Director: Bernardo Bertolucci
Stars: Jean-Louis Trintignant, Stefania Sandrelli, Gastone Moschin, Enzo Tarascio
The conformist is 1930s Italian Marcello Clerici (Jean-Louis
Trintignant), a coward who has spent his life accommodating others so
that he can "belong." Marcello agrees to kill a political refugee, on
orders from the Fascist government, even though the victim-to-be is his
college mentor. The film is a character study of the kind of person who
willingly "conforms" to the ideological fashions of his day. In this
case, director Bernardo Bertolucci suggests that Marcello's desire to
conform is
rooted in his latent
homosexuality.
In addition to its strong storyline, the film is
critically revered for the astonishing production design by Nedo Azzini,
which, together with Vittorio Storaro's camerawork, recreates the
atmosphere of Fascist Italy with some of the most complex visual
compositions ever seen on film, filled with highly stylized uses of
angles, shapes, and shadows. The Conformist was cut by five crucial
minutes when first released in the US; those missing moments were
restored in the 1994 reissue. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
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