Golden Door Movie Review
Golden Door Review
"Golden Door" Overview

Rating: PG
2006
Cast and Crew
Director : Emanuele CrialeseProducer : Bernard Bouix,Tommaso Calevi,Alexandre Mallet-Guy
Screenwiter : Emanuele Crialese
Starring : Charlotte Gainsbourg,Vincenzo Amato,Francesco Casisa,Filippo Pucillo,Vincent Schiavelli
The immigrant experience in the United States is typically viewed through two
particularly rosy set of historical glasses. The first version pits
strong-willed foreigners against the elements to hear freedom's sweet, sweet
ring. The other offers gritty, no-nonsense realism highlighting the mighty
struggles (both personal and logistical) of picking up ancestral stakes and
starting a new life elsewhere. Somewhere in the middle of these competing
conceits is Nuovomondo (translation: "New World," but now known as Golden
Door), a fascinating if ultimately flawed film by Italian director Emanuele
Crialese. By combining a dour portrait of migrant misadventures with flights of
slightly surrealistic fantasy, we are supposed to see both sides of the issue.
Instead, the battling approaches cancel each other out, resulting in an effort
that fails to resonate emotionally.
When we first meet the Mancuso boys -- oldest son Salvatore (Vincenzo Amato)
and the younger Angelo -- they are climbing up the side of a Sicilian peak,
their mouths laden with rocks. As part of some arcane, unexplained ritual, the
brothers are seeking a sign as to whether to travel to America. When
Salvatore's deaf mute son Pietro shows up, photos of the new world in hand, the
images of gigantic produce and money-stocked trees settle the debate. Grabbing
his resistant mother and a pair of promised brides, they make their way from
the country to the sea, where they must endure the elaborate (and corrupt)
process of finding passage. During their trials, Salvatore meets a proper
English woman named Lucy (Charlotte Gainsbourg). Rumored to be anything from
royalty to a prostitute, one thing is certain: The lady needs a husband to help
her gain access at Ellis Island. After refusing the advances of a marriage
broker (the late Vincent Schiavelli), she sets her sights on Salvatore.
For the first 70 minutes or so, Golden Door wants to be a very brave and
focused feature. It offers up the opening rite with nary a word of context, and
when the arranged brides show up for an exorcism (?), the superstitious
ceremony is all sly smoke and mirrors. Walking through the barren landscape,
their hopes pinned on making it to the so-called Promised Land, these dirty,
downtrodden people could be the poster children for the Statue of Liberty's
poetic lament. But then Crialese offers the first moment of magic realism --
Salvatore dreams of a rainstorm of money -- and the authenticity wanes. By the
time he envisions a group of revelers carrying huge carrots and
tree-trunk-sized olives, the movie has lost its bearings. Such stylized ideals
don't completely undermine the film, but they do appear in sharp contrast to
the textural despair presented previously.
But Crialese also makes other artistic choices that tend to dampen the overall
scope. When traveling aboard ship, we never really get a handle on how huge or
(in retrospect) how small and cramped the accommodations are. Everything is
shot in set-saving semi-close up. During a supposed storm, it is up to the
actors, not the effects, to sell the boat's dangerous thrashing. When we do get
above deck, the movie stays in tight and conversational. Fog shrouds any shot
of America, and Ellis Island looks like a lovingly recreated location, never
juxtaposed against any recognizable backdrop. Certainly, there are scenes that
work wonderfully (the marriage call, with its sudden proposed-to shocks, the
mother's defiant resistance to the various "intelligence" tests), but for the
most part, Golden Door is all façade and no force. It wants to be true to the
immigrant spirit. Sadly, it relies too often on the more ethereal definition of
that term to make its point.
Aka Nuevomondo.
We're ready for the boat.
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Review by Bill Gibron
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