Alessandro Rossellini, grandson of legendary auteur Roberto, attempts to gather his extended family for an indulgent but interesting exercise in documentary therapy.

“I think you have to go back to therapy. It wasn’t enough,” says Isabella Rossellini, drily and only somewhat jokingly, to her nephew Alessandro, as he interviews her on some hard family truths. The documentary he’s making is that therapy, he tells her, earning a fixed stare of equal parts affection and skepticism. “Good luck,” she finally replies.
It’s a droll but loaded exchange between the most celebrated child and the self-declared misfit of the Rossellini dynasty, hinting at varying levels of privilege and damage among the families it comprises. It’s a cobweb of dysfunction founded, Alessandro believes, in the self-determined moral code of their shared patriarch, trailblazing Italian filmmaker Roberto. “The Rossellinis” represents Alessandro’s attempt to unparcel that legacy, though it often plays as personal catharsis in the guise of wider family counseling.
Related Stories
VIP+Hollywood Must Define AI Technical Standards to Prep for Its Future

'Librarians: The Next Chapter' Pulled From CW Fall Schedule
The flashes of discomfort and occasional hostility emerging from that disconnect are what make the film intriguing, even if the younger Rossellini’s techniques as both a filmmaker and an interviewer border on gauche. The very premise of the documentary is self-indulgent. Alessandro, the son of Roberto Rossellini’s eldest living child Renzo and the African-American dancer Katherine Cohen, is a recovering drug addict who has diagnosed himself with the separate affliction of “Rossellinitis”: a chronic state of insecurity, stemming from being born into a clan “where you’re expected to be cultured and creative by nature.” His relatives are bemused when he brings up the term. His efforts to pitch individual crisis as a shared condition aren’t necessarily a success, though he exposes tricky, intricate family politics in the process.
Popular on Variety
“The Rossellinis” — which premiered last year in Critics’ Week at Venice, before embarking on the docfest circuit — isn’t Alessandro’s first stab at capturing his thorny family history in documentary form. A previous attempt at launching the project culminated in the short “Viva Ingrid!,” a more straightforwardly celebratory tribute to his grandfather’s most famous wife Ingrid Bergman. Via archive materials and the bittersweet recollections of her three children, Bergman remains a critical presence in this documentary — and the chief hook for an international audience less versed in the Rossellinis’ Italian celebrity. What he gathers of her and his grandfather’s marriage and acrimonious divorce is nothing that Hollywood scholars don’t already know. Its trickle-down effects on their children’s lives, meanwhile, are selectively guarded in Alessandro’s one-on-one interviews with them.
Anyone hoping for gossipy showbiz color may come away disappointed. Isabella is a wry and quizzical interviewee, though she doesn’t hold forth on her glittery career or romantic life. Instead, she’s briskly candid about the pressure she felt, as the most famous and wealthy of her father’s children, to financially sustain her extended family — Alessandro, with his history of substance abuse problems, included. She has wrestled with the Rossellini inheritance onscreen before, writing and narrating the Guy Maddin documentary short “My Dad Is 100 Years Old,” to the consternation of her twin sister, New York-based academic Ingrid: Perhaps that past experience is part of the reason the Rossellinis approach Alessandro’s camera with a smiling wariness, knowing full well what tension it can foster.
Interactions with the director’s suave uncle Robin, who lives a solitary life on his mother’s estate at Sweden’s Danholmen Island, are less flinty, but also not entirely forthcoming. Alessandro’s visit to the estate is most interesting for what it reveals of how he perceives his own place in the extended family, as he describes himself as “the little Black nephew about to disembark at the mythical temple of the Bergmans.” Alessandro’s biracial identity, and how he feels it distinguishes (or separates) him from other Rossellinis, surfaces repeatedly as a point of concern, though it’s rarely addressed head-on — even in the film’s final third, where he journeys to Qatar to interview his aunt Nur, the daughter of Roberto and his fourth wife, Indian writer Sonali Senroy Das Gupta. The Rossellini surname, he implies, is an identity that subsumes all others.
For all its ambitious breadth of scope, “The Rossellinis” is best when it sticks closest to home for the filmmaker. Alessandro’s own children, perhaps protectively, are left out of the equation, but the film’s most affecting stretches document his years-in-the-making reunion with his estranged mother Katherine, now living in a modest New York nursing home and long removed from the merry-go-round of Rossellini issues, even if she’s had her own alcoholism to contend with. Alessandro’s producer father Renzo, meanwhile, is mostly good-humored about a life and career in cinema that never quite escaped the long shadow of his father, whose legacy further permeates “The Rossellinis” via a thrilling selection of film clips. (They speak for themselves rather better than Alessandro’s commentary on them, which is limited to such bland generalities as calling “Rome, Open City” a “masterpiece of cinema.”) If this flawed but compellingly heartfelt doc never quite outpaces Roberto Rossellini’s shadow either, well, that’s largely its point.
Read More About:
Jump to Comments‘The Rossellinis’ Review: An Outsider’s Inside View of a Dysfunctional Celebrity Dynasty
Reviewed in Hot Docs Film Festival (online), London, April 29, 2021. (Also in Venice, Visions du Réel film festivals.) Running time: 99 MIN.
More from Variety

Celebrating the 60th Anniversary of the Beatles at the Hollywood Bowl: Martin Lewis to Speak on How Fab Four Ushered in the Outdoor Rock Concert Age

Training AI With TV & Film Content: How Licensing Deals Look

Hollywood Must Define AI Technical Standards to Prep for Its Future
Most Popular
Channing Tatum Says Gambit Accent Was Supposed to Be ‘Unintelligible’ at Times and He Was ‘Too Scared to Ask’ Marvel for the Costume to Bring…

Ryan Reynolds Was ‘Mortified’ to Cut Rob McElhenney’s ‘Deadpool & Wolverine’ Cameo but the ‘Sequence Wasn’t Working’: ‘I Had to Kill a Darling…

Box Office: ‘Deadpool & Wolverine’ Returns to No. 1 in Fifth Weekend as ‘The Crow’ Bombs and ‘Blink Twice…

‘Ted Lasso’ Eyes Season 4 Greenlight With Main Cast Members Returning

Zach Galifianakis Warns Hollywood Endorsements Could Hurt Kamala Harris: ‘I Do Wish the DNC Would Step Back from the Celebrities a Little Bit…

‘Inside Out 2’ Becomes First Animated Film to Hit $1 Billion at International Box Office

Chris Hemsworth Plays Drums in Surprise Appearance at Ed Sheeran’s Romania Concert

Denzel Washington Says ‘There Are Very Few Films Left For Me to Make That I'm Interested In’

‘Blink Twice’ Ending Explained: What Really Happens on Channing Tatum’s Island?

Dear Beyoncé and Taylor: Thanks for Staying Home. The DNC Benefited From Treating Musicians as Opening Acts, Not Headliners

Must Read
- Film
‘Megalopolis’ Trailer’s Fake Critic Quotes Were AI-Generated, Lionsgate Drops Marketing Consultant Responsible For Snafu

- Music
Sabrina Carpenter Teases and Torments on the Masterful — and Devilishly NSFW — 'Short n' Sweet': Album Review

- Film
Tim Burton on Why the 'Batman' Films Have Changed and How 'Beetlejuice Beetlejuice' Saved Him From Retirement

- Film
Jennifer Lopez and Ben Affleck Are the Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton of the 2020s

Sign Up for Variety Newsletters
By providing your information, you agree to our Terms of Use and our Privacy Policy.We use vendors that may also process your information to help provide our services. // This site is protected by reCAPTCHA Enterprise and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.Variety Confidential
ncG1vNJzZmiukae2psDYZ5qopV9nfXN9jp%2BgpaVfp7K3tcSwqmismJp6s7vSrJylpJmjtrR50Z6top2nYn5zf5NybW1paWZ8
