Happy.as.lazzaro.2018 -
An isolated farming village where sharecroppers are essentially slaves to the Marchesa Alfonsina de Luna (a brilliant, vampish turn by Alba Rohrwacher). The workers believe they owe her a debt that can never be repaid — a metaphor for feudal Italy, sharecropping, and psychological bondage. Time seems frozen (70s hairstyles, but no modern tech). Lazzaro befriends the Marchesa’s spoiled, lonely son, Tancredi (Luca Chikovani), who stages a fake kidnapping — a prank that unravels everything.
Happy as Lazzaro (Italian: Lazzaro felice ) is a 2018 magical realist film written and directed by Alice Rohrwacher. It defies easy categorization, blending Italian neorealism, social parable, biblical allegory, and gentle fantasy. happy.as.lazzaro.2018
(Tancredi, in a letter Lazzaro carries across decades): “I saw the wolf. It was beautiful. It drank from the stream and looked at me. It didn’t even see me.” Lazzaro is that wolf — outside of hierarchy, beyond recognition, and impossibly, quietly free. (Tancredi, in a letter Lazzaro carries across decades):
: Lazzaro falls off a cliff searching for Tancredi and is left for dead. Lazzaro befriends the Marchesa’s spoiled
The sound design is equally uncanny: ambient silence, wind, wolf howls, and a sudden burst of modern pop music (including a cappella hymns and a jarring needle-drop of “Calamity Song” by The Decemberists during the credits). Happy as Lazzaro is a fable for post-industrial capitalism. It asks: What if kindness isn’t a virtue but a form of disability in a cruel world? And it answers with a quiet, brutal miracle. Lazzaro doesn’t change the world. The world destroys him. But the film suggests that his goodness — even if futile — is the only thing worth remembering.