Set in postwar 1940s Italy, it follows Delia breaking traditional family patterns and aspiring to a different future, after receiving a mysterious letter.Set in postwar 1940s Italy, it follows Delia breaking traditional family patterns and aspiring to a different future, after receiving a mysterious letter.Set in postwar 1940s Italy, it follows Delia breaking traditional family patterns and aspiring to a different future, after receiving a mysterious letter.
- Awards
- 20 wins & 18 nominations
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaOne month after its release, the film was already the highest grossing Italian movie post-pandemic.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Zomergasten: Liesbeth Zegveld (2024)
- SoundtracksAprite le finestre
Written by Virgilio Panzuti and Giuseppe Perotti
Sung by Fiorella Bini
Featured review
I hate going to the cinema, especially when I know I risk finding so many people inside the hall. I hate that because people are noisy and annoying. It seems impossible not to use the smartphone during the screening, not to comment with friends, not to move continuously on the seat, not to eat crunchy things, not to cough or sneeze, not to steal the armrest of the person close to you.
For me the cinema it's a sort of war scenario.
I hate the cinema but I love it too, so sometimes I take the risk and go to war.
I already knew Paola Cortellesi as an actress, and, sorry for this, I think she was not a good one. IMHO she did better when she was a comedian. I already knew Valerio Mastandrea too, he's a good comedy actor... and when one says "comedy actor" he is not saying "actor".
What can I expect from this movie if not another negative experience with my seat neighbors and a modest interpretation from these two comedians?
And instead, sometimes, the cinema does what it should do: magic!
During the screening, people start to pay attention, for real, start to literally sink into the movie.
The black and white film throws us all in another dimension, in a past era, in our grandparents' world. A poor, dirty, harsh, primitive, retrograde, sexist world. But it is the world from where we all come, so, in a sense, we already know it.
And we start to feel the characters.
Paola becomes Delia.
Sorry Valerio, for me you won't be nothing else then Ivano for the rest of your career.
Every single actor is credible, tridimensional, real.
All of us viewers simply stop to be alive, we are in the movie now.
We start to laugh, to cry, to stop breathing in perfect timing with the scenes.
Until the end... when the images go out.
The cinema hall is completely silent.
We freeze for a moment, realizing we are again in the real world.
We are astounded, beaten, emotionally exhausted.
And then the applause started. My first experience with spontaneous applause in a cinema hall outside of the movie festivals. The cinema was empty of pop-corn eaters, coughers, and smartphone users, not cinephiles, but everyone knows that something special has just happened: we've just attended a perfect movie, a masterpiece.
Brava Paola.
For me the cinema it's a sort of war scenario.
I hate the cinema but I love it too, so sometimes I take the risk and go to war.
I already knew Paola Cortellesi as an actress, and, sorry for this, I think she was not a good one. IMHO she did better when she was a comedian. I already knew Valerio Mastandrea too, he's a good comedy actor... and when one says "comedy actor" he is not saying "actor".
What can I expect from this movie if not another negative experience with my seat neighbors and a modest interpretation from these two comedians?
And instead, sometimes, the cinema does what it should do: magic!
During the screening, people start to pay attention, for real, start to literally sink into the movie.
The black and white film throws us all in another dimension, in a past era, in our grandparents' world. A poor, dirty, harsh, primitive, retrograde, sexist world. But it is the world from where we all come, so, in a sense, we already know it.
And we start to feel the characters.
Paola becomes Delia.
Sorry Valerio, for me you won't be nothing else then Ivano for the rest of your career.
Every single actor is credible, tridimensional, real.
All of us viewers simply stop to be alive, we are in the movie now.
We start to laugh, to cry, to stop breathing in perfect timing with the scenes.
Until the end... when the images go out.
The cinema hall is completely silent.
We freeze for a moment, realizing we are again in the real world.
We are astounded, beaten, emotionally exhausted.
And then the applause started. My first experience with spontaneous applause in a cinema hall outside of the movie festivals. The cinema was empty of pop-corn eaters, coughers, and smartphone users, not cinephiles, but everyone knows that something special has just happened: we've just attended a perfect movie, a masterpiece.
Brava Paola.
- minder-77155
- Jan 28, 2024
- Permalink
Details
Box office
- Budget
- €8,300,000 (estimated)
- Gross worldwide
- $49,511,579
- Runtime1 hour 58 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.85 : 1
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