Close Menu
  • Home
  • Entertainment
  • Film & TV
  • Fashion
  • Business
  • Sports
  • Lifestyle
  • Tech
  • Health
What's Hot

Amazon ends Flock partnership after backlash over Super Bowl ad

February 14, 2026

‘Quite expensive’ supermarket named country’s favorite supermarket for fifth time | Money news

February 13, 2026

Toyota is recalling 141,000 Prius vehicles due to the risk of the doors opening while driving

February 11, 2026
Facebook Instagram YouTube TikTok
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Privacy Policy
Facebook Instagram YouTube TikTok
Nana Media
  • Home
  • Entertainment
  • Film & TV
  • Fashion
  • Business
  • Sports
  • Lifestyle
  • Tech
  • Health
العربية
Nana Media
العربية
You are at:Home»Film & TV»La Grazia: Paolo Sorrentino’s Quiet Reckoning With Power, Doubt, and the Burden of Grace
Film & TV

La Grazia: Paolo Sorrentino’s Quiet Reckoning With Power, Doubt, and the Burden of Grace

Nana MediaBy Nana MediaAugust 27, 2025Updated:December 29, 20253 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
La Grazia: Paolo Sorrentino’s Quiet Reckoning With Power, Doubt, and the Burden of Grace
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email Copy Link

With La Grazia, Paolo Sorrentino returns to familiar yet fertile ground: the intimate psychology of power, observed not through spectacle but through restraint. Opening the Venice Film Festival, the film marks a decisive recalibration after the divisive Parthenope. Here, Sorrentino exchanges flamboyance for precision, crafting a somber, ironic meditation on leadership, morality, and the loneliness that accompanies institutional authority.

At the center stands Toni Servillo, once again Sorrentino’s essential cinematic counterpart. Servillo plays Mariano De Santis, the President of Italy nearing the end of his mandate—an emblem of integrity admired for his constitutional rigor and emotional opacity. Nicknamed “reinforced concrete,” Mariano embodies legality without warmth, order without consolation. Servillo’s performance is a masterclass in subtraction: a flicker of doubt, a restrained smile, a pause heavy with unspoken fear. In his stillness, the film finds its pulse.

Unlike the operatic excess of The Great Beauty or the corrosive satire of Il Divo, La Grazia unfolds in muted tones. The Quirinale Palace becomes less a seat of power than a mausoleum of certainty, its corridors echoing with unresolved questions. Mariano is confronted with decisions that refuse moral clarity: pardons involving mercy and violence, and a proposed euthanasia law that pits legal responsibility against human suffering. Sorrentino refuses easy answers, allowing the dilemmas to linger—much like the president himself, paralysed by conscience and faith.

Toni Servillo, Anna Ferzetti and Paolo Sorrentino at the ‘La Grazia’ premiere in Venice

Yet politics is only the film’s outer shell. Beneath it lies an intensely personal anguish. Mariano is haunted by the suspicion that his late wife once betrayed him—an unknowable truth that undermines his lifelong devotion to facts and statutes. The irony is devastating: a man who built his life on legal certainty is undone by emotional ambiguity. This private torment, rendered with dry humor and aching melancholy, gives La Grazia its quiet force.

Visually, the film is elegant and austere, favoring composed interiors and controlled movement. Moments of surreal tenderness puncture the formality—a ceremonial reception disrupted by rain and wind, a sudden burst of song among veterans—images that crystallize Sorrentino’s view of power as both absurd and fragile. Music, contemporary and anachronistic, slips in like a guilty pleasure, hinting at a vitality Mariano has long suppressed.

Courtesy of Venice Film Festival

Ultimately, La Grazia is not a portrait of political failure but of existential fatigue. It asks what remains when authority recedes and identity dissolves. In returning to Servillo, Sorrentino reconnects with a cinematic language rooted in irony, compassion, and doubt. The result is a film of measured beauty—less intoxicating than his earlier triumphs, perhaps, but richer in reflection. It is a work that trusts silence, embraces uncertainty, and finds, within restraint itself, a form of grace.

La Grazia premiered in Competition at the Venice Film Festival.

By Michel Riet – Venice 2025

EuropeanCinema Euthanasia FilmCriticism History of Naples Il divo (film) ItalianCinema LaGrazia Michel_Riet Morality Nanamedia nanamediaorg Paolo Sorrentino PaoloSorrentino President of Italy Psychology Quirinal Palace Toni Servillo Toni_Servillo ToniServillo Truth Venezia82 Venice Venice Film Festival VeniceFilmFestival
Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Avatar photo
Nana Media
  • Website

Related Posts

“Art Cure” and the neuroscience of the arts: Activating reward systems in the brain and increasing dopamine

January 19, 2026

Livestream: The European Film Awards 2026

January 16, 2026

Why robots still can’t keep up with humans – and what’s holding them back | Science, climate and technology news

January 10, 2026
Top Posts

Amazon ends Flock partnership after backlash over Super Bowl ad

February 14, 2026

Gavin Newsom is played by Travis Quentin Young in the film ’33 Days’.

June 10, 2025

Yes, that’s really that Bob Dylan MGKS “Lost Americana” albon trailer tells

June 11, 2025

How to find the perfect fascinator for the race day

June 10, 2025
Don't Miss
Lifestyle

We will see these nail polish colors everywhere in autumn

By Nana MediaSeptember 5, 2025

Autumn Nail Polish Colors Autumn is here, and with it comes a new palette of…

Demi Lovato says reunification with Jonas Brothers and “Camp Rock” songs was “healing”.

August 12, 2025

Colleges try to tackle the AI ​​in the classroom

June 4, 2025

Frieze London 2025 cheat sheet

October 17, 2025
About Us
About Us

Welcome to Nana Media – your digital hub for stories that move, inform, and inspire. We’re a modern media platform built for today’s audience, covering everything from the glitz of entertainment and the magic of film & TV to the latest innovations shaping our tech-driven world. At Nana Media, we bring you sharp insights, honest opinions, and fresh takes on the trends shaping pop culture and beyond.

Facebook Instagram YouTube TikTok
Our Picks

Amazon ends Flock partnership after backlash over Super Bowl ad

February 14, 2026

‘Quite expensive’ supermarket named country’s favorite supermarket for fifth time | Money news

February 13, 2026

Toyota is recalling 141,000 Prius vehicles due to the risk of the doors opening while driving

February 11, 2026
Our Newsletter

Subscribe Us To Receive Our Latest News Directly In Your Inbox!!!

We don’t spam! Read our privacy policy for more info.

Check your inbox or spam folder to confirm your subscription.

© Copyright 2026 . All Right Reserved By Nanamedia.
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Privacy Policy

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.