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Le premier qui l'a dit

Titre original : Mine vaganti
  • 2010
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 50min
NOTE IMDb
7,2/10
14 k
MA NOTE
Le premier qui l'a dit (2010)
The youngest son in an Italian family struggles with whether or not to come out of the closet as he's faced with the prospect of taking over the family's pasta business.
Lire trailer2:04
2 Videos
16 photos
ComédieDrameRomance

Au moment de révéler son homosexualité, Tommaso est doublé par son frère aîné, Antonio, également gay. Indigné, leur père bannit Antonio du clan, avant d'être frappé par une crise cardiaque.Au moment de révéler son homosexualité, Tommaso est doublé par son frère aîné, Antonio, également gay. Indigné, leur père bannit Antonio du clan, avant d'être frappé par une crise cardiaque.Au moment de révéler son homosexualité, Tommaso est doublé par son frère aîné, Antonio, également gay. Indigné, leur père bannit Antonio du clan, avant d'être frappé par une crise cardiaque.

  • Réalisation
    • Ferzan Özpetek
  • Scénario
    • Ivan Cotroneo
    • Ferzan Özpetek
  • Casting principal
    • Riccardo Scamarcio
    • Nicole Grimaudo
    • Alessandro Preziosi
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    7,2/10
    14 k
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Ferzan Özpetek
    • Scénario
      • Ivan Cotroneo
      • Ferzan Özpetek
    • Casting principal
      • Riccardo Scamarcio
      • Nicole Grimaudo
      • Alessandro Preziosi
    • 36avis d'utilisateurs
    • 67avis des critiques
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
    • Récompenses
      • 34 victoires et 34 nominations au total

    Vidéos2

    Loose Cannons
    Trailer 2:04
    Loose Cannons
    Loose Cannons
    Trailer 0:31
    Loose Cannons
    Loose Cannons
    Trailer 0:31
    Loose Cannons

    Photos16

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    Rôles principaux35

    Modifier
    Riccardo Scamarcio
    Riccardo Scamarcio
    • Tommaso Cantone
    Nicole Grimaudo
    Nicole Grimaudo
    • Alba Brunetti
    Alessandro Preziosi
    Alessandro Preziosi
    • Antonio Cantone
    Ennio Fantastichini
    Ennio Fantastichini
    • Vincenzo Cantone
    Lunetta Savino
    • Stefania Cantone
    Ilaria Occhini
    • La nonna
    Bianca Nappi
    Bianca Nappi
    • Elena - Tommaso's sister
    Carmine Recano
    Carmine Recano
    • Marco
    Massimiliano Gallo
    Massimiliano Gallo
    • Salvatore - Elena's Husband
    Paola Minaccioni
    • Teresa
    Gianluca De Marchi
    • Davide
    Mauro Bonaffini
    • Massimiliano
    Giorgio Marchesi
    Giorgio Marchesi
    • Nicola
    Matteo Taranto
    Matteo Taranto
    • Domenico
    Gea Martire
    • Patrizia
    Daniele Pecci
    • Andrea
    Carolina Crescentini
    Carolina Crescentini
    • Nonna da giovane
    Elena Sofia Ricci
    Elena Sofia Ricci
    • Luciana Cantone
    • Réalisation
      • Ferzan Özpetek
    • Scénario
      • Ivan Cotroneo
      • Ferzan Özpetek
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs36

    7,213.8K
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    Avis à la une

    6intern-88

    A queer take on Italian family life

    For a film in which each character harbours some tragic secret - of unrequited love, betrayal, unfulfilled ambition, alcoholism, a death wish or suchlike – Ferzan Özpetek's Loose Cannons is surprisingly uplifting.

    In this family drama/rom-com-with-a-twist, the Istanbul-born Italian director combines precise aesthetics with good-looking actors, but, regrettably, Loose Cannons is also full of all-too-predictable stereotypes. This makes the film, despite its underlying theme of the pressures of stifling social conformism, easy on the eye and light of heart. Think Festen meets Women on the Verge of a Nervous Breakdown.

    The loose cannons of the title are found amongst the Cantone family, the owners of a pasta factory in Puglia, in southern Italy. The father, Vincenzo, has decided that the time has come to hand over responsibilities to his sons, Antonio and Tommaso. His daughter's husband being an imbecile and his daughter being a woman, the brothers are the obvious heirs to the family business.

    Tommaso, ostensibly enrolled in business school in Rome but actually a gay literature student with a novel freshly submitted to a publisher, returns home for a pompous dinner where Vincenzo plans to announce the generational handover in front of the entire family and some new business associates. Tommaso, having just confided in his brother that he is planning to use the occasion to reveal his literary and same-sex relationship aspirations, is himself taken by surprise at the dinner: Antonio beats him to it, coming out of the closet and triggering a heart attack in his father.

    Antonio is disowned and Tommaso, afraid that opening up about his gayness would be a final death knell for his father, reluctantly steps in to manage the factory with the assistance of Alba, a beautiful young family friend with a nose for business deals and eye-catching pasta packaging. No matter how hard he tries, even caressing the freshly-baked pasta every morning as his grandfather used to, Tommaso can't develop a passion for macaroni. He wants to get back to Rome, to his writing and his gay lover, a bookish doctor.

    While the film centres on Tommaso and his dilemmas, Loose Cannons has an assortment of characters with an assortment of repressed emotions. There's the homophobic and patriarchal father; the outwardly stoic, but in reality sensitive, mother; the daughter stuck in a passionless marriage with a podgy husband and two chubby daughters; the spinster auntie indiscreetly drenching her sorrows in whiskey; the diabetic grandmother dishing out pearls of wisdom; and the ugly, frustrated maid.

    Though Loose Cannons is never dull, with plenty of narrative twists, flashback scenes and regular introductions of new characters, all the typecasting soon grates. The scenes with the multi-generational, loud- mouth Cantone family gathering around tables brimming with food quickly come to feel like quirky pasta adverts.

    The film is marked by clichés from the outset. The opening scene, which turns out to be a flashback sequence into the past of granny Cantone, couldn't be more kitsch: a beautiful, teary-eyed young bride runs up the steep staircase of a solitary stone house, where she confronts a man, his shirt unbuttoned at the neck, with a gun – first aimed at him, then pressed against her own chest. The man tries to wrangle the gun out of the bride's hand, at which point the film cuts to a shot of the house's exterior and the banging sound of a gun shot is heard.

    Things don't get better when, during a transitional phase of the film, Tommaso's gay friends from Rome show up for a surprise visit. Tommaso's parents convince them to stay overnight – cue camp homos who try to act straight but still can't help admire Alba's dress or flirt with Tommaso's brother-in-law. During a trip to the beach, the boys perform a silly coordinated dance before splashing each other with water. It's funny, but so predictable. At times, it's hard to tell whether all the typecasting and melodrama is done knowingly or is just crass.

    For a film exploring the themes of family obligations, tradition, clash of values, sexuality and love, you'd be better off watching Özpetek's Hamam: The Turkish Bath from 1997. Still, the graceful final scene of Loose Cannons, set to the melancholic tones of Turkish diva Sezen Aksu's 'Kutlama' (Celebration), is almost enough to redeem the conventional and clapped-out feel that colours most of the movie.
    10carlinafox

    One of the best movies I have seen this year

    I saw this movie at the Chicago International Film Festival, along with 18 other movies, and it was, by far, the best movie in the festival. It was the only movie I attended that was applauded by the audience at the end of the film. I see that one of the film critics commented that the film was uneven because it couldn't make up its mind whether it was a comedy or a drama. It was both and worked on both levels, which is one of the reasons I loved it. it made me laugh and it made me cry. I think the best art is often like that. Gabriel Garcia Marquez' book "100 Years of Solitude" and Joseph Heller's "Catch 22" are examples of books that are very funny and very sad, sometimes for exactly the same reasons. I hope this film will be nominated for an Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film. It deserves the recognition.
    9nandoferrer

    A wonderful movie!

    This is one of the best movies of the year,a wonderful tale of hope,friendship,love and family.For those who want to laugh, cry and especially think about matters that are, ultimately, uncomplicated and simple to think about.The actors are all simply wonderful, the musical score a must, and the script consistent with the aim of the picture: to tell a tale about living life to the hilt, and being happy the way one is.The most beautiful and unforgettable moments are related to the on-screen presence of Tommaso, Marco, Alba and 'the nonna'.This is for me one of the best movies of 2010 and a wonderful,sensitive and unforgettable tale!
    8wricketts

    It would take an immigrant to create a film like this in Italy....

    Bravo for Ivan Cotroneo, the talented translator of Cunningham and Kureishi, among other evident skills, and for Fernan Ozpetek, the only Italian director (though he happens to be Turkish by birth) who regularly and reliably features positive gay characters in his films. In an Italy that, at least as issues of sexual identity and respect for difference are concerned, has just barely crossing the threshold of the 1980s, Ozpetek is a rarity and a treasure. The first two-thirds of Mine Vaganti (Loose Cannons) will seem dated to anyone familiar with the last 30 years of queer representation in American cinema, as will the melodramatic, end-of-the-world reaction of Tommaso's father to learning that his son is gay, but the last third hits all the right dramatic and emotional notes and redeems any doubts one might have about the rest. There are some outstanding performances here: Ilaria Occhini as Tommaso's grandmother, and the gorgeous Nicole Grimaudo as the disconsolate and complex Alba. In fairness, I even have to throttle back some of my knee-jerk dislike for Scamarcio. It's not that he's a standout here, but playing a gay character is still a brave move in Italian cinema, especially for an actor who still depends on teen-heartthrob roles for his bread-and-butter. He's certainly no more or less believable as a gay man than are any of the other actors in the film, though even that's a throwback to the days when U.S. cinema divided representations of gay men between "normal," masculine gays (Tommaso—who may be gay, but still knows how to play soccer—his boyfriend, and his brother) and the "sassy gay friends" who are frivolous and effeminate and whose only purpose is to provide comic relief. Still, Mine Vaganti is a giant step forward and a welcome and charming antidote to government silence and Vatican-inspired hate speech.
    8lasttimeisaw

    Loose Cannons

    Juxtaposing with other Ozpetek's films I have watched (chronically STEAM: THE Turkish BATH 1997, LAST HAREM 1999, THE IGNORANT FAIRIES 2001, FACING WINDOWS 2003, SATURN IN OPPOSITION 2007), this time Ozpetek is palpably much smoother and more effortless to deal with his gay-oriented hallmark, shunning from all the melancholy and narcissism most homosexual films shamelessly over-exploit.

    This film is struggling to overthrow FACING WINDOWS from the crown of my favorite Ozpetek's work (I do need a fresh re-watch of STEAM though). I do not dare to spoil anything here, one prominent astonishment comes at the near end, when the camera fluidly couples with different times, emanates a wonderful visual and spiritual poignancy which exactly one would love to experience from watching a decent film!

    The cast may not be perfectly splendid, but every character is worth of some acknowledge for its ensemble undertaking, in particular for Ilaria Occhini (the grandmother in the film), a royal poise exuding from her own dignity, which counter-balances the dramatic banality of the coming-out-of-the-closet plight (namely a shade abominable presence of Ennio Fantastichini). Our leading man Riccardo Scamarcio (from THREE STEPS OVER HEAVEN 2004) may be in lack of a certain gay temperament as the chemistry between him and an irresistibly alluring Nicole Grimaudo is way more tangible here.

    The comedy part in the film is somewhat showy but properly amusing; the intermittent interruption of grandma's marriage is adorably empathetic, also I cherish the balmy score (from Pasquale Catalano) and the moot ending which insinuates a positive perspective of the philosophy of our beings.

    The blatant snub of 2011 Davide di Donatello awards (only one nomination for BEST MUSIC) is atrociously staggering in my opinion, but it will not stop Ozpetek from coming to be among the most promising virtuoso in the contemporary Italian cinema.

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    Histoire

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    Le saviez-vous

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    • Connexions
      Remade as Quem Vai Ficar com Mário? (2021)
    • Bandes originales
      50Mila
      (Versione Mine Vaganti)

      Written by Nina Zilli

      Performed by Nina Zilli

    Meilleurs choix

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    FAQ17

    • How long is Loose Cannons?Alimenté par Alexa

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 21 juillet 2010 (France)
    • Pays d’origine
      • Italie
    • Sites officiels
      • Official Facebook
      • Official site (Germany)
    • Langue
      • Italien
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Loose Cannons
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Lecce, Apulia, Italie
    • Sociétés de production
      • Fandango
      • Rai Cinema
      • Apulia Film Commission
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Box-office

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    • Montant brut mondial
      • 15 340 429 $US
    Voir les infos détaillées du box-office sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

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    • Durée
      1 heure 50 minutes
    • Couleur
      • Color
    • Mixage
      • Dolby Digital
    • Rapport de forme
      • 2.35 : 1

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