75-year-old Giuseppe De Metrio has spent 30 years in Geneva, as foreign worker for the Broyer company. Upon retirement, he returned to Puglia, Italy, where his family had continued to live. ... Read all75-year-old Giuseppe De Metrio has spent 30 years in Geneva, as foreign worker for the Broyer company. Upon retirement, he returned to Puglia, Italy, where his family had continued to live. His only grandchild, 7-year-old Carla, is blind. The whole family looks forward hopefully ... Read all75-year-old Giuseppe De Metrio has spent 30 years in Geneva, as foreign worker for the Broyer company. Upon retirement, he returned to Puglia, Italy, where his family had continued to live. His only grandchild, 7-year-old Carla, is blind. The whole family looks forward hopefully to the day when Carla's sight can be restored by means of a cornea transplantation. After ... Read all
- Director
- Writers
- Stars
- Awards
- 6 wins & 2 nominations total
- Lucia De Metrio
- (as Soraya Gomaa)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
The script, though, is very weak. It should have been killed long before it arrived on the screen. Half of it is a decent drama about an old man coming to terms with his past. That's always a potent subject. It doesn't even really have to be done well to make a good film. But the other half of the film is pure evil: Guiseppe has a granddaughter whom he dearly loves. She is blind, and Guiseppe wants to get her an operation to repair her sight before he dies. Yuck. The whole being-cured-from-blindness thing has been tired for decades. We can forgive Charlie Chaplin for doing it in City Lights. That film is too charming to criticize that much. Douglas Sirk did a pretty good soaper with a blindness angle in Magnificent Obsession. And we can look past it in Lars von Trier's Dancer in the Dark. He was experimenting with the melodramatic genre, and it was of interest. But Azzurro is playing the melodrama so cheaply. It's even too stupid to keep the music from swelling to all hell, which makes the already embarrassing moments more so. Besides, that little girl, Francesca Pipoli, is far too annoying. They play the cute angle all the time, and it hurts my head. To boot, they give ol' Guiseppe a heart condition, just in case the movie wasn't affecting you enough.
There is, like I say, some pretty good material concerning Guiseppe's coming to terms with his past. They really should have scrapped the entire blind girl stuff and concentrated on that. It's not everyday we have a big, plump, white-haired man. He's so awesome! I would cast him in a movie in a second if I were making one. 5/10.
Well, let me focus on the film. The plot is not very realistic so it made me a little bit uncomfortable watching it. I do not like plots which are not realistic.
Both principal actors were great in their roles, especially the little girl.
I gave this film for m kids to watch and they said they were bored. I guess today unless it is a Lord of the Rings or something similar, kids get bored. It is a pity, since I like social themes, especially in my beloved continent Europe.
All in all if you are for crying and feeling pity for people who have problems this is a film for you, otherwise you can skip it.
Did you know
- TriviaAbout 540 girls were auditioned in Apuglia and Roma before casting Francesca Pipoli who was 7 at the time of principal photography.
- SoundtracksQUANTE COSE CHIARE
Lyrics by Lucia Albertoni
Music by Louis Crelier
Performed by Lucia Albertoni
Courtesy of Crelier Music Publishing - Suisa
Details
- Release date
- Countries of origin
- Official sites
- Languages
- Also known as
- Lazur
- Filming locations
- Aigle, Vaud, Switzerland(Pascal's new company)
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Budget
- €2,300,000 (estimated)
- Gross worldwide
- $48,030
- Runtime1 hour 24 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.85 : 1