Tutti Pazzi Per Amore is an Italian television series that aired on Rai 1 from December 7, 2008 to January 1, 2012, consisting of three seasons. The show is set in Rome and follows the love story between a single father, Paolo Giorgi, and a single mother, Laura Del Fiore, and the adventures of the extended family that originates from their relationship. The main characters are Paolo Giorgi and his daughter Cristina, Laura Del Fiore and her son Emanuele and her daughter Nina. Around these main characters develops the story of their grandparents, their uncles and aunts, their colleagues and friends.
On November 20, 2012, Andrea Spezzacatena, a boy who had just turned 15, took his own life. It was the first case in Italy of bullying and cyberbullying that led to the suicide of a minor. This movie is based on his story.
Between 1938 and 1948, from the height of Italy s Fascist regime to the end of the tumultuous post-war period, Chief Detective De Luca investigates and solves crimes in the City of Bologna and along the Adriatic coast. With little or no regard for those in power, whoever they happen to be, his solitary, uncompromising character often lands him in trouble, but his respect is reserved for the truth and justice alone. In the four TV movies of the series Unauthorized Investigation , Carte Blanche , The Damned Season and Via Della Oche each taken from a novel by best-selling mystery Carlo Lucarelli Chief Detective De Luca always ultimately gets to the bottom of his cases, though what he finds leaves a bitter aftertaste.
In 'Do You See Me?', a woman architect in Italy faces sexism in her workplace. To overcome the obstacles, she pretends to be a man, leading to a series of humorous and dramatic situations. Along the way, she develops unrequited feelings for her male co-worker and navigates her complicated relationship with her father. The movie explores themes of gender roles, sexual identity, and the challenges of being a pioneer woman in a male-dominated field.
In this Italian romantic comedy, an American tourist named Tanino comes to Sicily and falls in love with a local girl. However, their relationship is filled with both love and hate, leading to a rollercoaster of emotions. Tanino experiences the beauty of the Italian landscape and culture, while navigating the complexities of a first-person love story.
The Purple Sea is a heartfelt drama that takes place in 19th century Sicily. It tells the story of two childhood friends, Maria and Antonia, who develop a deep and secret love for each other. The film explores their struggle to maintain their relationship in a society that is hostile towards homosexuality. Amidst the beautiful backdrop of the Mediterranean Sea, the two women navigate their love amidst the pressures of family expectations, religion, and societal norms.
A judge decides to dedicate his life to go after the members of the 'Ndrangheta-mafia, when he meets a young heir who longs for a life without criminality.
Although Pippo Genuardi seems to have cleared his mind by marrying Taninè Schilirò, daughter of the richest man in Vigàta, he is in fact someone who is not satisfied with his life…
Four alpha male friends in their forties find themselves facing their own prejudices and the paradigms of toxic masculinity in a world that is moving towards social and gender equality. Without losing themselves, they are forced to rediscover their place in society and their relationships.
A tormented Emma, runs on her treadmill while doing online counseling, deluding herself to escape from her past. This balance will break when, after twenty-six years, her younger sister bursts in with an unsustainable request.
Prevented from using mobile phones due to the non-existent reception of the location, a school trip to a rural town becomes a life-changing experience of friendship and love for a group of Italian kids and their teacher.
Ettore, a young boy in Sicily in the 50's, is surrounded by women and is always surprised by what is happening around him. In Milan a few years later Ettore is once again the center of attention and the hip crowd.
Three best friends, Angela, Gina, and Barbara, stumble upon a dead body while on a getaway and become entangled in a dangerous crime. As they try to cover their tracks, hilarity ensues, and their friendship is put to the test.
The Right to Happiness centers on a small used book store in a small plaza in a small town with big vistas, somewhere in Italy. It sounds like a book lover's fantasy, and maybe it is. The bookseller, Libero, knows most of his rather eccentric customers and can barely bring himself to take their money (although fascists pay double). When a young boy, Essien (Didie Lorenz Tchumbu), an émigré from Burkina Faso, happens on the shop, Libero begins lending him books of increasing difficulty. From Pinocchio to Moby Dick, Essien can read as fast as Libero can lend, and the two form a bond over reading and meaning. "Books should be read twice," Libero says. "Once to understand them, and once to think." Life should probably be lived like that too, but the bookseller's name means "free," and freedom is what Libero bequeaths to Essien.
In Palermo, Sicily in the 1990s, a Catholic priest becomes entangled in the dangerous web of the mafia. As he fights against corruption and evil, he must confront his own faith and beliefs.