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Their chance encounter on a deserted Ferragosto (holiday) in Rome begins a two-day odyssey that is ostensibly a comedy but functions as a "moral fable". Bruno represents the new, individualistic, and consumerist spirit of the 1960s, while Roberto stands for the fading, more interiorized values of the 1950s. The Symbolic Road

A shy, inhibited law student representing the traditional, more scrupulous Italy. Il_sorpasso_1962_HD_-_Altadefinizione01

Il Sorpasso (1962), directed by Dino Risi, stands as the quintessential masterpiece of the commedia all’italiana genre. Released during the peak of Italy's "economic miracle" ( il boom ), the film serves as a brilliant but unsettling road map of a nation racing headlong into modernity without a seatbelt. The Clash of Two Italies Their chance encounter on a deserted Ferragosto (holiday)

The film’s title, which translates to "the overtaking," refers to the aggressive Italian driving habit of passing other cars at all costs—a metaphor for social and economic competition. As they travel from Rome to the Tuscan coast, the road becomes a stage where Risi critiques: Il Sorpasso | Gagosian Quarterly Il Sorpasso (1962), directed by Dino Risi, stands

An exuberant, boorish, and reckless hedonist who lives entirely in the present. He drives a Lancia Aurelia B24, an iconic status symbol that—much like Bruno—is slightly banged up and aggressive.

The narrative engine is the unlikely pairing of two polar opposites: