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IMDbPro

Parthenope - Os Amores de Nápoles

Título original: Parthenope
  • 2024
  • 18
  • 2 h 17 min
AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
6,6/10
16 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
POPULARIDADE
439
166
Celeste Dalla Porta in Parthenope - Os Amores de Nápoles (2024)
Partenope is a woman who bears the name of her city. Is she a siren or a myth?
Reproduzir trailer1:58
1 vídeo
99+ fotos
AmadurecimentoDramaFantasia

Uma mulher nascida no mar de Nápoles em 1950 busca a felicidade durante os longos verões de sua juventude, apaixonando-se por sua cidade natal e seus muitos personagens memoráveis.Uma mulher nascida no mar de Nápoles em 1950 busca a felicidade durante os longos verões de sua juventude, apaixonando-se por sua cidade natal e seus muitos personagens memoráveis.Uma mulher nascida no mar de Nápoles em 1950 busca a felicidade durante os longos verões de sua juventude, apaixonando-se por sua cidade natal e seus muitos personagens memoráveis.

  • Direção
    • Paolo Sorrentino
  • Roteirista
    • Paolo Sorrentino
  • Artistas
    • Celeste Dalla Porta
    • Stefania Sandrelli
    • Gary Oldman
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
    6,6/10
    16 mil
    SUA AVALIAÇÃO
    POPULARIDADE
    439
    166
    • Direção
      • Paolo Sorrentino
    • Roteirista
      • Paolo Sorrentino
    • Artistas
      • Celeste Dalla Porta
      • Stefania Sandrelli
      • Gary Oldman
    • 85Avaliações de usuários
    • 129Avaliações da crítica
    • 52Metascore
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
    • Prêmios
      • 7 vitórias e 25 indicações no total

    Vídeos1

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 1:58
    Official Trailer

    Fotos126

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    Elenco principal61

    Editar
    Celeste Dalla Porta
    Celeste Dalla Porta
    • Parthenope
    Stefania Sandrelli
    Stefania Sandrelli
    • Parthenope anziana
    Gary Oldman
    Gary Oldman
    • John Cheever
    Silvio Orlando
    Silvio Orlando
    • Devoto Marotta
    Luisa Ranieri
    Luisa Ranieri
    • Greta Cool
    Peppe Lanzetta
    Peppe Lanzetta
    • Vescovo
    Isabella Ferrari
    Isabella Ferrari
    • Flora Malva
    Dario Aita
    Dario Aita
    • Sandrino
    Antonio Annina
    • Raimondo 10 anni
    • (as Antonino Annina)
    Margherita Aresti
    • Vittoria da Casamicciola
    Martina Attanasio
    • Debbie da Casamicciola
    Francesca Romana Bergamo
    • Madre Sandrino governante
    Liliana Bottone
    • Lucia Esposito
    Maria Rosaria Bozzon
    • Vecchia megera
    • (as Mariarosaria Bozzon)
    Luigi Bruno
    • Ragazzo meraviglioso
    Giovanni Buselli
    • Gennaro Criscuolo
    Paola Calliari
    • Giovane assistente incinta
    Ciro Capano
    • Capasso
    • Direção
      • Paolo Sorrentino
    • Roteirista
      • Paolo Sorrentino
    • Elenco e equipe completos
    • Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro

    Avaliações de usuários85

    6,615.5K
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    Resumo

    Reviewers say 'Parthenope' by Paolo Sorrentino is visually stunning with breathtaking cinematography and beautiful Naples scenery. It explores themes of beauty, youth, love, and self-discovery. Celeste Dalla Porta's performance is praised for its allure and enigmatic quality. However, the film has mixed reviews, with some finding it pretentious and lacking substance, focusing too much on aesthetics. The narrative structure and character development are contentious, with some appreciating the philosophical approach and others finding it incoherent and shallow.
    Gerado por IA a partir do texto das avaliações de usuários

    Avaliações em destaque

    6Portobella

    Strangely draining

    I was so close to leaving the cinema half way through this film, but stayed. And the best bits are actually in the 2nd half so Im giving it 6 stars instead of the 4 which the first half deserved. However, I still dont think this is a good movie. Fantastic visually yes, for Sorrentino is a master of unforgettable filmic tableaus, but that just isn't enough.

    The overall problem...There is no plot, it's more a series of separate scenes on narcissism, or rather that's how they come across. I think Sorrentino wanted to create something profound but the result feels contrived and sad.

    And then there's the anticlimactic ending - a sudden flash forward 50 years to an oddly empty/vacant character that is Parthenope in her 70s. What? Why?
    9lucianopolimi

    Parthenope: in the end, only irony will remain.

    "As complete as she is-with all her goods and her ills-do you know who she reminds me of?... Naples"
    • Eça de Queirós, The Illustrious House of Ramires, mutatis mutandis.


    "The most beautiful gift is not the most expensive; it is the most fragile." Marques Rebelo, O Trapicheiro.

    As the lights of the nineteenth century faded, Eça de Queirós-the great Eça-painted, through the face of Gonçalo Mendes Ramires, a symbolic portrait of Portugal that, as any good symbol does, contained everything, even when it sometimes seemed to contain nothing at all. Last year, Paolo Sorrentino, the great artist of contemporary cinema, painted with the face and body of Parthenope the symbolic portrait of Naples: yet another of his masterpieces, unveiling a city and a woman that, in the blink of an eye, are one in the lyrical conception of poet Sorrentino. Naples, or Parthenope- a name that evokes the mythological siren whose body is said to have given birth to the city-is not merely a backdrop, but a pulsating character. And Parthenope, the protagonist (portrayed with an ethereal melancholy), is its incarnation: born in the waters of the Mediterranean, like Venus, like Naples, she carries within her the contradiction of the sublime and the grotesque, of desire and death.

    Sorrentino, heir to a Fellini-esque sensitivity for both beauty and the bizarre, does not fear excess. In scenes such as the party in Capri-where beautiful faces and bodies dissolved under golden lights-Parthenope, in her melancholy, asks her millionaire admirer: "Lei non pensa che il desiderio sia un mistero e il sesso il suo funerale?" [don't you think that desire is a mystery and sex its funeral]. The phrase echoes like an epitaph, laid bare to reveal the fragility and preciousness of desire and youth: desire as an unfathomable mystery, and sex as the funeral ritual of something that will never be consummated. It is in this interplay of opposites that the narrative unfolds, between the sculptural beauty of Naples' landscapes and the harshness of its forgotten alleys, where the protagonist walks with Roberto, an ambiguous character who unveils to her the other side of the city-a Naples both raw and poetic, where the contrast between the opulent luxury of grand houses and the simplicity of neglected corners becomes a metaphor for the city's inherent duality. Every step, every exchanged glance, carries the tension between the ephemeral and the eternal, between the urgent and the trivial. There, in the interplay of shadow and light, "the irrelevant merges with the decisive," as if chance itself became the silent arbiter of destinies. But is there any sense in speaking of chance? In song, Riccardo Cocciante tells us otherwise-everything was already foreseen.

    "Beauty is like war: it opens doors," declares the alcoholic writer John Cheever (portrayed by Gary Oldman) in his brief, ghostly appearance. Drunkenly, he murmurs about the "scent of dead loves," a fragrance he claims to detect in his hotel room, surrounded by bottles of alcohol. So many dead loves in the city, in Parthenope's life. Here, her beauty is a weapon-a weapon that invariably wounds those who wield it: capable of granting access to privileged worlds, yet also imprisoning one in gilded cages. But Parthenope is a woman-city that "sfugge sempre": she flees, escapes, refuses to be deciphered, and always has a retort ready to disarm her interlocutors. What mysteries lie hidden within her?

    The narrative delves into a universe where every image is meticulously sculpted to reveal the mysteries of existence. Amid this tapestry of contrasts stands Cardinal Tesorone, with his imposing and perverse figure, his grotesque nature and skepticism-a link in a Neapolitan religiosity divided between the sacred and the profane. His discourse, laden with solemnity and irony, resonates in the scene where, clad only in the adornments of San Gennaro's treasure, he attempts to seduce the city of Parthenope-or perhaps merely the delectable Parthenope herself-with the lubricity of a faun and the cynicism of an old man. Il tempo che scorre insieme al dolore.

    In every dialogue, in every exchanged glance, the question echoes: is it possible that by trying to master desire, love ultimately imprisons its own freedom? And in this eternal ebb and flow between wanting and being, the protagonist remains undefinable, always escaping, constantly reinventing herself-as if the very city of Naples refused to be confined by labels or predetermined destinies.

    In the twilight of her existence-be it amidst the effervescence of a Capri celebration or in the solitude of a dim alley-Parthenope presents herself as the synthesis of all the opposites that coexist in Naples: the sublime and the grotesque, desire and death, fragility and strength. It is this paradoxical combination that renders her portrait so unforgettable-a mirror, perhaps, of a city whose soul, despite everything, continues to pulse with an indomitable vitality, defying time and destiny with an irony that, in the end, remains its sole certainty.
    6CinemaSerf

    Parthenope

    Along the lines of the legendary beauty Aphrodite, "Parthenope" (Celeste Dalla Porta) was born in the sea and grew to become a great temptress to both of her male contemporaries. The first being her obsessed brother "Raimondo" (Daniele Rienzo) and the other her adoring childhood friend "Sandrino" (Dario Alta) whose unrequited love for her drove him to distraction. Not, however, to such distraction as that of her sibling, It's when the trio decide to head for an unfunded trip from their home in Naples to the nearby island of Capri that she meets elderly American writer/dipso "Cheever" (Gary Oldman) who finds her intriguing but appears to have a certain immunity to her charms and she's not used to that. Whilst on this carefree trip there befalls a tragic realisation that causes all of them to appreciate the stark realities and fickle shallowness of their lives and brings into focus senses of grief, rejection and emptiness. It's a beautifully photographed piece of cinema, this film, with sparing dialogue and a sexually, but not explicitly so, charged chemistry abundant throughout this rather visually extravagant but disappointingly soulless drama. It is a bit like a postcard upon which is a beautiful picture but just too few words to develop the characters or to quite put enough meat on their perfectly formed bones. Indeed as the second hour starts to drag, the whole thing begins to look more like a repetitively self-indulgent vanity exercise that might be rooted in mythology but that struggles to engage beyond the superficial. It's classy and stylish and well worth a look - but look appears to be all Paolo Sorrentino wants us to do.
    7panta-4

    Sorrentino's signature style is on full display in Parthenope

    In the enchanting world of Parthenope, director Paolo Sorrentino weaves a tapestry of captivating imagery and compelling storytelling. The film, named after the mythical siren and the city, is a breathtaking exploration of life, beauty, and self-discovery.

    The mesmerizing performance by debut actress Celeste Dalla Porta is the heart and soul of Parthenope. Her enigmatic portrayal of the titular character is a masterclass in subtlety and allure, drawing the audience into her journey of self-realization. The partnership between Sorrentino and cinematographer Daria D'Antonio is once again a match made in heaven, as they paint a vivid picture of Italy's stunning landscapes.

    Sorrentino's signature style is on full display in Parthenope, with the film's episodic structure allowing for a deep dive into the protagonist's experiences. While some may argue that the film prioritizes style over substance, it's hard to deny the sheer visual splendor and emotional resonance that Sorrentino achieves.

    Parthenope is a celebration of youth, beauty, and the transformative power of self-discovery. It's a testament to Sorrentino's unique vision and unwavering commitment to his craft. While it may not be a radical departure from his previous works, Parthenope is a stunning addition to his filmography and a must-see for fans of his distinct cinematic style.
    6olga_shevchenco

    Beauty that didn't touch my soul

    I believe this film has a lot more in common with last year's other hit, The Substance, than you might think. Because in my opinion, Parthenope shouldn't be seen as a human character: she represents Youth itself. Anyone who is attracted to Parthenope is actually attracted to Youth.

    "She's always fleeing," says her brother Raimondo, because Youth is a substance that constantly slips through our fingers like sand.

    I think there is also an obvious parallel with Aphrodite, who was born from sea foam: Parthenope was born in the water of the Mediterranean Sea.

    But nice metaphors, analogies and beautiful cinematography are not enough to touch my soul. For me, this film is only a faint shadow of La grande bellezza. I couldn't help but compare the two films and think that Sorrentino put much more soul into La grande bellezza, because he understands men, but not so much women.

    What also disappointed me in this film was the acting of Celeste Dalla Porta and Dario Aita: it's not my cup of tea at all, I found their performance very forced. Although I enjoyed the acting of Luisa Ranieri and Gary Oldman.

    Overall, it definitely won't be my favorite Sorrentino film.

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    Enredo

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    Você sabia?

    Editar
    • Curiosidades
      Paolo Sorrentino said he reached out to Gary Oldman about filming a cameo after hearing that Oldman was a huge fan of his. Oldman immediately accepted saying Sorrentino was at the top of his wish list to collaborate with.
    • Citações

      Devoto Marotta: It's very difficult to see, because it's the last thing you learn.

      Parthenope: When do you learn to see?

      Devoto Marotta: When everything else begins to be missing.

      Parthenope: What is everything else?

      Devoto Marotta: Love, youth, desire, emotion, pleasure.

    • Trilhas sonoras
      Warmth
      Written by Peter Gregson

      Performed by Peter Gregson, Warren Zielinski, Magdalena Filipczak, Laurie Anderson, Ashok Klouda

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    • How long is Parthenope?Fornecido pela Alexa

    Detalhes

    Editar
    • Data de lançamento
      • 27 de março de 2025 (Brasil)
    • Países de origem
      • Itália
      • França
    • Centrais de atendimento oficiais
      • Apple TV Store (MENA Official)
      • Official Site
    • Idiomas
      • Italiano
      • Napolitano
      • Inglês
    • Também conhecido como
      • Parthenope
    • Locações de filme
      • Nápoles, Campânia, Itália
    • Empresas de produção
      • The Apartment
      • Pathé
      • Numero 10
    • Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro

    Bilheteria

    Editar
    • Orçamento
      • € 26.300.000 (estimativa)
    • Faturamento bruto nos EUA e Canadá
      • US$ 289.303
    • Fim de semana de estreia nos EUA e Canadá
      • US$ 31.588
      • 9 de fev. de 2025
    • Faturamento bruto mundial
      • US$ 11.651.125
    Veja informações detalhadas da bilheteria no IMDbPro

    Especificações técnicas

    Editar
    • Tempo de duração
      2 horas 17 minutos
    • Cor
      • Color
      • Black and White
    • Mixagem de som
      • Dolby Digital
    • Proporção
      • 2.39 : 1

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