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Roberta Lena Movies

1999  
 
Gianluca Maria Tavarelli directs this nuanced portrait of an intermittent 20-year love affair told in 12 chapters that depict critical, though undramatized, turning points in the relationship. The film introduces Marco (Fabrizio Gifuni) and Sara (Lorenza Indovina) during a 1998 argument. Just as Sara insists that she wants to break up, an unseen photographer takes pictures of their encounter. Cut to 1982 when the two 20-year-old college students go on their first magical date. From there, the film jumps ahead by one or two year intervals during which time the relationship goes through periods of happiness and pain. The affair seems like it is over for good when Marco abruptly ends it in 1991, resulting in Sara moving to Argentina for three years. Yet upon their reunion, they realize that the same chemistry still exists, even though Marco has gotten married during the intervening time. By 1997, the two are in a full-blown affair, meeting in an apartment for their regular tryst. Yet their pretend relationship proves too unfulfilling, and Sara, in the argument that opened the film, breaks it off. Later during a 2000 New Year's Eve party, they stumble upon each other once again. This film was screened at the 2000 Rotterdam Film Festival. ~ Jonathan Crow, Rovi

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Starring:
Lorenza IndovinaFabrizio Gifuni, (more)
 
1989  
 
Caterina (Isabella Ferrari) grieves for her father who died in Brussels when British soccer fans from Liverpool rioted in 1985. In a vivid, reoccurring nightmare, she sees her father and sees the murderer administer the deadly blow. When she is visited by a Liverpool police inspector (John Steiner), he shows her pictures of suspects and points out the killer with absolute certainty. She drives her late father's car to Liverpool to seek vengeance in this uneven melodrama. ~ Dan Pavlides, Rovi

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Starring:
Isabella FerrariJohn Steiner, (more)
 
1988  
 
Davide (Daniel Ezralow) is a young psychiatrist who is tormented by his own dreams in this psychological drama. Maddalena (Beatrice Dalle) is a beautiful but disturbed mental patient who resembles a woman Davide dreamed was burned at the stake after being convicted of witchcraft. Davide soon has trouble dividing fantasy and reality when he falls for Maddalena. A well-orchestrated dance scene and simulated orgy with clothed participants are the big production numbers. ~ Dan Pavlides, Rovi

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Starring:
Daniel Ezralow
 
1988  
PG  
Cinema Paradiso offers a nostalgic look at films and the effect they have on a young boy who grows up in and around the title village movie theater in this Italian comedy drama that is based on the life and times of screenwriter/director Giuseppe Tornatore. The story begins in the present as a Sicilian mother pines for her estranged son, Salvatore, who left many years ago and has since become a prominent Roman film director who has taken the advice of his mentor too literally. He finally returns to his home village to attend the funeral of the town's former film projectionist, Alfredo, and, in so doing, embarks upon a journey into his boyhood just after WWII when he became the man's official son. In the dark confines of the Cinema Paradiso, the boy and the other townsfolk try to escape from the grim realities of post-war Italy. The town censor is also there to insure nothing untoward appears onscreen, invariably demanding that all kissing scenes be edited out. One day, Salvatore saves Alfredo's life after a fire, and then becomes the new projectionist. A few years later, Salvatore falls in love with a beautiful girl who breaks his heart after he is inducted into the military. Thirty years later, Salvatore has come to say goodbye to his life-long friend, who has left him a little gift in a film can. In 2002, over a decade after the film's original release, Tornatore brought the original 170-minute director's cut to American screens for the first time. ~ Sandra Brennan, Rovi

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Starring:
Philippe NoiretSalvatore Cascio, (more)