The Best Offer Explained

The Best Offer
Native Name:
Director:Giuseppe Tornatore
Producer:Isabella Cocuzza
Arturo Paglia
Music:Ennio Morricone
Cinematography:Fabio Zamarion
Editing:Massimo Quaglia
Studio:Paco Cinematografica
Warner Bros. Entertainment Italia
Distributor:Warner Bros. Pictures
Runtime:131 minutes
Country:Italy
Language:English
Budget:$18 million[1]
Gross:$20,596,350[2] [3]

The Best Offer (Italian: '''La migliore offerta''' – entitled Deception in the UK) is a 2013 English-language Italian psychological thriller film written and directed by Giuseppe Tornatore. The film stars Geoffrey Rush, Jim Sturgess, Sylvia Hoeks, and Donald Sutherland. The music score was composed by Ennio Morricone.

Plot

The story revolves around Virgil Oldman (Geoffrey Rush), an ageing and renowned, but fastidious, eccentric and highly temperamental managing director of a preeminent auction house. While giving an engaging performance to the public at auction, Virgil is not at ease with them individually; he refuses to use a cell phone and only removes his gloves to touch artwork as he has OCD.

Virgil is hired by a mysterious young heiress, Claire Ibbetson (Sylvia Hoeks), to auction off a large collection of art and antiques left to her by her parents. Claire, who suffers from severe agoraphobia, refuses to be seen, hiding herself in a locked safe room. She has decided to trust Oldman, as his own disorder means he also avoids physical contact with others. Soon Virgil, a lifelong bachelor who has never been able to relate to a woman who is not on canvas, realizes that he is becoming obsessed with her.

An astute young artisan, Robert (Jim Sturgess), who has a shop repairing and restoring anything mechanical, aids Oldman in restoring and reassembling some mechanical geared parts that oddly keep turning up on Claire's property, which appear to be from a potentially valuable historic automaton. Robert, who is very successful with women, is soon giving him advice on how to befriend Claire, and how to deal with his feelings towards her.

The side narrative of the automaton is that it could supposedly talk; while Robert theorizes it must have been designed to contain a dwarf in order to accomplish this, Virgil notes while some trickery like that must have been involved, no one has been able to explain how the automaton always provided the correct answers to the questions it was asked. This topic is furthered when Virgil begins to frequent a cafe across from Claire's home so he can watch the gates. Aware of the slightest detail and nuance when it comes to art, he is totally oblivious every time to a dwarf who is seated at the window, ignoring her not only when she accurately calculates aloud the points the pinball game across the room is racking up, but confounds the cafe's patrons with correct calculations and mathematical formulae in answer to their questions.

Virgil's reputation as an authenticator who is above reproach is belied by an ongoing scam, whereby he presents actual master portraits of women at auction as inauthentic, the work of minor artists or forgers, so that his friend Billy Whistler (Donald Sutherland) can act as his shill, bidding on them at prices far below what they should actually have fetched. While Billy has abetted Virgil's acquisition of a large private collection worth many millions, he is disappointed that as an aspiring artist himself, Oldman does not take his work seriously, declaring that Billy has "no inner mystery."

An example of Virgil's manipulations to swindle his clients is revealed when he discovers a mouldy, charred piece of wood at a client's estate. Declaring it probably worthless, he fails to solicit it as a gift. Unfazed, when professional restoration does reveal a painting underneath, Virgil declares it is by a 16th-century forger who identified herself with an obscurely placed "V," and notes that all forgers are irresistibly tempted to modify the original by adding something of themselves, that self-betrayal reveals the forger's own authentic sensibilities. After having prepped his clients that the piece will sell for a modest price at auction, he relies on Billy to acquire it, but Billy is too slow in placing a competing bid and, in an embarrassing confrontation mid-auction with the other bidder, the painting is sold to her for £90,000. A furious Virgil later confronts Billy and reveals it was actually an original worth £8 million, and not a forgery. Soon afterwards, Billy buys the painting from that bidder for £250,000 and sells it to Virgil at cost, claiming he only wants to restore their damaged relationship.

An infatuated Virgil eventually begins a relationship with Claire which compromises his work, despite Billy warning him that human emotions are like works of art; they can be forged, meaning that even love can be faked. When Virgil is beaten up by a gang after he leaves the villa and is left lying in the street, Claire overcomes her fear of the outside world and comes to his rescue. At the peak of the relationship, Virgil lays aside his gloves and a still-fragile Claire goes to live with him. He trusts her enough to show her his lifetime secret collection. Overcome with emotion, she tells Virgil that, no matter what might happen to the two of them, she does love him.

At a restaurant dinner with Robert and his girlfriend, Virgil presents Claire with the collection catalogue. When she confesses that she has decided not to sell, rather than being angry at all his effort going to waste, a besotted Virgil happily rips it up, declaring he would do the same if the property belonged to him. He then announces that his farewell auction performance will be in London in a week. After the successful event, Billy congratulates him and tells him that to remind him of what a great artist he could have been if only Virgil has believed in him, he has sent him one of his paintings. Virgil laughingly promises not to burn it.

When he returns home, he discovers both Claire and his entire collection are gone. The empty vault contains only the restored automaton, which plays Robert's message saying that there is something authentic concealed in every forgery, which is why he will truly miss Virgil. Virgil also discovers that a supposed portrait of Claire's mother was actually a portrait of her, painted by Billy, and has been left for Virgil, complete with a telling dedication "with love and gratitude."

Virgil is unable to go to the police as the victim of the elaborate fraud since he acquired the now stolen works by illicit means. He soon discovers that the dwarf in the restaurant is not only also named Claire, but is the real owner of the villa. She reveals that while she has hired it out to some film directors, for the past two years it has been rented by "an engineer" that could only have been Robert. She then gives him the exact number of the hundreds of times the supposedly agoraphobic "Claire" left the villa and that over the course of the con, the contents of the villa had been moved in three times and removed three times.

After months of recovering from the betrayal in a mental institution, Virgil is still haunted by memories of making love to Claire. Carrying Billy's portrait of her, he takes a trip to Prague, where rooms opposite the famous medieval tower clock have been configured to his specifications. He hangs the portrait on the wall and visits a restaurant which Claire claimed to be nostalgic for, as it was where she had been happy. It is filled with clocks and mechanical gearwork. When asked by the waiter if he is alone, Virgil says he is waiting for someone. As the camera pulls back to reveal a myriad collection of noisily whirring, ticking and moving clockworks that are all in motion.

Cast

Production

The film was produced by Paco Cinematografica with support from the FVG (Friuli-Venezia Giulia) Film Fund. Filming began in Trieste on April 30, 2012. For Tornatore this meant a return to Trieste: it was here he shot La Sconosciuta in 2005, with Xenia Rappoport. Filming took place in a period of five to six weeks in the region of Friuli-Venezia Giulia, Vienna, Prague, and South Tyrol.[4]

Reception

Critical reception

The Best Offer received mixed reviews. On Rotten Tomatoes, the film has a score of 55%, with an average rating of 5.84/10, based on reviews from 33 critics.[5] On Metacritic, the film holds a score of 49 (out of 100), based on reviews from 17 critics, indicating "mixed or average reviews".[6] Andrew Pulver of The Guardian rated it 2/5 stars and called it "stiff" and "convoluted".[7] Philippa Hawker of The Age rated it 3/5 stars and called it "handsome, yet austere".[8] Sandra Hall of the Brisbane Times rated it 4/5 stars and praised Geoffrey Rush's acting.[9] Deborah Young of The Hollywood Reporter called it "astutely written".[10] Variety called the film "superficial" and "clichéd", but predicted box office success.[1]

Box office

On the Italian opening weekend, the film grossed $2,496,402 from 373 theaters and debuted at number 2 on the box office chart, behind Us in the U.S.. It grossed $12,021,662 domestically and $8,468,038 overseas for a worldwide gross of $20,489,700.[2] [3]

Accolades

Awards
AwardCategoryRecipients and nomineesResult
58th David di Donatello Awards[11] Best FilmGiuseppe Tornatore
Best DirectorGiuseppe Tornatore
Best ScriptGiuseppe Tornatore
Best ProducerIsabella Cocuzza and Arturo Paglia
Best CinematographyFabio Zamarion
Best Sets and DecorationsMaurizio Sabatini and Raffaella Giovannetti
Best CostumesMaurizio Millenotti
Best MakeupLuigi Rocchetti
Best HairstylingStefano Ceccarelli
Best EditingMassimo Quaglia
Best SoundGilberto Martinelli
Best ScoreEnnio Morricone
Youngs' DavidGiuseppe Tornatore
67th Silver Ribbon Awards[12] Best DirectorGiuseppe Tornatore
Best ProducerIsabella Cocuzza and Arturo Paglia
Best ScreenplayGiuseppe Tornatore
Best CinematographyFabio Zamarion
Best ScenographyMaurizio Sabatini and Raffaella Giovannetti
Best CostumesMaurizio Millenotti
Best EditorMassimo Quaglia
Best SoundGilberto Martinelli
Best ScoreEnnio Morricone
53rd Italian Golden Globe[13] Best CinematographyFabio Zamarion
Best MusicEnnio Morricone
26th European Film AwardsBest FilmGiuseppe Tornatore
Best DirectorGiuseppe Tornatore
Best ScreenwriterGiuseppe Tornatore
Best ComposerEnnio Morricone
People's Choice AwardGiuseppe Tornatore

Notes and References

  1. Review: "The Best Offer". 2013-01-24. Variety. 2013-09-01.
  2. La Migliore Offerta (The Best Offer). Box Office Mojo. 2013-10-06. https://web.archive.org/web/20131102181218/http://boxofficemojo.com/movies/intl/?page=&country=IT&id=_fLAMIGLIOREOFFERT01. 2013-11-02.
  3. Web site: La Migliore Offerta (The Best Offer). Box Office Mojo. 2014-01-09.
  4. News: Tornatore shoots The Best Offer in Trieste. Scarpa. Vittoria. 2012-04-05. 2012-11-17.
  5. Web site: The Best Offer (La Migliore Offerta) (2013) . Rotten Tomatoes . May 27, 2020.
  6. Web site: The Best Offer . Metacritic . January 9, 2014.
  7. News: The Best Offer – First Look Review. Pulver. Andrew. The Guardian. 2013-02-13. 2013-09-01.
  8. News: The Best Offer review: Artistry in Fascination with Beauty. Philippa. Hawker. 2013-08-29. The Age. 2013-09-01.
  9. News: The Best Offer review: Perfect Frame to Display Rush's Talent. Hall. Sandra . Sandra Hall (writer). 2013-08-29. 2013-09-01.
  10. The Best Offer: Film Review. Deborah. Young. 2013-01-05. The Hollywood Reporter. 2013-09-01.
  11. Web site: Giuseppe Tornatore's The Best Offer Wins Big at the Italian Oscars. Twitch Film. Pierre. Hombrebueno. 2013-06-15. 2013-09-01. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20130913195223/http://twitchfilm.com/2013/06/giuseppe-tornatores-the-best-offer-wins-big-at-the-embarassing-italian-oscars.html. 2013-09-13.
  12. 'The Best Offer' Wins Big at Italy's Nastri d'Argento Awards. Eric J.. Lyman. The Hollywood Reporter. 2013-07-07. 2013-09-01.
  13. News: Geoffrey Rush film sweeps Silver Ribbon awards. 2013-07-08. BBC News. 2013-09-01.