Metacritic Film

Malena

Starring Monica Bellucci, Daniele Arena, Giovanni Litrico, and Giuseppe Sulfaro

MPAA RATING: R for sexuality, nudity, language and some violence

Miramax Films
Romance
105 minutes | Color
USA / Italy
Released In Theaters December 25, 2000

Malena (Bellacci), a beautiful young war widow, inspires the sensual awakenings of a group of adolescent boys in 1941 Sicily.

WRITTEN BY
Giuseppe Tornatore
Luciano Vincenzoni (story)

DIRECTED BY
Giuseppe Tornatore

Overall Metascore

This is a weighted, normalized average of all individual scores given by critics, on a scale of 0 (worst) to 100 (best).

54 / 100

Critic Reviews

100 San Francisco Chronicle Mick LaSalle
Qualifies as director Giuseppe Tornatore's second full-fledged masterpiece. His first: "Cinema Paradiso."
90 Los Angeles Times Kevin Thomas
Malena the film is as beautiful and seductive as its heroine, with its ravishing Lajos Koltai cinematography and sweepingly romantic Ennio Morricone score.
75 Philadelphia Inquirer Carrie Rickey
Gives audiences something more than just a heart-stopping beauty to contemplate.
70 Rolling Stone Peter Travers
Nothing new here except model-turned-actress Bellucci. To call her noteworthy would be an understatement.
70 Village Voice Dennis Lim
A nostalgic coming-of-age sex comedy tastefully lecherous enough to indicate that its intended demographic is several decades past puberty.
70 The New York Times Stephen Holden
What begins as a blushing, priapic opera buffa about coming of age turns into a verismo shocker, before softening into something mellower.
70 TV Guide Frank Lovece
It differs from American films about the period in its evocation of day-to-day passion. The power of beauty is often dealt with in films, but not so often its powerful curse.
67 Entertainment Weekly Owen Gleiberman
You wish that Malena's inner life had been given as much accent as her outer charms.
67 Portland Oregonian Kim Morgan
Intriguing, containing a truthful kernel of sweetness, rot and brutality that will shock many.
63 Christian Science Monitor David Sterritt
Striking photography, period detail, screen-filling crowd scenes, and veteran composer Morricone's score make this one worth seeing, but the sheer nastiness of the town's people drags it down.
63 New York Post Jonathan Foreman
Too often seems like a slightly silly film.
63 Chicago Tribune Michael Wilmington
No period of Italian history has produced more great movies than the WWII years . But, Malena romanticizes and even sentimentalizes those years.
63 New York Daily News Jack Mathews
If Mussolini had a Monica Bellucci to inspire his troops, we might still be trying to take Palermo.
50 Chicago Sun-Times Roger Ebert
There is noting quite so awkward as a film that is one thing while it pretends to be another.
50 Austin Chronicle Marc Savlov
When the film changes gears from light coming-of-age comedy to ex-post-facto war parable midway through, it loses its focus and suddenly becomes a much darker beast.
50 Variety David Rooney
Combining a coming-of-age story with the sad odyssey of a woman punished for her beauty, the film ultimately has too little depth, subtlety, thematic consequence or contemporary relevance.
50 USA Today Mike Clark
There's definitely some paradiso in watching Malena walking, but not enough to sustain almost two hours of cinema.
50 Chicago Reader Jonathan Rosenbaum
Somewhere in writer-director Giuseppe Tornatore's overstyled movie, about a 12-year-old boy (Sulfaro) during the Italian fascist period who has the hots for a mistreated war widow (Belluci), is a pretty good short story about the fickleness of community and the cruelty of gossip struggling to get out.
40 Time Richard Schickel
Things finally work out all right--except for audiences, who will find this thin movie bereft of the more richly textured sentiments of Tornatore's "Cinema Paradiso."
20 Mr. Showbiz Kevin Maynard
Giuseppe Tornatore has long been a master of cheap sentiment ("Cinema Paradiso," " The Legend of 1900"), but his latest film is his most shallow, reprehensible exercise in nostalgia to date.
20 Washington Post Michael O'Sullivan
Feels more like "Porky's" with marinara sauce than "Summer of '42."
10 Film.com Henry Cabot Beck
In the end, Malena is an unlikable and foul farce, unworthy of Tornatore's previously gentle touch.

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