Follows the lives and misadventures of a group of friends in 1970s Italy, exploring their relationships, pranks, and humorous situations.
After their mother's funeral, three brothers with contrasting personalities and backgrounds reunite. They discover that their mother has left them with a substantial debt and a hidden stash of money. As they navigate through their inheritance, they encounter drug trafficking, reality TV production, stand-up comedy, and a variety of absurd circumstances. Through it all, their bond as brothers strengthens, and they learn valuable lessons about family, class differences, and the meaning of true wealth.
A women's track team is preparing for a big meet against a rival college, but the coach is having trouble getting her team ready. Norma, the team's star, is more interested in slipping out to meet her boyfriend than she is with getting ready for the meet, so Norma and the coach engage in a clash of wills.
Stan plays a waiter at a crappy restaurant and frankly such fare was better done by Chaplin and others. However, in two cute scenes, the film shines. The first is a Limburger cheese bit that is low-brow but funny. The second is the final scene with dogs following Stan at the end.
Raffaella's first period comes at the same time as her first crush, on Shaun, a cook's assistant and the brother of her friend Sharon. Raffaella's Italian aunt insists that they make "love biscuits" for Shaun, a recipe from the old country using three drops of menstrual blood. Raffaella sends the cookies to Shaun via Sharon, who announces her own crush on Raffaella. Is it the cookies? What's a girl to do? With the help of her aunt and some ideas of her own, Raffaella finds a solution and learns something about friendship and romance.
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