Article 5SE45 House of Gucci review – Lady Gaga steers a steely path through the madness

House of Gucci review – Lady Gaga steers a steely path through the madness

by
Mark Kermode, Observer film critic
from on (#5SE45)

Gaga rules in Ridley Scott's at times ridiculous drama based on the true-life sagas of the Italian fashion dynasty

The most Gucci of them all" is how Patrizia Reggiani described herself in a 2014 interview and, judging by this entertainingly ripe, comedically tinged tragedy, she has a point. Variously known as Lady Gucci" and Black Widow", Reggiani became the centre of a very 1990s scandal involving lust, money, fashion, murder... and a clairvoyant. To that tabloid-friendly cocktail, Ridley Scott's latest true story" potboiler adds a dash of pop superstardom, with Lady Gaga (Oscar- nominated for her close-to-home performance in A Star Is Born) relishing the chance to find the human cracks beneath a larger-than-life, femme fatale surface.

Adapted by screenwriters Becky Johnston and Roberto Bentivegna from the nonfiction book by Sara Gay Forden, House of Gucci charts a crowd-pleasing course from the Milanese party scene of the 1970s to a high-profile, end-of-the-century trial. At its heart is the doomed romance between Patrizia and Maurizio Gucci, the latter played behind stylishly studious glasses by cinema's sexy nerd de nos jours, Adam Driver. I want to see how this story goes," says Patrizia, embarking upon a twisted fairytale romance with the grandson of Guccio Gucci that starts with masked balls and talk of midnight chimes and pumpkins and ends with family back-stabbings, jealous rages and deadly rivalries.

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