00:03Let's dive right into today's explainer, because I am honestly so thrilled to share
00:07this one with you. We are unpacking what is easily one of the strangest, most quietly
00:12moving stories of the year. We're looking at Carolina Cavalli's weird and completely
00:16beautiful second feature film, The Kidnapping of Arabella. This is a cinematic journey that
00:20premiered at the 82nd Venice Air National Film Festival, where it actually snagged the
00:24Best Actress award, by the way. And it hits U.S. theaters on July 17th, 2026. So let's
00:29get into it, because this explainer is going to take us on this super deadpan road trip
00:33through loneliness, identity, and that very specific nagging agony of feeling like you
00:38somehow became the exact wrong version of yourself. She just wanted tacos. And somehow, that changed
00:45absolutely everything. I mean it. The entire existential journey of this film kicks off
00:51with an eight-year-old girl named Arabella, running away for one simple reason. Her dad
00:55wouldn't take her to Taco King. That's literally it. That is the inciting incident. There's
01:00no grand tragedy here, no elaborate sweeping scheme, just a petty, incredibly ordinary grievance
01:05that sets off this profoundly emotional chain reaction.
01:09You've got to walk through this hilariously petty chain of events to really appreciate it.
01:14Step one, the father, who is just deeply, deeply absorbed in his own literary importance, refuses
01:19to buy tacos. Step two, getting tired of being heckled by his own daughter at this gala ceremony,
01:25he just banishes the kid with his driver. Step three, recognizing a golden opportunity when
01:30she sees one, the eight-year-old makes her move and bolts. And finally, step four, a 28-year-old
01:36woman finds her in a fast food car park, becomes 100% convinced that this child is literally her
01:42own past self, sent back through time, and, well, drives away with her. Which means, yeah, technically,
01:49this is a kidnapping, but as you'll see, it really plays out way more like a rescue.
01:54Chapter one, Two Liars and Chris Pine.
01:57Okay, so you really can't have a deadpan road movie without a totally bizarre cast of characters, right?
02:02And we have this incredible stark contrast between our two protagonists. On one hand, you have Holly,
02:08played by Benedetta Porcarolli, who, again, won Best Actress at Venice for this. She's 28, working this awful
02:14dead-end job, grieving her mother, and just lugging around a trauma she can't even put a name to.
02:19Her goal? To literally repair the space-time continuum, because she feels she's living the
02:23wrong life. And then we have eight-year-old Arabella, played by this brilliant newcomer,
02:28Lucrezia Gugliamino. Arabella's goal? She just wants tacos. When Holly very earnestly explains her
02:34whole-time travel theory, Arabella just looks at Holly's name badge, tells her that her name is also
02:39Holly, and completely plays her. She feeds this woman exactly what she wants to hear. Arabella
02:44doesn't need saving at all. She just found someone she could use to get what she wants.
02:47And who exactly is Arabella running from? Her dad, or SDD? And get this, he is played by Chris Pine
02:55in
02:55his first-ever non-English language role. Seriously, no joke, Chris Pine learned and speaks Italian for
03:01this arthouse film, and reviewers were actually blown away by it. He plays this distracted novelist who is
03:06endlessly jealous of Jonathan Franzen, and he's constantly chasing this idealized version of
03:11himself. The thing is, he's not malicious, he's not evil. He's just a guy who has never, ever had to
03:17face the consequences of his own distraction. His failure to buy tacos is so incredibly petty,
03:22but it perfectly captures the funny, sad reality of a father who is just too caught up in his own
03:27performance to pay attention to his kid. Now, obviously, a kidnapping means there has to be an
03:32investigation. Enter Marco Bonade as the detective. The sources describe him as this lugubrious Nick
03:38Cave lookalike, which is just spot on. He brings this amazing grounding pathos to what is essentially
03:44an absurd manhunt. I mean, he's trying to track down a child who really, really doesn't want to
03:49be found by anyone except the woman currently buying her fast food. So that brings us to the
03:54road trip itself. Cavalli's filmmaking here is just incredibly controlled. Reviewers keep comparing
03:59her deadpan directorial-toned early Jim Jarmusch, and you can totally see why. They travel through
04:04the Po Valley lowlands, which is this endless landscape of anonymous drab motels, strip malls,
04:10and towns named Santa Rosa and Santa Cruz. It's this deliberate nowhere space that perfectly
04:15mirrors Holly's internal feeling of, well, being nowhere. And along the way, they run into
04:20the weirdest characters. There's a kooky, aging showgirl, people with incredibly unusual hair,
04:25and yes, even a death goat. But it never goes off the rails into pure chaos, because our two lead
04:30actresses ground the whole absurdist trip with just absolute sincerity and, in Arabella's case,
04:35clever manipulation.
04:37Chapter 2. The Magical Thinking Problem
04:40Right, this is where we start peeling back the onion. We're looking at the deeply emotional core
04:45hiding right beneath all this quirky arthouse comedy. To understand what's going on in Holly's head,
04:50we really need to understand the concept of magical thinking. Basically, it's inventing a cosmology
04:56where a past mistake can still be corrected, because the damage isn't actually permanent.
05:00Holly has always felt like she took a wrong fork in the road somewhere. But because she can't locate
05:05the exact moment her life went off track, she has literally invented a universe where an 8-year-old
05:10girl is her past self, here to give her a do-over. The film never endorses this delusion,
05:15but it treats it with such profound dignity and understanding.
05:18And that leads us to Holly's grand scheme, the Granatina Plan. See, she remembers a dance
05:25instructor from her childhood named Granatina, who, by the way, is played by the iconic 1980s
05:30transgender actress Eva Robbins. Granatina once told young Holly that she was special.
05:36So Holly's irrational but deeply human plan is to essentially force the past to recognize the
05:41present. If she can just get Granatina to look at Arabella and recognize that exact same specialness,
05:46Holly firmly believes the timeline will be fixed, and her current wrong life will magically be
05:52corrected.
05:53Chapter 3. Coming of Age in Reverse
05:56So, the director, Carolina Cavalli, actually found the inspiration for this story on Reddit
06:02and other online forums. She really tapped into the heartbeat of an entire generation here.
06:06The sources describe it as the meh pandemic. It's that specific, awful flatness of being
06:12completely functional but not actually feeling alive. It's the agony of digital natives who feel
06:16adrift, you know? Just slightly out of sync with everything and totally unable to explain to anyone
06:22why they feel like they became the wrong person. Holly is literally the physical embodiment of this
06:26exact feeling. Just, you know, given a car and an eight-year-old accomplice.
06:30And her age in all this is absolutely crucial. She's 28. Holly is not some teenager discovering
06:36who she is for the first time. This is a coming-of-age story, but it's being told in reverse.
06:41At 28 years old, she isn't moving forward. She is desperately trying to go backward to fix the
06:46person she already became. There was this one Italian reviewer who just hit the nail on the head,
06:51calling it the beauty of being unresolved. I love that. It perfectly captures the film's
06:56dignified, gentle treatment of feeling completely lost. The movie is basically saying, hey,
07:01it's actually okay to be a functional adult who still feels totally unresolved inside.
07:05And the critical acclaim totally backs up just how uniquely this film handles that theme.
07:10Like, check out this letterboxed reviewer who wrote,
07:13Cavalli is the Italian Lanthimos and Porcarolli his Emma Stone. High praise, right? This is a story
07:19that uses deadpan absurdism not to deflect from real human emotion, but to approach sadness sideways.
07:24It's the kind of film that just expands in your memory long, long after the credits roll.
07:29Because ultimately, Hawley didn't really kidnap a child. What she actually kidnapped was a second
07:34chance. The whole time, she was trying to rescue someone who didn't actually need rescuing at all.
07:40But in the process of just moving, of taking action, of caring for this incredibly manipulative,
07:46taco-loving kid, Hawley found exactly what she needed anyway.
07:49Which brings us to the ultimate philosophical takeaway of this whole explainer.
07:53It isn't about fixing the past. It's about surviving the version of you that didn't.
07:58This story isn't about finding some magical time machine so you can rewrite your mistakes.
08:03It's about learning to live with, and eventually find some peace with,
08:06the person you actually became.
08:09So, I want to leave you with a question to chew on today.
08:12Have you ever felt like you were living the wrong version of your life?
08:15Take a second to really think about that. Because if you have,
08:18this is exactly the story that was made for you.
08:21Thank you so much for joining me on today's explainer,
08:23and I absolutely cannot wait to explore our next topic with you.
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