'S BOOK, of John Gielgud in hs bath, watered by cherubs like a garden fountain. This one is very watchable, with its bits of color, and Dennehy's solid performance against the wreckage of classical art through the movie's Rome; there's one funny moment when he uses the feet of a colossal sculpture to scratch his back. Yet, in the end, Dennehy's performance takes over the entire movie, leaving everyone else as bit players. Others' motives, except for Lambert's greed, remain obscure. Is Greenaway satirizing the excessive intellectualization of a practical art of which he himself is guilty?
    7henry8-3

    The Belly of an Architect

    An American architect (Dennehy) comes to Rome with his wife to create an exhibition he's been working on for 10years. He is troubled though by a terrible pain in his stomach.

    Like all Greenaway's projects, this is decidedly off kilter - though not as much as usual - with his usual structured picture framing and colour (red and green) and fabulous use of music. The wonderful soundtrack here is not by Nyman, but is very similar.

    Dennehy is perfect in the lead role, but Chloe Webb as his wife puts in a rather strange stilted performance as his wife.

    This starts slow but improves as it goes along as Dennehy's story unfolds. Not for everyone, but lovers of the great director will enjoy this, even if it is more orthodox than usual.
    chaos-rampant

    Transient belly

    I always know I can turn to Greenaway for nested worlds. He's one of few who can - not always mind, but the few occasions are precious - align the notions of image, how they project outwards to form what we know of reality - an empty field of anxious, random forces tossing us around - and the interior springwell from where these images flow out and which reveals ourselves to be in control of them. The play is usually given to us by some sort of fiction passing as real, or a charade within another, a story within itself, so that we may be directed from the confines of the narrow frame into a broader view that includes it.

    The idea is especially powerful in the context of architecture, that we use form to project outwards a set of ideals but, having understood ourselves eventually circumscribed by structures that describe us, we can then use them to describe the inner landscape.

    So indeed, we stroll around one such interior Rome, where earlier decadence or glory, or masks thereof, greeting us from marble balustrades and rows of pillars reflect inside. A city so ornately decorated and cast in stone, as though man would outlast his follies.

    Into this comes an American architect - the man whose folly is to build things that last - to stage an exhibition for some obscure French architect who died 180 years ago. Italians are not too happy that he hasn't picked one of their own, but they oblige to finance nonetheless.

    There are two broad ideas that Greenaway is careful to lightly caress, tease out their potential implications, but finally circumnavigate. The film would have been lesser had it settled on either, or is perhaps greater for encompassing both.

    One is the doubling; the architect begins to imagine himself as his older counterpart, writing letters to him in the form of private confessional; then begins imagining himself as emperor Augustus, trapped in the same ploy of marital infidelity and murder. He replicates these stories around him. So these people overlap and are mirrored with bellies, bellies aching with the toll of creation. At this point you may think it is all going to be another film about the creative person losing himself in the mind, merging life with narrative.

    The other is, as always with Greenaway, about all this as doubling for the making of the film. It's a film-within device, make no mistake. So the visionary artist is increasingly frustrated by lackeys, ignorant money-men, virulent antagonists scheming to usurp him; energy is wasted in duplicitous dinner parties and idle, but always more or less venomous, chit-chat, until eventually finds himself embittered and alone in his own set.

    But it is not merely about the price of genius, or a satire of the contemporary civilized arena that it has to bleed into.

    Look for the scene with his doctor in front of the busts of emperors; each bust a face and story, one decadent and evil, another perhaps famed as wise, but all inadvertently gone. A little further down is a bust without name, it could be anyone's, and whatever story will be inscribed upon it, it's again only destined to join this gallery of fiction. It is important to see these follies, but more important to see the continuity.

    So it is this acceptance on the part of the architect, the man who builds things not only to last but to be beautiful in time, of the turn of the wheel, decline through rebirth. It is powerful stuff to see; the scene in the police station near the end, where he is simply asked name and age, whether married or not. He is free to go then. He has been jotted down in the ledgers.

    The final scenes in the exhibition center echo with this casual dismissal of a life lived, a casual but sweet, relieving it would seem, departure after so much grief with nothing to weigh on the shoulders. He attends the exhibition, the work of a lifetime, from the balustrade above, from the vantage point of not being involved anymore. Everything looks like a small ceremony from there. So this is the nested world that matters; not the exhibition, but the creative life on the ego-redemptive journey through life at large, purging itself of itself, after the painful struggle to master the world building pantheons finally submitting to be the mastered world, transient, as it comes into being and goes again.

    As he goes, new life is born down below - and plays, again and again it would seem, before the colossal marble structures.

    It is perhaps the ideal Greenaway film; the self-referential tics are all present, the framework ornate, but instead of chaotic it is all mastered into a pillar that supports, unifies vision. The architect - on more levels than one - coming to terms with the architecture of a transient life.
    5Red-Barracuda

    A more straightforward Greenaway film but less interesting than most of his others

    You always know going into a Peter Greenaway film that, for better or for worse, you are going to get something a bit left-field. The Belly of an Architect is really no different in this regard. This one tells the tale of an American architect who travels to Rome with his young wife to supervise an exhibition celebrating the 18th century architect Etienne-Louis Boullée. Very soon after arrival both he and his wife experience contrasting activity in their bellies, for him it is severe abdominal pains while she falls pregnant. To complicate matters, they soon begin affairs with other people. The film essentially then details the architects mental deterioration, which includes writing postcards to his long deceased doppelganger Boullée.

    This one has to go down as one of Greenaway's more accessible films. It has an actual story that is underpinned by a good central performance from Brian Dennehy. But its maybe the very fact that it skirts so close to realistic drama that is one of the main problems, as Greenaway is usually best when he does precisely the opposite. The story is really quite boring and the acting aside from Dennehy not all that good – Chloe Webb being particularly flat as his wife; look out also for Stefania (Suspiria) Cassini sporting an unfamiliar cropped 80's barnet. The visuals, while certainly nicely composed, aren't all that memorable. Given that the setting is Rome, there are many shots of that cities peerless architecture, although that all gets almost a bit travelogue to a certain extent. I think this film, therefore, is one for Greenaway devotees almost exclusively as in order to get a lot out of it you have to be interested in his ideas. While I have liked several of his films, I can't deny that, even in the cases of the ones I liked most, his films can be somewhat annoying. Dennehy really helps draw us in to events though and makes a good stab at involving us but it's difficult to care too much about these stiff characters populating a narrative that is both distant and very cold emotionally. Boullée himself is a typically absurd Greenaway figure, in that very little of his architecture ever came to be built, so it's difficult to ever imagine a high profile retrospective of his work ever happening. His rounded, domed buildings mimic the belly of the title, as does his name. So there are many links and symmetries in the story if you are at all interested in that kind of thing. But, while some of the photography was nice and it did have a good score from one of the members of Kraftwerk, it was overall a little tedious for me.
    9suskified

    Fantastic Film

    One of my favorite Greenaway films. Story, visuals, metaphor, acting, music...it's got it all. The visuals of Rome are stunning. Wim Mertens' musical accompaniment is brilliant and on par with any modern minimalist composition. After years of seeing his TV roles, I was completely floored by the depth and authenticity Brian Dennehey brought to the main character. I've watched this film at least a dozen times over the years and enjoy it thoroughly each time. Unlike a previous reviewer, I don't see the need to judge this film based on how much it resembles previous or subsequent Greenaway films. "Belly of An Architect" is not as abstract as some of the other Greenaway films, but that shouldn't be viewed as a negative. The film is great and rich in its own right. I highly recommend it.

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    Related interests

    Naomie Harris, Mahershala Ali, Janelle Monáe, André Holland, Herman Caheej McGloun, Edson Jean, Alex R. Hibbert, and Tanisha Cidel in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Brian Dennehy was quoted after the release as saying "I've made lots of movies but this is my first film."
    • Goofs
      When photocopying the picture of Augustus, Kracklite puts the picture in upside-down which would have given a blank copy. Additionally, it would not be possible to achieve the level of resolution of Augustus's abdomen from such a small picture.
    • Quotes

      Caspasian Speckler: Your wife is very beautiful, Signor Kracklite, especially when she is pregnant.

      Stourley Kracklite: Yes, that's right. She is pregnant. But not with your child, Speckler.

      Caspasian Speckler: True. I'm very grateful to you for that. Your child, shall we say, is the most perfect contraceptive.

      [Kracklite turns and punches Speckler in the nose]

    • Connections
      Featured in Peter Greenaway: A Documentary (1992)

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    FAQ17

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • October 16, 1987 (United Kingdom)
    • Countries of origin
      • United Kingdom
      • Italy
    • Languages
      • English
      • Italian
    • Also known as
      • Der Bauch des Architekten
    • Filming locations
      • Altare della Patria, Piazza Venezia, Rome, Lazio, Italy
    • Production companies
      • Callender Company
      • Mondial
      • Tangram Film
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $287,725
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 59m(119 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Stereo
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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