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God's Jester
By Nathan Cone
A seemingly simple film that reveals deeper levels of profundity upon further
reflection, Roberto Rossellini's "The
Flowers of St. Francis" is basically a series of vignettes
that takes Italian neo-realism back to the 13th century.
Using non-actors in almost every role (including a group of Franciscan monks
as Francis and his followers), Rossellini succeeds in humanizing a man who is
perhaps the most beloved and revered of all the Catholic saints. As Father
Virgilio Fantuzzi tells it in one of the DVD's special features, at a Paris
screening of the film for Monsignor Angelo Roncalli, the future Pope John XXIII
told Rossellini, "Poor man, you don't know what you've done." By
"demolishing iconography in film," as Fantuzzi explains it, it might
be said that "The Flowers of St. Francis" paved the way for films like
Pier Paolo Pasolini's "The Gospel According to St. Matthew" and even
Martin Scorsese's "The Last Temptation of Christ."
In "The Flowers of St. Francis," the monks that surround their
spiritual leader seem almost comical in their naïveté. Francis does not scold
them for their mistakes; he merely leads by example, shunning wealth and
comforts for a simple monastic life praising God and all His creations. Brother
Ginepro and the simpleton Giovanni are given almost as much if not more screen
time than Francis. In Ginepro we see ourselves, struggling to attain
enlightenment.
A few of the vignettes are less successful than others, such as when Brother
Ginepro "asks" a pig to lend his foot to a hungry brother, and so even
at 87 minutes, "The Flowers of St. Francis" feels a little long.
Another of the stories seems completely at odds with the rest of the film. As
Ginepro goes out to preach, he runs afoul of Nicolaio the Tyrant, played by
Italian actor Aldo Fabrizi. Nicolaio's camp is full of rowdy marauders, and
Ginepro is thrown about like a rag doll. Yet he remains calm, and stands
Nicolaio down. It's a much different setting than the rest of the film, which
takes place within the monastic life of St. Francis, and the scene seems a
parable of our chaotic world. Still, Fabrizi's histrionics seem out of place in
the movie, and he is less menacing than ridiculous.
The DVD of "The Flowers of St. Francis" includes the aforementioned
interview with film critic Father Virgilio Fantuzzi, as well as two other
interviews that help frame the film in its historical context, and within
Rossellini's career. There is an interview with film historian Adriano Aprà,
and an English language interview with Isabella Rossellini, who discusses her
father's work. The DVD case also includes a 36-page booklet featuring scholarly
essays and reprinted writings by Roberto Rossellini. The 55-year-old movie isn't
as fabulous looking as other Criterion discs, but thankfully the black-and-white
medium is more forgiving than color when it comes to dirt and scratches.
Acclaimed by film and religious scholars as one of the great religious films,
"The
Flowers of St. Francis," has been largely forgotten by the
public. Those in for a straight telling of the life of St. Francis may be
disappointed, and I must admit I was a little taken aback by the style of the
film, but ultimately found some of its themes inspiring.
9/9/05
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