Giacomo Rizzo Movies
In writer/director Paolo Sorrentino's second feature, The Family Friend (L'Amico di Famiglia), Giacomo Rizzo stars as Geremia de Geremei, a sixtysomething tailor who lives with his mother in a disgusting and decrepit flat. Though wealthy from the money that he has culled via loan-sharking, Geremia is a thoroughly miserable wretch, driven into the throes of destruction by his own incredible selfishness and his obsessive infatuation with a beautiful local girl, Rosalba (Laura Chiatta), whom he meets when asked to assist with her wedding. Geremia agrees, but takes the bride off alone and pressures her into sex, little realizing that he's sowing the seeds of his own downfall. Meanwhile, a bidet supplier attempts to goad Geremia into giving him a massive loan -- an amount that Geremia could never possibly fork over. Throughout the film, Sorrentino packs in numerous surrealistic touches, from the sight of a nun buried up to her neck in sand (accompanied by an aural assault on the soundtrack) to a grotesque glimpse of Rizzo with a potato poultice around his head to the jarring sight of Geremia's village, built by Mussolini on an Italian swampland. In the process, Sorrentino manages to create his own distinct world and thoroughly unforgettable characters. He also pulls off an incredibly difficult feat, by enabling the audience to care about a markedly unpleasant central figure. ~ Nathan Southern, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Giacomo Rizzo, Fabrizio Bentivoglio, (more)
Italian pop singer Nino D'Angelo wrote, directed, and stars in this broad satiric comedy. Leonardo Di Capri (D'Angelo) first loses his job selling flowers in a cemetery, and then learns he must give up custody of his son. A dispirited Leonardo plans to escort the boy back to his mother and then kill himself, but the ferry to the Island of Capri is out of commission due to a strike in the shipyard. A gangster named Aitano offers to let Leonardo and his boy tag along aboard his ship, the Aitanic, which is making the rounds in violation of the strike. En route to Capri, Leonardo meets Giulia Roberti (Sabina Began), a call girl looking to get away from crooked lawyer Riccardo (Mauro Di Francesco), who hired her as his escort. It's love at first sight for Leonardo and Giulia, but when the Aitanic hits some rocks near the coast, a sinking ship could put an end to their romance. Nino D'Angelo also appears in a secondary role as Neon, a tastelessly flamboyant rock star. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Nino D'Angelo, Giacomo Rizzo, (more)
The title of this movie refers to a typical Neapolitan shell-game in which a package of valuable merchandise is switched for something worthless while a brief diversion is used as a cover. This comic anthology is a survival guide to the mad, sometimes joyful anarchy of this ill-managed town, told in ten separate episodes. In one of the funniest, a woman swindled out of her apartment by a phony medium successfully uses his own superstitious belief that there are real mediums somewhere to get her apartment back. ~ Clarke Fountain, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Tommaso Bianco, Enzo Cannavale, (more)

- 1980
- R
- Add Graf Dracula beisst jetzt auch in Oberbayern to QueueAdd Graf Dracula beisst jetzt auch in Oberbayern to top of Queue
In yet another sexploitation horror spoof of Count Dracula and his nasty incisors, the infamous count (Gianni Garko) and an often naked Countess Olivia (Betty Vergès) live and dine in the castle's basement on whomever they can find, while the Count's grandson Stan (Garko in a dual role) photographs erotic views of some buxom models on the floors above. The photography of the film also offers some stunning views of the Bavarian landscape, but the dubbed English and failed humor, along with so-so acting, leave only the visuals to be appreciated. ~ Eleanor Mannikka, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Gianni Garko, Betty Verges, (more)
Bernardo Bertolucci's 255-minute 1900 was a gargantuan undertaking, requiring the resources of three European countries and a trio of American movie studios. Set in the Italian town of Parma, the film's continuity backtracks from Liberation Day in 1945 to the occasion of composer/patriot Giuseppe Verdi's death in 1901. We follow the lives of two men born on that day in 1901, who grow up to be Alfredo Berlinghieti (Robert De Niro) and Olmo Dalco (Gérard Depardieu). Wealthy Alfredo sinks into dissipation, while poverty-stricken Olmo becomes a firebrand labor leader and communist. After WWI, Alfredo is allowed to peacefully retain his land holdings by playing nice with the burgeoning fascists; Olmo, on the other hand, engages in a long-standing battle against the minions of Mussolini. The two protagonists are reunited when Alfredo returns to Parma to preside over Olmo's trial for "political crimes." Co-star Burt Lancaster is cast as Alfredo's wealthy grandfather, who hates to see the old values buried beneath the social travails of the 20th century. Many American prints of 1900 were shortened to 243 minutes, rendering the story hard to follow at times. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Robert De Niro, Gérard Depardieu, (more)
This enchanting yet dark romantic comedy stars Jack Lemmon and Juliet Mills as a pair of mismatched lovers helplessly drawn into a series of seemingly hopeless but humorous situations as in Lemmon's The Out-of -Towners two years earlier. Lemmon is Wendell Armbruster Jr., an overbearing American business tycoon forced to travel to the beautiful Italian island of Ischia to claim the body of his recently departed father. What begins with a rather elementary premise evolves into a succession of somber twists and turns, as Armbruster meets Pamela Piggott (Mills), the daughter of his father's mistress, who, Lemmon is appalled to learn, died alongside Armbruster Sr., while zipping through the Italian countryside in his sportscar. Even worse, the family who owns the vineyard that his father's car crashed into has stolen the bodies in exchange for damages. Although plagued with a plethora of such problems, as well as an inability to enjoy life (and the ulcers to prove it), Wendell eventually falls in love with Pamela, almost exactly as his father did with her mother. ~ Don Kaye, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Jack Lemmon, Juliet Mills, (more)
The Decameron was the first of director Pier Paolo Pasolini's "trilogy of life." The film, based on the sexually supercharged tales of Boccaccio, is a patchwork of many of Pasolini's favorite themes. Pasolini himself plays the role of an aspiring fresco painter who is advised that his completed work will never be as satisfying as his dream of that work. The film is followed by Pasolini's The Canterbury Tales and The Arabian Nights. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide













