PANE E TULIPANI aka BREAD AND TULIPS (2000)
Reviewed by Jerry Saravia
Anyone who thinks that Hollywood is the only industry that makes formulaic romantic comedies is sadly mistaken. Silvio Soldini's "Bread and Tulips" is an Italian romantic comedy with all the necessary ingredients to make it a success. The difference is in the execution.
"Bread and Tulips" stars Licia Maglietta as Rosalba, the dutiful housewife who boards a tourist bus with her son and husband back from vacation. At a rest stop, Rosalba loses her engagement ring in a toilet bowl. While trying to retrieve it, the bus leaves without her. What is Rosalba to do now? She decides to go to Venice by hitchhiking there, and enjoying her own vacation for once. This leaves her husband mad who blames her for not being in the bus. Did he ever stop to think that maybe he had taken her for granted and should have checked to be sure she was in the bus before leaving?
Nevertheless, Rosalba stays in beautiful Venice for a day until she misses the train that would take her home. She goes to a cheap hotel, eats a cold dish at the local restaurant, and decides to get a job working for a florist! Rosalba suddenly feels liberated but where will she stay since the hotel has just closed down? Back at the restaurant, a waiter named Fernando (Bruno Ganz) lets her stay in his flat out of sympathy. Rosalba has now neglected her family in favor of her own interests and desires. She becomes acquainted with the reticent Fernando, and forms a friendship with a masseuse next door named Grazia (Marina Massironi). But what of her familial obligations? It seems that her husband has hired a plumber, Constantino (Giuseppe Battiston), to do some private investigating on his wife in Venice. He needs her for her cleaning and cooking and little else since he satisfies himself with a mistress.
"Bread and Tulips" is fairly predictable since you can sense how these characters will mingle and connect. I only wish that writers Soldini and Doriana Leondeff had devised more unexpected turns and twists, especially with the overweight Constantino who fancies himself a real detective though he is only an amateur. I also wished that more was said about Fernando, and his curious habit of hanging a noose in his bedroom. He is obviously suicidal but it is hardly mentioned again when he meets Rosalba the first time. I also would have liked to hear Rosalba mention just once how she felt about her past life and her newer, happier one. The film seems to aim for that speech but it never arrives.
And yet, this is a fairly enjoyable, delicious film that holds back and never goes for any cheap gags. It simmers but never boils. Hollywood may remake it and cast Gwyneth Paltrow as the masseuse, Conchata Ferrell as Rosalba and Gene Hackman as Fernando, but I should hope not. If you like "Chocolat" or the simple pleasures of comedies that deem to be uncomplicated and optimistic, then "Bread and Tulips" is the film for you.






