Sign In  |  Register  |  Shopping Cart Shopping Cart  |  RSS Subscribe to RSS Feed  
Spirituality & Practice

Find us on:
 Facebook
 Twitter
 YouTube
Search Reviews
Title:

Director
First Name:

Director
Last Name:

Keywords:

Medium:
Practice:

Tradition:
About the Database

Search our database of more than 3,600 film reviews. We have been discovering spiritual meanings in movies for nearly four decades.
Film Awards

The Most Spiritually Literate Films of:
 
Film Awards

The latest films, special features, teaching scenes, and more.
Sign up here

Film Review

By Frederic and Mary Ann Brussat

 

Bread and Tulips
Directed by Silvio Soldini
Columbia TriStar Home Video 07/01 DVD/VHS Feature Film
PG-13 - brief language, some sensuality, drug reference

During a bus tour of Italy, 40-year-old housewife Rosalba (Licia Maglietta) is left behind by her husband and family at a rest stop. Disobeying orders to wait for them to retrieve her, she decides to follow her heart to Venice, a city of romance and intrigue. Dizzied by the adventure of being on her own, Rosalba checks into a pensione. The next day she misses the train home.

Alone in the city without money or credit cards, she is befriended by Fernando (Bruno Ganz), an idiosyncratic Icelander who works as a waiter. He gives her a room in his apartment. She soon gets a job in the florist shop of Fermo (Felice Andreasi), a curmudgeonly anarchist, and finds a chum in Grazia (Marinma Massironi), a holistic masseuse who's filled with enthusiasm about life.

Meanwhile Mimmo (Antonio Catania), Rosalba's put-upon husband, hires Constantino (Giuseppe Massironi) to do some detective work for him in Venice. This momma's boy, who is actually a plumber, takes off for the biggest adventure in his life and is surprised by what he finds awaiting him away from home.

"Longing is such a wonderful thing," Joan Chittister has observed. "It tells us that we're not finished yet. Those who long for nothing are already half dead." This wonderful Italian comedy pays tribute to the deep yearnings we all have for a life of adventure, romance, and intimacy. Like the heroine in Shirley Valentine, Rosalba finds an undiscovered and unused part of herself in a strange place. Isolated and ignored at home by a husband who has a mistress and sons who don't need her, she comes into full bloom in a romantic affair with Fernando, a man who until he met her, had given up on life. Co-writer and director Silvio Soldini draws out top-drawer performances from the entire cast.

Find your movie at MoviesUnlimited.com.

 

Films Now Showing
Recent VHS/DVD Releases

Reviews and database copyright © 1970 – 2009
by Frederic and Mary Ann Brussat
Women 
Purchase from: