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Style and substance combine in mesmerising historical drama The Leopard

Style and substance combine in mesmerising historical drama The Leopard

Independent05-03-2025
It's impossible to overstate the impact that fiction can have on the mythology of a nation. What would our understanding of British history look like, were it not for the record Shakespeare left of our late medieval kings? How would we think of the French Revolution without Victor Hugo's Les Misérables or the American Civil War without Stephen Crane's The Red Badge of Courage? These works record history, but they also shape it – and that role is played, in the great unified nation of Italy, by Giuseppe Tomasi di Lampedusa 's 1958 novel The Leopard, which arrives on our screens this week as a lavish Netflix miniseries.
Italy, in the second half of the 19th century, is on the brink of binding together its disparate nations, under the stewardship of General Garibaldi. Sicily, the island being kicked by the boot of the peninsula, has long been its own master, and is governed, internally, by its aristocracy, not least Don Fabrizio (Kim Rossi Stuart), Prince of Salina, known to all as The Leopard. But his standing in Palermo is unsettled by the arrival of Garibaldi's 'red shirts', not least when his feckless but beloved nephew Tancredi (Saul Nanni) enlists with the rebels. As Sicily falls under the spell of the nationalists, undertaking a project known as the Risorgimento, from the Italian for 'resurgence', the way of life long enjoyed by the Salina dynasty is threatened.
This is the grand question of The Leopard and one that is well suited to our times. At moments of great change, should we adapt and accept our new station, or fight for the world we have always known? The novel's author was himself a Prince of Lampedusa whose own bloodline had declined under the Risorgimento, and his own peerage, established in the 1660s, would survive only a few years after his death. 'Sicily is no longer just an island', Tancredi tells the Leopard's lovestruck daughter Concetta (Benedetta Porcaroli), 'but part of a nation.' Of course, as with all great, sweeping historical novels – from War and Peace to Gone with the Wind – The Leopard also finds time for romance amidst the violence. Tancredi eschews the wide-eyed Concetta in favour of Angelica, the glamorous daughter of a village mayor, played by Monica Bellucci's daughter, Deva Cassel.
For all the variety of its international library, it's rare for Netflix to put so much faith (and money) into a non-English language series, but having triumphed recently with shows like Squid Game and Lupin, it is the turn of Italian to receive the streamer's euros. And the show is beautifully made: the locations and costumes are sumptuous, the attention to period detail immaculate. This is a period drama on a scale rarely seen on TV, more akin to the expenditure on The Crown than terrestrial dramas like Wolf Hall or The Gilded Age. That's perhaps why they handed the directorial reins to Tom Shankland (who had previously adapted Les Mis for the Beeb) and writing duties to Richard Warlow (creator of the corporation's Ripper Street). If Sicily itself is a fusion of cultures – having been occupied, at times, by Greeks, Romans, Byzantines, Normans, Spanish and more – then so is The Leopard.
It seems Netflix understands that the show shares many of its themes with Downton Abbey, which has often been compared to Lampedusa's novel. Broiling class anxiety ('He wants to crush us and sweep us into the sea!' a Salina child exclaims) is mixed with sexual repression (here, aided by a healthy dollop of Catholic guilt. 'How can I settle for a woman who, after every single embrace, has to recite an Ave Maria?'), The Leopard laments. It is pleasant, if familiar, not least because the book has already been adapted for an acclaimed 1963 film, starring Burt Lancaster and Claudia Cardinale. The poignancy of that film was slightly undermined by a confusing melange of dubbing – here, Netflix's technology allows viewers to seamlessly amble between native Italian, English and other options, from Hindi to Ukrainian.
Buried beneath the love triangle and the mountains of granita (for breakfast?!), The Leopard is a simple story about a man, stood on a rock in the sea, watching the tides change around him. 'We were the family of great leopards,' the Prince eulogises. 'Those who replace us are jackals, hyenas. Everything will be different, but worse.' As testaments to the flux of history go, The Leopard manages to be beautiful, engaging and suitably elegiac.
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How KPop Demon Hunters became the surprise Netflix smash of the summer
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How KPop Demon Hunters became the surprise Netflix smash of the summer

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Get a first look inside L.A.'s new anime-themed café, opening this weekend
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Stranger Things re-review 2025: my verdict on episode 3 & 4
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Our Stranger Things 2025 re-watch continues with season one 📺🚨 Sign up to our daily newsletter Sign up Thank you for signing up! Did you know with a Digital Subscription to Edinburgh News, you can get unlimited access to the website including our premium content, as well as benefiting from fewer ads, loyalty rewards and much more. Learn More Sorry, there seem to be some issues. Please try again later. Submitting... Our Stranger Things re-watch continues with episode 3 & 4. Discover my verdict on Holly, Jolly and The Body. Find out which episodes will be re-reviewed next week! Grab your bicycle, walkie-talkie and left-over Vietnam War supplies because it is time for another trip to Hawkins, Indiana. Last week marked the start of my Stranger Things re-review and you can read my thoughts on the first two episodes here. This week we continue with season one and reach the half-way mark of the show's original 2016 run. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad It is a pair of episodes that feature some of the most iconic moments across the whole show - bet you haven't looked at Christmas lights quite the same ever since. But got me wondering what Stranger Things is about - what are the Duffer Brothers interested in telling us. If you haven't already, go and watch Stranger Things season 1 episode three and four and then come back and read my thoughts. Let's continue with our weekly re-review and take a trip to the Upside Down. Chapter Three: Holly, Jolly David Harbour in Stranger Things | Netflix Synopsis: An increasingly concerned Nancy looks for Barb and finds out what Jonathan's been up to. Joyce is convinced Will is trying to talk to her. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Holly, Jolly is an episode of television that feels very interested in the idea of being seen - and more importantly not being seen. It is a throughline that can be found across all of the different plotlines over its 50 minute runtime. We pick-up from the end of the previous episode with Barb waking up in the Upside Down, having been grabbed from the swimming pool. She calls out but cannot be seen or heard by Steve and Nancy back in the normal world - but the Demogorgon is watching. Her disappearance goes pretty much unnoticed back in Hawkins, beside Nancy. Even her own parents don't seem to have realised something is wrong and the rest of the school certainly hasn't taken note. Meanwhile Nancy herself feels watched by her peers, potentially judged for her hook-up with Steve. It feels like all eyes are on her, while no eyes are on Barb and her absence that day. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Joyce is unable to convince Jonathan that the blinking light-bulb is Will. In another twist on the theme of being seen/ unseen, she is the only one who can see her son's attempts to reach out. And it is her willingness to keep the belief and 'see' her son that is rewarded by one of the most iconic moments of the whole show. The Christmas lights in the living room - turned into a ouija board of sorts. Barb's disappearance raises the idea of people who slip out of sight and disappear unnoticed and this is a motif that is echoed in Joyce's plotline. Mike's mum Karen visits the Byers home and while not fully paying attention to her young daughter Holly, she is almost snatched into the Upside Down after wandering into Will's room and is only saved by Joyce. Meanwhile we get glimpses of Eleven's time at the mysterious institute in which her psychic powers were formed and harnessed. She is constantly observed by Papa (Dr. Brenner) but the only time he seems to see her as a child in need of parental affection is after she uses her powers to injure a bunch of orderlies. 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But at least the fake body wasn't dragged out for more than one episode and the idea of Stranger Things is starting to come firmly into focus - at least. What do you think of episode three and four - do you agree with my re-review? Let me know your thoughts by email: . If you love TV, check out our Screen Babble podcast to get the latest in TV and film.

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