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Viral (per)versions of power in Paolo Sorrentino's diptych Loro

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  18 June 2020

Annachiara Mariani*
Affiliation:
Department of Modern Foreign Languages and Literatures, University of Tennessee, Knoxville, USA

Abstract

This article examines Paolo Sorrentino's portrayal of moral degradation and pursuit of power in his twin biopics about Silvio Berlusconi: Loro 1 and Loro 2 (2018). It does so by performing a psychological reading of Sorrentino's representation of Berlusconi, as someone suffering from a personality disorder characterised by excessive power striving. It argues that this obsession with power also affects most of the films’ characters, who become obsessed with entering Berlusconi's inner circle – the pinnacle of wealth and power in a neoliberal society. In particular, it argues that their power striving circulates ‘virally’ in the film's narrative; the characters are willing to do anything to befriend their idol and attain absolute power. The ensuing analysis shows that Sorrentino's portrayal of Berlusconi – as the embodiment of a highly dysfunctional and obsessive, viral quest for power – comes to represent the deep pervasiveness of corruption, hedonism and commodification that marked the Second Republic.

Questo articolo esamina la rappresentazione del degrado morale e la ricerca del potere nei due film biografici di Paolo Sorrentino su Silvio Berlusconi: Loro 1 e Loro 2 (2018). Partendo dal presupposto che il personaggio soffra di un disturbo di personalità legato all'eccesiva dipendenza dal potere, si evince che questa ossessione si diffonde tra gli altri personaggi del film e dilaga nella diegesi con la forza di una pandemia scatenata da un virus indotto dal fascino per Berlusconi. Infatti, nel film il magnate simboleggia l'oro, l'apice della ricchezza e del potere neoliberista a cui tutti aspirano e ne sono contagiati come in una pandemia psicologica. L'articolo sottolinea come l'entourage di Berlusconi sia disposto a piegarsi a qualsiasi servigio pur di emulare il proprio idolo e raggiungere il potere. L'argomentazione illustra come, per Sorrentino, Berlusconi raffiguri la capillarità della corruzione, dell'edonismo e della mercificazione che hanno caratterizzato la Seconda Repubblica italiana.

Type
Research Articles
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s) 2020. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of the Association for the Study of Modern Italy

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