
Quote:
A police officer meets a girl who is near to falling into the net of shady individuals. To prevent this, he invites her into the police station and tells her a story.Read More »

Quote:
A police officer meets a girl who is near to falling into the net of shady individuals. To prevent this, he invites her into the police station and tells her a story.Read More »

1950. William Lee, an American expat in Mexico City, spends his days almost entirely alone, except for a few contacts with other members of the community. His encounter with Eugene Allerton, an expat former soldier, shows him that it might be finally possible to establish an intimate connection.Read More »

A young woman meets a vital young man, but their love affair is doomed because of the man’s materialistic nature.Read More »

Plot: A hieratic Count sits in his elegant mansion finishing his writings – Alphonse, a young Waloon officer, rides through the Murgia to reach his regiment in Naples but soon finds himself mysteriously detained at a inn in the strange and varied company of thieves, brigands, cabalists, noblemen, coquettes and gypsies, whose stories he records over ten days. A range of situations in stories-within-stories, which, like the Decameron and Tales from the Thousand and One Nights, provide entertainment on an epic scale. The two men’s destiny intertwined, it is difficult to know who’s real between the two and who belongs to the other’s mind. This is a journey for both of them which Alphonse will continue, uncertain in the end, if his experiences were real or a dream.Read More »

Turn-of-the-century Naples. Salvatore Ruotolo and his wife are murdered and their bodies are found in different locations. Since the evidence points to a crime by the Neapolitan crime organization, the Camorra, fear and corruption cause serious hindrances to the investigation by police authorities. In charge is a young and courageous judge who, using evidence discovered by chance, tries to reconstruct the story of the double murder. The plot that the judge must unravel is very complicated. Many people are questioned, even those apparently above suspicion. Deciding to get to the bottom of the matter, the judge keeps all the suspects under arrest, causing a backlash of public opinion. Read More »

Set during General Francisco Franco’s counterrevolutionary campaign, which concluded in 1939 with the conquest of Madrid and the end of the Spanish Civil War.
Two soldiers from an itlaian fascist battalion sent to support Franco’s troops befriend each other; one is a former communist revolutionary who enlisted in the hope of finding a way to escape to America, the other is a poor nobody who has found in the army the alternative to working in the sulfur mines.
The horrors of war will transform both men.Read More »

Frolickers enjoy a sunny afternoon at a Roman beach.
Review:
Recalling the informal neorealist spirit and sociopolitical consciousness of important prewar ensembles such as People on Sunday (1930) and Treno popolare (1933), while paving the way for the wry comedies of manners produced under the aegis of commedia all’italiana, Luciano Emmer’s wonderful Sunday in August (Domenica d’agosto) skillfully interweaves several stories involving a disparate array of Romans who flock to the beaches of Ostia on the eponymous day to escape both the summer heat and their daily troubles. As this lively blend of fiction and documentary proves, however, they are only partly successful in their endeavors.Read More »

Countess Elena Rambaldi’s brother, Alfonso, is asked to leave the Rambaldi estate by Count Rambaldi and take up quarters elsewhere. Alfonso plots to usurp the Rambaldi estate.Read More »

Quote:
Immersing us in a sea of words and images, Al largo brings us into contact with the experience of suffering. Dissolving the polarity between egoism and altruism, taking care becomes a gesture which alone seems to resist in front of the excessive power of life. Anna Marziano returns to the Festival with a film inspired by the reading of Nietzsche and Donald Winnicott.Read More »