Doug Dillaman’s review published on Letterboxd:
At least my sixth viewing, my third this year, and thoroughly convinced it's in my top 25 of all time. Sorrentino is a freaking magician, weaving disparate tones, musical styles, and a slowly burning story together with rich aplomb and an astonishing fluidity of camerawork that I've never seen the like of. (Seriously, if you have, let me know.) And, of course, Toni Servillo's magnificently somber (I'd call it deadpan, but that misleadingly implies comedy on his part) performance. Apparently this has never even had a DVD release in the States, to which I say Holy Fucking Shit how is this disappearing down the rabbit hole?