For a summer in Rome, an office clerk finds himself thrust
into the spotlight, his routine reflections hyperbolically
sensationalizing influence, as an architect revisits his youth to bring
back to life/cross-examine his most serendipitous subject of desire, a
young communist lawyer contends with a retired opera producer when it's
discovered that his humble father can sing exceptionally well, and a
married couple, in town for a potentially prosperous employment
opportunity, find themselves accidentally embracing exotic extramarital
affairs.
Felicitously framed by a traffic cop's dissolving point of view.
The conditions of which inculcate calisthenic creativity.
Romantically
mingling the celebrated with the starstruck and the ordinary with the
hyper-intensive, while evoking the nimble necessity to unearth
metaphorical mirth within corresponding pscyhoanalytic observations, Woody Allen's To Rome with Love's palpable playful
pluck picturesquely procures impressionable popularizations, and salaciously serenades atemporal condensations.
Fidelity
strengthened through chance, temptation tethered to testimony, regret
distinguished from revelation, and dreams evanescently alighted.
A virtuosic variation on a theme.
There's a lot more to it than that.
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