Made in Italy: Film Review
Liam Neeson and his son Micheal Richardson have teamed up to play an onscreen father-son duo grieving a profound loss in this pleasant yet unoriginal comedy-drama.
Richardson plays Jack, who is about to lose the London art gallery he runs unless he can find some cash to pay off the owners, his estranged wife’s parents. The easiest solution, so he thinks, is to do up his family’s villa in Tuscany, Italy, and sell it, so he recruits his father, the acclaimed artist Robert Foster (Neeson), and they head to Italy to restore the former family home – but the villa, which has stood empty for 20 years, has fallen into disrepair and they soon realise it’s going to take much longer and require much more manpower to bring the dilapidated home back to its former glory than they expected. During the restoration project, they confront and grieve the loss of Jack’s mum/Robert’s wife, who died when Jack was only seven.
The film, written and directed by actor James D’Arcy in his feature directorial debut, is a perfectly pleasant movie that would work well for an afternoon on the sofa with your mum. It tells a very familiar, overly sentimental, and predictable story – you can call the ending from miles away – but it’s still a lovely, easy, inoffensive watch, with a handful of laugh-out-loud moments and enough beautiful shots of Italy to give me envy. I also love a good old house makeover show so I enjoyed seeing the villa come back to life.
Richardson plays Jack as this likeable, down-on-his-luck guy who just needs to catch a break amid his separation from his wife, something which he feels unable to discuss with his father as they have a strained relationship and haven’t spoken for two months. They have always avoided talking about Jack’s mother’s death, something which Robert thought would save Jack from his pain but it has just led to resentment. The trip forces the duo to examine where they’re at in their lives and reconsider their priorities.
The film has a personal resonance for the lead stars as they have grieved the exact same loss in real life with Natasha Richardson (who died in different circumstances). You can’t help but think of that towards the end when the actors address their grief head-on. They both did well with the material they were given. I also enjoyed Lindsay Duncan as their no-nonsense British estate agent Kate Lewis, who monitors the progress of the restoration, and Valeria Bilello as Natasha, a charming local Italian chef.
Made in Italy is very flawed but there’s no denying it’s quite a comforting watch.
On Prime Video from Friday 26th March