A sort ofn Italian-Americans in late middle age refused to compete and embarked on a journey of self-discovery and winemaking in this lifeless and boring comedy. It is Eat Pray Love for the wealthy male baby boomers: embarrassing sincerity and indifferent patronage to Italian characters. The star is a veteran role actor Joe Pantoliano (Joe Pantoliano), he played the pretending villain Ralph Cifaretto (Ralph Cifaretto) in “The Sopranos”-he played the good guy here Marco Gentile, the CEO of the automotive industry, looks very uncomfortable. For most of the movie, Pantoliano kept his mouth, which I think is a warm, welcoming smile. But maybe this is the burden of the Sopranos: his smile looks hostile, like a shark flashing.
At the beginning of the film, Marco quit his job impulsively and took the moral high ground on the ethical issues of his Canadian company’s board of directors.He booked a ticket to go ItalyHe left to live a better life in the United States when he was six years old-of course, his lesson is that a better life actually requires the simple joy of sitting under a tree and cutting oranges with a knife, while wearing a handkerchief as a temporary hat .
Marco’s wife and adult daughter told him that this was a mid-life crisis, when he announced that he would be engaged in winemaking in the estate he would inherit from his grandfather, which had been closed for many years. The old boy even begged in his dream: “Marco, this land is part of you.” In other places, rustic locals talked to him in cute, broken English. Prince Charles is known for chatting with his plants; well, they replied in this movie-one of the whimsical feelings should be weirdly charming.
In “The Sopranos,” Ralphi’s head is placed in a bowling bag without a wig. In contrast, this now looks like a benevolent destiny.



