Set during World War II, the movie follows the story of a widow and her daughter as they struggle to survive amidst the chaos of war. They face hardships, including aerial bombings, hunger, and the threat of violence. The film explores themes of resilience, sacrifice, and the strength of the human spirit.
Leopardi is a biographical drama that tells the story of Giacomo Leopardi, an Italian poet in the 19th century. The movie explores his struggles with illness, his passion for poetry, and his search for enlightenment amidst the challenges of his time.
The Man Who Will Come is a heart-wrenching film that takes place in Italy during the brutal years of World War II. The story revolves around an eight-year-old girl named Martina, who becomes mute after witnessing the murder of a child by Nazi soldiers. As the war rages on, Martina's family and the rest of the village hide in a church, desperately clinging to hope and faith amidst the horrors of war.
A small town in Italy is about to celebrate their patron saint. The city is full of people with different problems. A Communist in existentialist crisis that also must take care of his mentally ill wife. A woman who is tired of her husband's inability to show emotions and therefore more and more often slips into the world of dreams. A perverse butcher engaged in sex with the meat he sells when he's not peeping on young girls. A girl who became pregnant after having sex with her father. In this town a mysterious stranger show up and who turns on several of the inhabitants lives.
The film is a sort of presentation of Franco Fortini's book 'I Cani del Sinai'. Fortini, an Italian Jew, reads excerpts from the book about his alienation from Judaism and from the social relations around him, the rise of Fascism in Italy, the anti-Arab attitude of European culture. The images, mostly a series of Italian landscape shots, provide a backdrop that highlights the meaning of the text. - Fabrizio Sabidussi
Showing the most important relics of the city's former greatness, such as: the Palace of the Duke of Urbino, the mediaeval cathedral built In the Thirteenth Century, the famous "Gubbian Tables" or Laws, engraved in bronze (300 B. C), and the huge amphitheater constructed by the Romans.
No More results found.