VALUTAZIONE IMDb
7,4/10
2454
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Immediatamente dopo la fine del comunismo in Albania, due italiani decidono di andare lì per investire soldi in una finta azienda, rendendo prestanome un ex prigioniero politico che si rivel... Leggi tuttoImmediatamente dopo la fine del comunismo in Albania, due italiani decidono di andare lì per investire soldi in una finta azienda, rendendo prestanome un ex prigioniero politico che si rivelerà più sveglio di quanto i due pensassero.Immediatamente dopo la fine del comunismo in Albania, due italiani decidono di andare lì per investire soldi in una finta azienda, rendendo prestanome un ex prigioniero politico che si rivelerà più sveglio di quanto i due pensassero.
- Regia
- Sceneggiatura
- Star
- Premi
- 21 vittorie e 18 candidature totali
Vasjan Lami
- Cop at cafe
- (as Vassjan Lammi)
Recensioni in evidenza
Amelio stile of directing amazes me everytime more and more. A powerful movie, being very realistic and documentary. Once again, Enrico Lo Verso acting and leading the movie is great. This movie was filmed few years after the government was overthrown and I consider AMelio to be brave with this theme and from my understanding he reflected what happened in a realistic way.
Gino (played by Enrico Lo Verso) and Fiore (Michele Placido) are Italian racketeers who come to Albania just after the fall of communism to set up a fictive firm and pocket the grants.
According to Luca Caminati, the two plot threads "challenge Italy's colonial past and in so doing force the redefinition of the notion of identity. Who is Italian? And what does it mean to be Italian?" This is an interesting concept, but unfortunately not one (as an American) I could reflect on with any real understanding.
But the line between Albania and Italy is an interesting one for me in another respect -- the history of Sicily. Many of the towns on the island were populated by Albanians who have since assimilated, inter-married and speak Italian. What does it mean for them to be Italian? Or Albanian?
According to Luca Caminati, the two plot threads "challenge Italy's colonial past and in so doing force the redefinition of the notion of identity. Who is Italian? And what does it mean to be Italian?" This is an interesting concept, but unfortunately not one (as an American) I could reflect on with any real understanding.
But the line between Albania and Italy is an interesting one for me in another respect -- the history of Sicily. Many of the towns on the island were populated by Albanians who have since assimilated, inter-married and speak Italian. What does it mean for them to be Italian? Or Albanian?
10eceku
I just finished watching this film and it brought back to me memories of my life in Albania. the film is very precise in it's description of life in our poor land after the riots and the exoduses that occurred in the early '90s. I was lucky myself not to have gone through what most people go through during this film but I can identify with some of it. even though the film focuses more on the italian businessman, the struggle for survival that most Albanians had to go and still have to is quite clear. this film should be watched by all interested in understanding why people have to abandon their homelands. this is a perfect example and should open eyes to many.
This Italian film is actually set behind the fall of dictatorship in Albania, a country once part of Soviet rule.
LoVerso's part in the movie as one of the protagonists is wonderfully acted. The first film I had seen him in was Il Ladro di Bambini. LoVerso takes his characters and challenges them, creating deep personalities that continue to develop throughout the film.
I would recommend this film solely based on the wonderful acting by all actors in the film.
LoVerso's part in the movie as one of the protagonists is wonderfully acted. The first film I had seen him in was Il Ladro di Bambini. LoVerso takes his characters and challenges them, creating deep personalities that continue to develop throughout the film.
I would recommend this film solely based on the wonderful acting by all actors in the film.
Italian director Gianni Amelio is a true filmmaker who is absolutely committed to his art.It is this serious as well as loyal commitment to the real cause of cinema which has led him to make a unique place for himself as a filmmaker whose stories are rooted in culture and civilizations in which they take place.Whether it is Albania or China,films by director Gianni Amelio always make a lot of sense as they never neglect the local stories for reaching the global audiences.The scale on which Gianni Amelio shoots his films is grand.'Lamerica' is an enduring proof of the grandeur of his vision.In this film,he depicts the mean nature of some human beings for whom the other persons'sufferings are a source of personal aggrandizement.There is also a lot of authenticity as Lamerica is based on the real story about the collapse of Albania after the end of a very long communist rule.How an affluent culture is blindly followed by a less fortunate culture has also been vividly described in Lamerica. This is exactly an element which makes the whole story palatable to audiences' tastes.
Lo sapevi?
- QuizIncluded among the "1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die", edited by Steven Schneider.
- ConnessioniReferences Paisà (1946)
- Colonne sonoreRosamunda
Written by Nicola Salerno (as Nisa) and Jaromir Vejvoda (as Vojavoda)
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Dettagli
Botteghino
- Lordo Stati Uniti e Canada
- 438.483 USD
- Lordo in tutto il mondo
- 4.788.331 USD
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