Film and TV Reviews

Saturday 25 June 2016

Suburra (Review)

Suburra (Film Review) 2016




Directed by Stefano Rulli
Starring Pierfrancesco Favino and Elio Germano

Suburra is an Italian neo-noir mafia film. The film is set in 2011 in Rome, when a major mob were bribing and threatening politicians to pass a law to convert a traditionally Italian town into a gambling and partying, mafia run, location, focusing on the mafia's control of Italian politics and the Vatican. It also focuses on the rivalries between gangs. ''Everyone can be bought.''

The rain-filled cinematography definitely tells the story's tone. Hyper-violence, political and Vatican corruption, and traditional mafia activity, the film isn't easy to watch. But the film's visuals, even including the violence, are done masterfully. The graphic violence adds the gritty sense that this film required.

I admire that the film went with an intelligent plot, rather than a solely action-filled one. The hard-hitting violence is only justified by the plot. An intriguing plot, at that.

The entire soundtrack was curated by the French band M83, and the music works unbelievably well with the visuals, as made obvious by the trailer. The tracks all sounds very modern, matching what the mafia wish to transform a traditional town into.

I don't have any major complaints, other than that it could have swayed further from the Italian mafia-film stereotype, and feel the film is gritty but visually beautiful.

9/10.

Rated 18, runtime 135 minutes.



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