Life Is Beautiful – La Vita è Bella (1997)

Life Is Beautiful - La Vita è Bella (1997)

La Vita è Bella

Life Is Beautiful movie storyline. In 1939 in the Kingdom of Italy, Guido Orefice is a young Jewish man who arrives to work in the city where his uncle Eliseo operates a restaurant. Guido is comical and sharp and falls in love with a girl named Dora.

Later, he sees her again in the city where she is a teacher and set to be engaged to a rich but arrogant man, a local government official with whom Guido has regular run-ins. Guido sets up many “coincidental” incidents to show his interest in Dora. Finally Dora sees Guido’s affection and promise and gives in against her better judgement. He steals her from her engagement party on a horse, humiliating her fiancé and mother. They are later married and have a son, Giosuè and own a book store.

When World War II breaks out, Guido, his uncle and Giosuè are seized on Giosuè’s birthday. They and many other Jews are forced onto a train and taken to a concentration camp. After confronting a guard about her husband and son and being told there is no mistake, Dora volunteers to get on the train in order to be close to her family. However, as men and women are separated in the camp, Dora and Guido never see each other during the internment.

Guido pulls off stunts, such as using the camp’s loudspeaker to send messages—symbolic or literal—to Dora to assure her that he and their son are safe. Eliseo is executed in a gas chamber shortly after their arrival. Giosuè barely avoids being gassed himself as he hates to take baths and showers and did not follow the other children when they had been ordered to enter the gas chambers.

Life Is Beautiful - La Vita è Bella (1997)

In the camp, Guido hides their true situation from his son. Guido explains to Giosuè that the camp is a complicated game in which he must perform the tasks Guido gives him. Each of the tasks will earn them points and whoever gets to one thousand points first will win a tank. He tells him that if he cries, complains that he wants his mother, or says that he is hungry, he will lose points, while quiet boys who hide from the camp guards earn extra points. Giosuè is at times reluctant to go along with the game, but Guido convinces him each time to continue.

Life Is Beautiful (Italian: La vita è bella) is a 1997 Italian comedy-drama film directed by and starring Roberto Benigni, who co-wrote the film with Vincenzo Cerami. Benigni plays Guido Orefice, a Jewish Italian book shop owner, who employs his fertile imagination to shield his son from the horrors of internment in a Nazi concentration camp. The film was partially inspired by the book In the End, I Beat Hitler by Rubino Romeo Salmonì and by Benigni’s father, who spent two years in a German labour camp during World War II.

The film was a critical and financial success, despite criticisms of using the subject matter for comedic purposes. It won the Grand Prix at the 1998 Cannes Film Festival, nine David di Donatello Awards, including Best Film, in Italy, and three Academy Awards, including Best Actor for Benigni.

Life Is Beautiful - La Vita è Bella Movie Poster (1997)

Life Is Beautiful (1997)

Directed by: Roberto Benigni
Starring: Roberto Benigni, Nicoletta Braschi, Giorgio Cantarini, Giustino Durano, Marisa Paredes, Sergio Bini Bustric, Lidia Alfonsi, Raffaella Lebboroni
Screenplay by: Roberto Benigni, Vincenzo Cerami
Production Design by: Danilo Donati
Cinematography by: Tonino Delli Colli
Film Editing by: Simona Paggi
Costume Design by: Danilo Donati
Art Direction by: Danilo Donati
Music by: Nicola Piovani
Distributed by: Miramax Films
Release Date: December 20, 1997 (Italy), February 12, 1999 (United States)

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