Metacritic Film

Best of Youth, The

Starring Luigi Lo Cascio, Alessio Boni, Adriana Asti, Sonia Bergamasco, Fabrizio Gifuni, Maya Sansa, Valentina Carnelutti, and Jasmine Trinca

MPAA RATING: R for language and brief nudity

Miramax Films
Drama  |  Foreign
358 minutes | Color
Italy
Released In Theaters March 2, 2005

Spanning four decades, from the chaotic 1960s to the present, this passionate epic follows two Italian brothers through some of the most tumultuous events of recent Italian history. (Miramax)

WRITTEN BY
Sandro Petraglia
Stefano Rulli

DIRECTED BY
Marco Tullio Giordana

Overall Metascore

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

89 / 100

Critic Reviews

100 Christian Science Monitor
This is epic filmmaking on a profoundly human scale, directed to perfection and magnificently acted by everyone in sight.
100 Newsweek
Smart, generous, as subtle as it is expansive, this is storytelling of a rare order. Six hours may seem like a big investment, but the emotional pay-back is beyond price.
100 Entertainment Weekly
Like a great novel from a more expansive bygone age, The Best of Youth is full of big thoughts; like a great soap opera, it's also full of sharp plot turns, vibrant characters, and great talk. It is, in short, the best of cinema.
100 Los Angeles Times
Those who see it will, quite frankly, not believe their luck. It is that satisfying, that engrossing, that good.
100 Chicago Tribune
A major cinema event of the year, a masterpiece of Italian film traditions in social/political realism and historical family epic.
100 Chicago Sun-Times
It is a luxury to be enveloped in a good film.
100 San Francisco Chronicle
So in-depth, so appealing, so easy to sit through and so anomalously grand scale that few who see it will ever forget it.
100 Seattle Post-Intelligencer
Giordana's redemptive vision provides a sense of discovery and a well of hope in the most devastating of troubles, and beautiful surprises in love, friendship and family.
100 Portland Oregonian
In exchange for a small piece of your life, you receive an infinity.
90 The New Yorker
The Best of Youth takes its chance--almost unheard of, these days--to bloom and unfurl like a novel.
90 Chicago Reader
The story unfolds at such length and over so many years that politics tend to fade into the wallpaper, leaving an exceptionally rich family story.
90 LA Weekly
And like all great family sagas, The Best of Youth, while tipping its hat to the painful confusion of living life forward, reels it backward to give it the thrilling significance of time and place.
90 Salon.com
This is a graceful and enveloping feat of filmmaking.
90 Slate
The Best of Youth doesn't have a boring millisecond. It isn't an art film, with longueurs; it's a mini-series with the sweep of a classic novel, with tons of plot.
90 Variety
At nearly six hours, pic's extreme length lets Giordana and screenwriters Sandro Petraglia and Stefano Rulli build up a novelistic rhythm, pulling the audience so deeply and forcefully into their story that it becomes like a enveloping dream; when it's over, parting with the characters is truly sweet and sorrowful.
88 New York Daily News
After all the observations on heartache, politics, art, commerce, passion, identity, mortality, even mental health, six hours begin to seem downright compact.
88 Rolling Stone
The acting is electric. By the end of this haunting, hypnotic film, you feel you have watched lives being lived, not just imagined.
88 Boston Globe
A slowly flowering miracle: an epic of normal life.
80 Washington Post
Works as both historical allegory and moving family drama.
80 Dallas Observer Michael Fox
Eminently watchable, The Best of Youth nonetheless lacks the devastating emotional gut punch of its obvious inspiration, Visconti's "Rocco and His Brothers."
80 TV Guide
Rarely have six hours spent doing ANYTHING seemed so rewarding.
80 The Hollywood Reporter
Lo Cascio and Boni inhabit their roles with keen intellectual and emotional vigor.
80 Village Voice
The movie has the addictive episodic intimacy of great TV.
80 The New York Times
Full of nuance and complexity, but it is also as accessible and engrossing as a grand 19th-century novel.
80 The New Republic
Like some wines, The Best of Youth travels well. From its earliest moments the film is intelligently seen.
80 The Onion (A.V. Club)
A big, family-style Italian dinner, catered to the broadest tastes, yet satisfying all the same.
75 New York Post
All the pieces converge in a powerful rush during the second half.
75 The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
If you've got six hours to invest watching superior television in a movie theatre, then spend the time wisely with The Best of Youth.

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