Life is Beautiful
Roberto Benigni’s “Life Is Beautiful” (1998) had a terrific run with critics and audiences. First, it won the Grand Jury Prize at the Cannes, followed by an Academy Award for the Best Foreign film, with Benigni bagging the Best Actor award. The box-office success in the U.S. was astonishing, too, especially for a non-English movie. Benigni, who was the leading star in Italy at the time, immediately shot to fame with this film. You can forgive Benigni for creating “Pinocchio” (2002), which has a rating of 0% with the Rotten Tomatoes critics, and that also appears in the list of all-time worst movies. Nonetheless, “Life Is Beautiful” succeeds because Benigni beautifully mixes humor against the backdrop of the Holocaust without offending anyone. The film almost becomes a satire that is driven through the eyes of a young boy. There are not many films that can explain the horrific events of the Holocaust to a young audience, and Benigni’s Oscar-winning film is one such f