Lunefulde måne
Laughing at exaggerated cultural stereotypes is not exactly
acceptable in this day and age, but it was in, apparently, in the eighties and “Moonstruck”
goes all in. As in everything is permissible as long as we understand this is a
comedy.
We are in the Italian community of New York and Loretta
Castorini (Cher) is a 37-year-old widower who lives at home with her parents, Cosmo
(Vincent Gardenia) and Rose Castorini (Olympia Dukakis), her grandfather (Feodor
Chaliapin) and perhaps a few more family members, this is not entirely clear to
me. Loretta is convinced that it was bad luck that caused her first husband to
die after only two years, so when her boyfriend Johnny Cammareri (Danny Aiello)
propose to her, she insists that everything must be done according to the
traditions. Johnny just needs to go back to Sicily to tell his dying mother
about the marriage.
Meanwhile, Loretta promises to seek out Johnny’s brother
Ronni (Nicholas Cage) to settle a five-year-old feud so he can attend the wedding.
Ronni is VERY upset. He blames Johnny for ruining his life by distracting him,
so he lost his hand in a meat slicer. It is five years ago, but to Ronni it is
like yesterday. Loretta’s attempt at placating Ronni develops into... an
affair. All of a sudden, Loretta is invited to a date at the Opera and going
through a makeover to look a little more like... Cher. At the Opera, Loretta meets
her father with a woman who is definitely not her mother, while at home Rose
meet a university teacher who we have already seen twice being ditched by a
student date.
Truly a messy situation and in any other connection, this
sounds like the recipe for a family meltdown. Alas, this is an Italian family,
so we are to understand that this sort of thing happens all the time, it takes
a bit (lot) of shouting and then everybody are happy again. It is natural to
give into your passions as long as you remember family is important and
everybody actually love each other even when they are throwing things at each
other.
I am Scandinavian and this mentality is... rather far away
from me, but I think that is the point here. These Italian Americans are
described with emphasis on all these cultural stereotypes, so far over the top
that most people, maybe even Italians, would find them crazy and amusing. This
is cultural stereotypes as a joke. Italians are a bit crooky, full of passion,
screaming their lungs out, intense lovers and family people above all and here
it is used for comedy.
The crazy thing is that it is totally working. This is
hilariously funny. Somewhere between the absurdity and the recognizable, we can
both follow the characters and are completely left by the wayside by their
crazy lives. The movie is obviously made with a sympathetic eye to Italian
culture, and it is laughing with, more than laughing at, the Italians, which
leaves a feel-good taste where this could have been really bad. I had a great
time watching this and that was totally unexpected.
This feels like an Italian version of “My Big, Fat, Greek
Wedding” in that the comedy is almost entirely based on extreme cultural stereotypes,
but “Moonstruck” is a cleaner movie in that it almost entirely dispenses with
plot and focuses of this particular situation across just two or three days. It
gives the movie more time to focus on the characters and that is to the benefit
of the movie.
Cher is almost the only actor without an Italian background,
but she pulls it off surprisingly well. I believe her to be Italian. Her only
problem is that her Cinderella transformation is not so convincing when she already
looks very pretty before it happens. Cage reminded me of his character in “Raising
Arizona”. He is rather good when he is a maniac. It is when he is supposed to
be sincere, he gets unconvincing.
I had no idea what I went into here and that is that best way
to approach a movie, no expectations at all. Here I was highly rewarded and had
a good time watching it.

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