My Own Good (2018) Poster

(2018)

User Reviews

Review this title
3 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
8/10
Funny but Thought Provoking Film!
nimishgour29 January 2019
Hats off to the director Pippo. It is a challenge to make a film on a lonely person in a devastated town and make it engaging and intriguing.

The best thing about any good film is that it works as a whole. It is very difficult to point out any component which is extraordinary. Every department in this film works in full tandem to make a great film. Everything in this film, writing, direction, casting, cinematography, editing, sound design, costume, production design etc. is just apt for the film. That's why the film has such a big impact.

It leaves us wondering about our very existence. Migration has been the backbone of our existence as human being. Man has been a migrant since stone age. Today when the world has become a global village, this film questions the very idea of leaving a place where you have lived your entire life. when we leave a place not only we leave its geography, we also leave behind the memories attached to it.

But at the same time, this film shows Noor, a migrant travelling from Syria to France. And the hero of the film who is not leaving his home despite it becoming a ruin helps her to reach France.

This irony makes the film so beautiful.
1 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
9/10
Elia simply won't leave.
Red-12524 September 2019
The Italian movie Il Bene Mio was shown in the U.S. with the title My Own Good (2018). It was co-written and directed by Pippo Mezzapesa.

Elia (portrayed by Sergio Rubini) is the only man left in his native village. After an earthquake destroyed this small hill village, the municipality moved into a new town in the valley. Everyone who survived the earthquake moved except Elia. He wanders through the village all day, visited occasionally by a woman who was a colleague of his deceased wife. A local tour bus brings tourists to the destroyed village, and he is the star attraction.

It's not as if he has nowhere to go. The mayor has offered him a fine apartment, and the woman offers to join forces with him. His former partner--the tour bus driver--wants to get back together in a partnership.

Elia simply won't leave. He frustrates everyone, including the viewer. He just won't leave.

There's a sub-plot about a young undocumented woman named Noor, played by Sonya Mellah. That plot fills out a movie that would otherwise just be everyone saying yes and Elia saying no.

However, the film really relies on Elia's story. If Elia were played by a mediocre actor, nothing would work. However, Sergio Rubini is a brilliant actor, and he makes the movie a success.

We saw this film as part of the ongoing Italian Film Festival at Rochester's excellent Little Theatre. It will work well enough on the small screen. My Own Good has an adequate IMDb rating of 7.1. I think it's better than that. It's a quirky, unusual movie that's worth seeing.
3 out of 4 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
9/10
JUST RIGHT
MSCultureSH7 June 2019
Warning: Spoilers
It's a special story, I kept thinking why authors wanted to tell such a story. I don't need any movie or else push me thinking whether it's stronger to face the pain or to leave behind(or escape) and restart, but it's something I'd like to share my opinions with the crowds. So (if so do Mr. Mezzapesa the director) this movie is just in a right tone, not too much, not too less. I just like that a single man in a ghost town could live not even a little boring, at least according to the movie he does. I like his persistence, even he didn't make a lot of efforts. I like he didn't make some extra efforts to show his strong willingness or heart. Life is just that real. I'm truley moved by those small items he collected which belonged to those past souls. And even it's bc of short budget, I sort of like the ending, don't want a conventional ending that childrens faces floating on the screen. I find in IMDB that dir. Mezzapesa has only few movies, and this one is the most recognised one and first one in five years. He should make more movies. Thank you for bringing this special, beautiful(bright) and deep film.
0 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed