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My Brilliant Friends gripping second episode reminds us that some roads lead nowhere

TV Reviews Recap

“Christmas won’t be Christmas without any presents,” grumbled Jo, lying on the rug.

“It’s so dreadful to be poor!” sighed Meg, looking down at her old dress.

“I don’t think it’s fair for some girls to have plenty of pretty things, and other girls nothing at all,” added little Amy, with an injured sniff.

“We’ve got Father and Mother, and each other,” said Beth contentedly from her corner.

There’s precious little like contentment in “I Soldi (The Money),” the tense, taut second episode of My Brilliant Friend, but it’s not a non-existent quality. Moments of warmth, and even joy, bubble up on screen: Lenú and Lila retrieve their hoarded cash to buy a book and dream of better things; they read Little Women in the sun; they holler together inside a tunnel; Lenú reads Lila’s book on a sunny, breezy rooftop and marvels at her friend’s pail of words. All lovely. All peaceful. Each, in its way, a moment of tranquility and loveliness.

This isn’t an idyllic childhood we’re witnessing, however. As such, these moments end almost before they can be wholly enjoyed, and some of them are not without an undercurrent of something sour or sore. Lenú’s family celebrates her excellent test scores as her mother’s resentment permeates the room. A book purchase isn’t just a moment of glee, but a possible escape route. And a long, gray road may or may not truly lead to the ocean, an adventure that may or may not be a joyful act of friendship.

Director Saverio Costanzo makes sure these sour spots can be spotted from the beginning. After receiving a (pretty threatening, if we’re honest) cash gift from suspected doll-stealer Don Achille, the girls race off to hide their cash, unwilling to surrender it to their families and unsure of where it should be spend. Deliberate postponement follows, until Lila strikes upon an idea that will, she says, allow them to turn that bill into many bills. Mercifully, she doesn’t suggest that they get involved with some sort of child’s Neapolitan pyramid scheme, but instead announces that they’ll be buying Louisa May Alcott’s enduring novel Little Women, because reading that book will teach them to write one of their own.

Sometimes the narration of a protagonist in voiceover can be a lot, even when it’s absolutely necessary to understand the events taking place or the emotional state of the character. (Example: Despite Caitriona Balfe’s excellent performance as Claire Fraser, the narration on Outlander is often more distracting than anything else. Some friends of mine call it “Claire-ification.” Not good.) Here, though, it’s indispensable, used extremely judiciously and always in beautiful language (often straight from the novel) that heightens the sensory experience while adding to the emotional and psychological layers already present. Such is the case with the older Lenú’s description of one of the qualities she most admired in her friend. Lila, she tells us (paraphrasing here) is a person who commits to her actions with every fiber of her being; even when the acts are small or intimate one, she follows through and takes no half-measures. It’s easy to understand what would be so alluring about that quality. If listening to Lila talk about words doesn’t make you immediately want to start writing a novel, who even are you?

These are two exceedingly bright girls. Lenú downplays her own intelligence, emphasizing how her abilities pale in comparison to Lila’s jewel-bright, dazzling mind, but even that realization indicates a beyond-her-years self-awareness, as does her realization about Lila’s possible intentions on their ocean adventure and her ability to forgive her with ease. Two such brilliant minds should have no trouble making their way out of the pale courtyard to the ocean and well beyond, but the deck is stacked against them both, and one decision, hesitatingly made by one adult, sets the two friends on divergent paths. And that brings us back to Little Women, the opening lines of which begin this review.

“I don’t think it’s fair for some girls to have plenty of pretty things, and other girls nothing at all,” added little Amy, with an injured sniff.

It’s not. The poverty of the families in Lenú and Lila’s neighborhood is never out of frame; both families balk at the suggestion that they pay money to lose help by sending their daughters for additional schooling. It’s an option not even available to some of their classmates, and it’s only the begrudging but determined acquiescence of Lenú’s father that sets her on a possible exit route. They are poor. They are girls. If there’s a way out, it’s a hard one, and only one of them comes close to finding it. The other gets hurled out a window for her trouble.

In another coming-of-age story, Lila’s mother would defy her father to get her past that test, or her father would unwillingly bow to her brother’s demands. Her teacher would fight harder, or volunteer to teach her for free. She’d study on her own and win a scholarship. But this isn’t that story. It’s not even that story for Lenú, who endures abuse emotional, verbal, and physical in nature whenever the topic of school is raised. But for Lila, her only safe havens are her brother Rino (for whom, one assumes, she named the son who calls the adult Lenú in the first episode’s opening moments) and Lenú herself, the friend with whom she entrusts her book even as her jealousy and fear are apparent. From every other corner she meets violence and rage. Even her teacher, her champion, writes her off, and encourages Lenú to do the same.

My Brilliant Friend makes very clear points about the many societal factors—financial, patriarchal, familial—that seem sure to keep one of these two brilliant friends from becoming what they have the potential to be. Yet it never stops being about the friendship of two young girls. Some of that is the writing, as the source material pulls this off with similar ease, and some of it is the direction, as Costanzo wisely sticks with Lenú and Lila even when their concerns have larger implications and resonances (no shots of dozens of little girls walking off to school, for example). But a great deal of it is due to the performances of Elisa Del Genio and Ludovica Nasti. It’s possible, even likely, that this will be the last episode that centers on these two—we’ve got to keep moving in time, and another pair of young actors await us as Lila and Lenú enter their teenage years. But they’ve done even more than was asked. They communicate the interior lives of their charges, and they make us believe in their bond, but they also lend all these big ideas and immediacy and urgency that’s not easily shaken.

When Lila lies crumpled on the pavement, muttering “I’m not hurt” as she stares at her friend with an arm clearly broken, it’s an end of a road, but Nasti’s remarkable performance ensures that the ghost of that potential future never leaves the frame. A girl with that strength and invention, a girl who reads Little Women to learn how to write a book and then does so, a brilliant girl—there’s another path she might have taken. Maybe it leads to the ocean. Maybe it leads to a University. Wherever it goes, she can’t follow it, and maybe it’s the fuel she has stored for a journey she’ll never take that we see burning in her eyes as she takes some words from her pail and puts them in order, telling herself a story: “I’m not hurt. I’m not hurt. I’m not hurt.”

Stray observations

  • The saga of Don Achille and his neighborhood foes continues, with Lila seeming to piece together that Solara family was somehow involved in both the death of Achille and the subsequent arrest of their inexplicable but sure-as-hell convenient new hire.
  • The violence is incredibly well handled. This episode is so, so hard to watch, because so much of what they experience seems routine. It’s only the window that seems to startle anyone—well, that, and Don Achille’s knife to the neck.
  • The costumes, by Antonella Cannarozzi, are incredible. Every single one looks like it’s been tended to often, and like it’s not often cleaned.
  • See you next Sunday!

15 Comments

  • timspc-av says:

    God, the range of emotions and the frustrations of the teacher were done so well. You can really feel how hard it is on her that Lila can’t shine due to circumstances. 

    • allisonshoemaker-av says:

      I agree. And you wish her frustration had come out any other way but you know from whence it springs. Rough. 

      • timspc-av says:

        It’s a recurring theme in the series, the way women angry at the system lash out against each other. Lila does it here to Lenú, with their non-trip to the sea. 

  • backdrifter-av says:

    I’m going to be that person that keeps referencing the books. This show is somehow more heartbreaking than the novels. Seeing Lenú’s battered face, hearing her voice catch as she shout’s Lina’s name when she realizes something terrible will happen if she doesn’t stop arguing with her father, and then watching a child slam into the ground after being thrown out a window…christ.
    You also really get the sense of how young they are through watching. Lenú’s adult voice narrates her childhood experience throughout in the book, but here we get to see how small they are, and how physically affectionate and childlike their relationship is (always running around, making silly sounds, passing smiles when others aren’t looking). There’s a sense of both joy and fear that come through the actors that is missing in the heady language of the book.

  • kommune85-av says:

    What an episode! Even more intense than the first, and some incredible moments illuminated by Lila’s actress’ performance. Her (imagined?) recap of the murder! The end scene! And the incredible family scenes. Lila’s dad is played really well, as uncomfortable as it was to watch him lash out at Lila to appease his wife. We’ll see if the teenage actresses can match this.

    • kalamatan-av says:

      It was Lenu’s dad, not Lila’s, who slapped her in order to appease his wife who didn’t want her to go to middle school. The wife seemed jealous of her own daughter.

  • hagedose68-av says:

    I didn’t get that Lila had ulterior motives with the trip to the sea at first. In hindsight it became clear, but my mind doesn’t want to go to such Machiavellian places, I guess.

    • idajk-av says:

      I’m really liking this series so far (I have not read the books, so I don’t have that comparison to make). Has anyone else taken note of how much Elisa Delgenio, who plays Lenu, looks like a young Drew Barrymore? It is seriously uncanny! 

    • mrrpmrrpmrrpmrrp-av says:

      FWIW I didn’t see it coming when I read the book either.

  • vossdl-av says:

    Hey, I am a thirty (!!) year old person who has been reading this site since high school and this is probably the second or third time I’ve ever felt compelled to comment. Have always enjoyed Allison Shoemaker’s content, but her reviews of the first two episodes were next-level. It’s great to read analysis from someone who loves the source material. (And has the perfect name to tell this specific story!) Hope we get to see more of these. It’s a shame to see only a handful of comments. So far, I’m most impressed with the casting. I could tell who everyone in the town was before they introduced them because everyone looked exactly the way they did in my head. The one choice I was kind of curious about was the camera’s focus on Elena during Melina’s meltdown. I don’t think they left the dialogue about Lila taking Melina’s side and Melina is a member of her family. It was one of our first hints at Lila’s passionate nature. That was the only real difference I noticed. 

  • benjamuffin-av says:

    Book stuff: interesting to see how this episode ends almost as if more of the show is going to focus on who really murdered Don Achille – I doubt it will, but the ending scene of this ep still made it feel like it would. If I remember correctly from the book, isn’t it pretty much the end of it once Donato goes off to jail? There are never any other suspects, and no one ever gets any real confirmation that Donato did it, right? (I’ve only read the first book, BTW.)Both of the main actresses are amazing, and I’m also loving the show’s depiction of Enzo.

    • thishannah-av says:

      They drag off Alfredo Peluso (Carmen’s father), not Donato—he’s Nino’s father and the sleazy husband who causes the fight between Melina and his wife. (Lots of characters, easy to confuse!) But yes, there’s not an ongoing murder story, it just gets referenced now and then as a neighborhood rumor, and of course affects poor Carmen and her brother a lot. I also love Enzo in the show. He comes across as a much bolder and prominent character than I felt he did in the book.

      • benjamuffin-av says:

        Ugh, I always confuse those two characters from name alone, for some reason. Same thing happened when I read the book.

  • erictan04-av says:

    I was shocked by the scene in which Lila was brutally punished by her father. My ten-year-old son was passing by when I was watching that, and he saw that bit, stopped and the whole house was quiet until the episode ended.

  • mrrpmrrpmrrpmrrp-av says:

    I saw that the show had been renewed and was confused, because I had assumed they were doing two episodes/book. But I’m glad they have time to linger.I was terrified for the girls during the conversation with Don Achille, and again every time they talked about middle school (middle school!) with their families.

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