The Staggering Girl (2019)

  • Year: 2019
  • Released: 15 Feb 2020
  • Country: Italy
  • Adwords: N/A
  • IMDb: https://www.imdb.com/title/tt9643214/
  • Rotten Tomatoes: https://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/the_staggering_girl
  • Metacritics:
  • Available in: 720p, 1080p,
  • Language: English, German, Italian
  • MPA Rating: Not Rated
  • Genre: Short, Drama
  • Runtime: 37 min
  • Writer: Michael Mitnick
  • Director: Luca Guadagnino
  • Cast: Julianne Moore, Marthe Keller, Kyle MacLachlan
  • Keywords: art collector, artist, art model, mother daughter relationship, short film,
5.4/10
29% – Critics

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The Staggering Girl Movie Reviews

A poetic and problematic reunion between a daughter and her mother

A woman (Julianne Moore) receives a call at her home in New York. She must return to Italy to convince her mother to move with her to the US She is a blind artist (Marthe Keller) who lives in a large house assisted by a caretaker (Kyle MacLachlan). The daughter is writing her memoirs, where her mother (the staggering-staggering-girl in the title?) May have a central role.

Luca Guadagnino offers us a sophisticated medium-length film with permanent jumps in its temporality and in its locations, which even overlap, with flashbacks intervened from the present; Valentino’s wardrobe, Italian cityscape, and Ryuichi Sakamoto’s music reinforce those dreamlike and fragmented qualities (like the title) of the story.

We witness the always difficult moment of resuming the role of daughter in person, in this case in front of a beautiful and talented mother (Mia Goth as a young woman and also Keller today) who became famous and who despite her limitations continues to create. The return to childhood at the same time as the role of an adult overextended by a declining mother. The story of both parades in front of the character of Moore and is headed towards a perhaps epiphanic end.

A tour de force of elegance

‘The Staggering Girl’ brings together a group of creative geniuses. Directed by Luca Guadagnino, a filmmaker whose work can both satisfy lovers of art house and popular films, the film stars in the lead roles Julianne Moore, Marthe Keller, KiKi Layne and Kyle MacLachlan, impeccably dressed in Valentino garments, with a film score by the legendary Ryuichi Sakamoto.

In short, the film is about an Italian-American writer working on her autobiography and rethinking her life, who has to move back to Rome to take care of her mother. The structure of the film is complex, with a thin line between reality, flashbacks and fantasies.

Instead of occupying yourself with a minute understanding of the film’s plot, I would rather advise the viewer to sit back for 35 minutes and enjoy the extreme visual refinement, in (among others) the camera work, dresses, and the picturesque Italian landscape, in combination with the spellbinding soundtrack. The last scene left me with a sheer feeling of joy and fulfilment.

The worst kind of art-house

This enigmatic little memory piece may be only 37 minutes long but it still typifies the worst kind of art-house. A superb cast, (Julianne Moore, Marthe Keller, Kyle MacLachlan, KiKi Layne), mooch about in the past and in the present but none of them manage to engage us on any level other than the banal. The director is Luca Guadagnino and this must rank as nothing more than a doodle on his CV, the kind of film that established film-makers with too much power and money, but perhaps limited imagination, make simply because they can. If, like me, you admire the director’s other work it’s best you give this one a miss.