La vita facile
La vita facile
| 04 March 2011 (USA)
La vita facile Trailers

An Italian doctor starts a new life in Kenya to escape the city, but life catches up with him when an old friend offers his assistance along with his wife, who happens to be an old lover.

Reviews
BoardChiri Bad Acting and worse Bad Screenplay
Matrixiole Simple and well acted, it has tension enough to knot the stomach.
TaryBiggBall It was OK. I don't see why everyone loves it so much. It wasn't very smart or deep or well-directed.
Ella-May O'Brien Each character in this movie — down to the smallest one — is an individual rather than a type, prone to spontaneous changes of mood and sometimes amusing outbursts of pettiness or ill humor.
smithellie1966 I watched this movie on Amazon instant video. I understand that sometime the meaning can be lost in translation and there are cultural things that impossible to understand. Having said that I found this movie to be really bad. Acting is terrible to start with. Nothing in this movie makes sense or believable. Dying children that are hospitalized cheerfully playing ball games? The love story? The corruption story? Jogging in a desert? Pool parties? A doctor behaving as an idiot? The ending!!!!!! Give me a break. Sloppy pieces of incoherent stories put together made an absurdous movie with absolutely unrealistic ending.
simona gianotti No doubt Stefano Accorsi and Pierfrancesco Favino are two of the most interesting and attractive Italian actors of today, and their working together in "La vita facile", as leading and interacting actors, works effectively. Either of them spreads magnetism from every pore, always proving believable, and their pairing appears convincing, at traits explosive (see when they quarrel violently). As a whole, the movie entertains, with some mildly committed hints, but certainly far from wanting to be committed. In a moment when Italian cinematography seems to be attracted by the exoticism of Africa as a place of redemption and escape, here the description of the condition of sub-saharan people and doctors helping them is only a pretext, quite stereotyped and not sufficiently explored, only a background in the service of the representation of these bourgeois young people. Also the reference to some bad health system of Italy just lies on the background of what remains a comedy, that exploits a charming setting and an equally charming cast to offer a pleasant product, moving with agility to a final (in my opinion out of tune) surprise. An enjoyable product, indeed, with some funny moments: had it been interpreted by less magnetic actors, I would have written a different review, but cinema lovers know how a good cast cast, even a single actor, can save a movie from its mediocrity.