Connect with us
Salvatore: Shoemaker of Dreams review
Image: Sony Pictures Classics

Film

Salvatore: Shoemaker of Dreams is all About the Shoes- and the Man

Salvatore: Shoemaker of Dreams

Salvatore: Shoemaker of Dreams Review

Whether you own dozens of pairs of Ferragamo shoes, or you’re someone who only knows names like Salvatore Ferragamo and Manolo Blahnik from when they were mentioned on Sex and the City, Salvatore: Shoemaker of Dreams is a fascinating documentary about Ferragamo, his shoe empire and his sojourn to Hollywood. 

Directed by Call Me By Your Name director Luca Guadagnino, in one of two films he has out this month, Salvatore is an extensive history of the life of the designer, who was born in poor circumstances in Bonito, Italy in 1898, and died at age 62 in 1960. His widow Wanda Ferragamo, the mother of his six children who took over the fashion house after his death, lived until 2018 and was interviewed for the film. 

Image: Sony Pictures Classics

The film, among other things, makes clear that “shoemaker” was not anything close to a fashionable calling, and that Ferragamo helped usher the concept of “celebrity fashion designer” into existence. 

Ferragamo has been dead for over 60 years, but the film has plenty to work with: His recorded voice, a memoir lead aloud by frequent Guadagnino collaborator Michael Stuhlbarg, the cooperation of Ferragamo’s estate, and a group of talking heads led by Martin Scorsese, as well as Blahnik himself. 

“My desire to work with feet was unrelenting,” we hear Ferragamo say, in a quote we may someday see again in a documentary about Quentin Tarantino. Though as we learn in the film, QT was far from the first top filmmaker to indulge his love of ladies’ feet in his work; D.W. Griffith had such proclivities as well, nearly a century ago. 

Indeed, while Salvatore spends some time talking about the designer’s early life as part of a family of 11 children, as well as his emigration to the United States at age 16 and his arrival in Boston, the most compelling part of the film is when he arrives in Hollywood during its formative years. 

There, over a period of several decades, he made shoes for the movies, as well as for starlets to wear. He started in the silent era, went bust during the Depression, and made a comeback soon after, emerging as the shoe provider of choice for the likes of Bette Davis and Marilyn Monroe. At the same time, they present what appeared to be Ferragamo’s family life; if that family or company ever had any drama in the tradition of House of Gucci, we don’t hear about it here. 

The film ends with a very impressive montage, called a “shoe ballet,” of many of Ferragamo’s notable creations. It was enough to impress me, someone, who knows enough about women’s shoes to fill a thimble. 

Salvatore: Shoemaker of Dreams opened November 4 in some cities with an expansion to come later. 

Written By

Stephen Silver is a journalist and film critic based in the Philadelphia area. He is the co-founder of the Philadelphia Film Critics Circle and a Rotten Tomatoes-listed critic since 2008, and his work has appeared in New York Press, Philly Voice, The Jewish Telegraphic Agency, Tablet, The Times of Israel, and RogerEbert.com. In 2009, he became the first American journalist to interview both a sitting FCC chairman and a sitting host of "Jeopardy" on the same day.

Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Facebook

Trending

Perrie Edwards Marries Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain After Moving On From Zayn Malik

Celebrity

Rich Paul Opens Up About Meeting Adele — and How They Went From “Cordial” to Couple

Celebrity

Police Raided Michael Jackson’s Neverland Ranch Twice. This Is What They Found

Celebrity

Musician Oliver Tree dies at 32 in a tragic helicopter accident

Celebrity

Brooklyn Beckham’s Representatives Allege David and Victoria Arranged Harper’s Visit to Her Brother

Celebrity

Jack Schlossberg recently shared his thoughts on Madonnas comments about his father, JFK Jr.

Celebrity

Dwayne Johnson discloses ‘really painful’ cancer scare, and the reason he didn’t tell wife Lauren Hashian

Celebrity

Richard Hammond Seen with New Girlfriend After Split from ex-wife Mindy

Celebrity

Jess Wright’s Son, 4, Hospitalized After He Couldn’t breathe on a bouncy castle

Celebrity

Grand Ole Opry MC Bill Cody dies at 67, collaborated with Dolly Parton and Kelsea Ballerini

Celebrity

Gisele Bündchen Gives an Uncommon Peek into Her ‘Quieter Life’ in Boston After Relocating with Ex-Husband Tom Brady

Celebrity

Mastermind behind iconic Tiffany & Co. designs, John Loring, passes away at 86

Celebrity

The Star Trek actress, who is 86 years old, has worked with Hepburn to Culkin. Guess who she is?

Celebrity

Jermaine Jenas Admits Career Collapse in Tense GMB Interview

Celebrity

Ariana Grande and Wicked co-star boyfriend Ethan Slater end their relationship after being together for three years.

Celebrity

Jake Hall’s former partner discloses heartbreaking method she explained his demise to daughter, 8

Celebrity

Connect