Cruz elevates soapy 'Don't Move'
She's raw, real and lonely in Italian film about doomed affair
Penelope Cruz plays Italia and Sergio Castellitto plays Timoteo in "Don't Move," which he also directs.
Associated Press
DON'T MOVE ** 1/2 Penelope Cruz, Sergio Castellitto; in Italian with English subtitles; not rated, probable R (sex, profanity, nudity).
Forget what you think you know about Penelope Cruz the glamorous Ralph Lauren ads, the tabloid-fodder romances with Tom Cruise and Matthew McConaughey, the questionable forays into big-budget English-language films like "Sahara" and "Captain Corelli's Mandolin."
With "Don't Move," the Spanish star reminds us of why we found her fascinating in the first place: Besides being gorgeous, she can act. And because she can act, she elevates Italian director/co-star Sergio Castellitto's film about a doomed affair above its soapiness.
Dressed down and tarted up as Italia, she's almost unrecognizable with her mismatched clothes, bad teeth and worse makeup. Well, almost. Despite the bow-legged gait as she struts awkwardly through her destitute neighborhood in Rome, those are still Penelope Cruz's long, lean gams sprouting from that cheap miniskirt.
Her inner transformation, though, is what counts. And there's something raw and real and sort of lonely about Italia that enthralls the more sophisticated Timoteo (Castellitto), who recalls meeting Italia after his car breaks down on the side of the road in the middle of nowhere.
He asks to use Italia's phone, then proceeds to force himself on her. The act isn't so much startling as it is mechanical and inert. She pretty much lets him do it, and when he repeatedly returns to her house afterward, she lets him do it some more.
Even though he's married to the impossibly beautiful and elegant Elsa (Claudia Gerini), the sad-eyed Timoteo finds he's happier with Italia. It's not just the exotic, rebellious nature of slumming it he's more comfortable with her, she's low-maintenance. It's totally believable that these two disparate people could fall into a forbidden fling and their connection does turn tender.
The most sensual scene in the film is shot in a gritty style and sometimes feels gratuitously shocking. By that point it almost feels like Castellitto is trying to see how far he can push it before we look away, completely offended.
And yet not to give too much away he lets some people off the hook a bit too easily. It's not a happy ending for anyone, but let's just say it's happier for some more than others.
"Don't Move" is not rated but would probably receive an R for graphic sexuality and language. Running time: 117 minutes.



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