Happy.as.lazzaro.2018 Apr 2026

The sound design is equally uncanny: ambient silence, wind, wolf howls, and a sudden burst of modern pop music (including a cappella hymns and a jarring needle-drop of “Calamity Song” by The Decemberists during the credits). Happy as Lazzaro is a fable for post-industrial capitalism. It asks: What if kindness isn’t a virtue but a form of disability in a cruel world? And it answers with a quiet, brutal miracle. Lazzaro doesn’t change the world. The world destroys him. But the film suggests that his goodness — even if futile — is the only thing worth remembering.

Happy as Lazzaro (Italian: Lazzaro felice ) is a 2018 magical realist film written and directed by Alice Rohrwacher. It defies easy categorization, blending Italian neorealism, social parable, biblical allegory, and gentle fantasy. happy.as.lazzaro.2018

An isolated farming village where sharecroppers are essentially slaves to the Marchesa Alfonsina de Luna (a brilliant, vampish turn by Alba Rohrwacher). The workers believe they owe her a debt that can never be repaid — a metaphor for feudal Italy, sharecropping, and psychological bondage. Time seems frozen (70s hairstyles, but no modern tech). Lazzaro befriends the Marchesa’s spoiled, lonely son, Tancredi (Luca Chikovani), who stages a fake kidnapping — a prank that unravels everything. The sound design is equally uncanny: ambient silence,

(Tancredi, in a letter Lazzaro carries across decades): “I saw the wolf. It was beautiful. It drank from the stream and looked at me. It didn’t even see me.” Lazzaro is that wolf — outside of hierarchy, beyond recognition, and impossibly, quietly free. And it answers with a quiet, brutal miracle

: Lazzaro falls off a cliff searching for Tancredi and is left for dead.