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Synopsis

A series of four short tales set on the Adriatic coast involving the complexity of expressing love. –Inbaseline

Director

Original

Francesco Barilli

Francesco Barilli (Parma, February 4, 1943) is an Italian actor, director, screenwriter and painter. 

Original

Giuseppe Bertolucci

Giuseppe Bertolucci (younger brother of Bernardo) was born in Parma, Italy in 1947. He is the director of 17 feature films, including Dolce rumore della vita (1999), Probably Love (1998), Pratone del casiliono (1996) and Troppo Sole (1994). —filmfestivals.com 

Original

Marco Tullio Giordana

Marco Tullio Giordana was born in Milan on 1st October 1950. During the 1970s he was intensely involved in politics. After entering the world of the cinema, he collaborated with Roberto Faenza on “Forza Italia” (1977) and made his feature debut with “Maledetti, vi amerò” (1979), which was presented at the Cannes Film Festival and won first prize at Locarno.

He went on to write the screenplay for Antonio Margheriti’s “Car crash” (1981) and returned to a directing role with the ambitious and unresolved "La caduta degli angeli ribelli "(1981), where – like in his debut work – the scene is occupied by the problematic figures of terrorists. In 1982, he directed the musical video of Benjamin Britten’s “Young person’s guide to the orchestra” for the Salsomaggiore festival. Two years later, he made a successful two-part small-screen adaptation of Carlo Castellaneta’s novel “Notti e nebbie” about a fascist living in Milan in the twilight of the Republic of Salò.

In 1987 he directed… read more

Original

Giuseppe Tornatore

After staging two plays by Pirandello and De Filippo with an amateur dramatics company at just sixteen years of age, Tornatore took his first tentative steps in the world of cinema through documentaries (one of these, “Ethnic minorities in Sicily (Le minoranze etniche in Sicilia)”, won him an award at the Salerno film festival) and television work (for RAI he produced “Portrait of a thief (Ritratto di rapinatore)”, “Guttuso’s diary (Diario di Guttuso)”, “Sicilian writers and films: Giovanni Verga, Luigi Pirandello, Vitaliano Brancati, Leonardo Sciascia (Scrittori siciliani e cinema: Verga, Pirandello, Brancati, Sciascia”). In 1984 he was second unit director on “Cento giorni a Palermo” by Giuseppe Ferrara and, two years later, finally made his directorial debut: “The professor (Il camorrista)” (1986), a hard-hitting portrait of a Naples underworld boss, is a sturdy, inspired work that successfully combines political considerations and spectacular scenes. Nonetheless, it was with his… read more

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