There's
plenty of the latter, though, for fans of the strange and often
irksome figure of blithering, babbling energy that Benigni frequently
presents on screen.
Benigni
stars as Attilio, a poet and university teacher in Rome who
conducts his classes with colorful, lyrical antics to press
home his love of poetry and how and why it should move people.
Divorced,
with a couple of adorable daughters, Attilio prances through
the waking world obsessed with Vittoria (played by Benigni's
wife and regular co‑star, Nicoletta Braschi), a woman
accustomed to giving him teasing, playful brush‑offs.
At
night, Attilio has bizarre wedding dreams of Vittoria, scenarios
accompanied by the off‑kilter vocals of an American singer
(Tom Waits, Benigni's co‑star in 1986's "Down by
Law").
Then
one day, Attilio gets terrible news from a friend, Iraqi poet
Fuad (Jeno Reno). Vittoria, in Baghdad to work on a book about
Fuad, has sustained a head wound from a bombing in the early
stages of the U.S.‑led war there and is not expected to
live.
Usually
the blithe and frivolous buffoon, Attilio is mobilized into
a whirlwind of pragmatic action, managing to get to Baghdad
that night and embarking on a Herculean scavenger hunt to find
the drugs, nutrients and other supplies Vittoria needs to recover.
Benigni
mostly plays the fool early on, but he gradually transforms
Attilio into a very real, sweet, wise and rational soul. And
he adds a surprising twist to Attilio and Vittoria's relationship
that enriches the sentiment behind his deeds and sacrifices
for his beloved.
"The
Tiger and the Snow" shares many themes and ideas of "Life
Is Beautiful," Benigni's unusual comic take on the Holocaust
centered on a father who uses humor and unfailing optimism to
shelter his son from the horrors of life in a concentration
camp.
Benigni's
Attilio shares that man's faith that the human spirit can triumph
over the harshest adversity, though this time, his character
seems more grounded in the prospect that a happy ending might
not be waiting, despite his best efforts.
And
like "Life Is Beautiful," "The Tiger and the
Snow" incongruously offers sharp laughs and touches of
tenderness amid moments of drama and danger.
It's
a refreshing story of a man unfazed by the severity of the real
world, even when he encounters the worst it can offer, a dauntless
romantic who feels right to his marrow that love truly does
conquer all.
"The
Tiger and the Snow," distributed by Strand Releasing, runs
113 minutes. Three stars out of four.