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La fenêtre d'en face

Original title: La finestra di fronte
  • 2003
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 46m
IMDb RATING
7.2/10
12K
YOUR RATING
La fenêtre d'en face (2003)
Facing Windows Scene: I Don't Taste Things As Good As I Once Did
Play clip2:59
Watch Facing Windows Scene: I Don't Taste Things As Good As I Once Did
5 Videos
15 Photos
DramaRomance

Overburdened and stuck in a greying marriage, Giovanna takes to caring for the Jewish Holocaust survivor her husband brings home. As she begins to reflect on her life, she turns to the man w... Read allOverburdened and stuck in a greying marriage, Giovanna takes to caring for the Jewish Holocaust survivor her husband brings home. As she begins to reflect on her life, she turns to the man who lives across from her ...Overburdened and stuck in a greying marriage, Giovanna takes to caring for the Jewish Holocaust survivor her husband brings home. As she begins to reflect on her life, she turns to the man who lives across from her ...

  • Director
    • Ferzan Özpetek
  • Writers
    • Gianni Romoli
    • Ferzan Özpetek
  • Stars
    • Giovanna Mezzogiorno
    • Massimo Girotti
    • Raoul Bova
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.2/10
    12K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Ferzan Özpetek
    • Writers
      • Gianni Romoli
      • Ferzan Özpetek
    • Stars
      • Giovanna Mezzogiorno
      • Massimo Girotti
      • Raoul Bova
    • 52User reviews
    • 57Critic reviews
    • 55Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 34 wins & 24 nominations total

    Videos5

    Facing Windows Scene: I Don't Taste Things As Good As I Once Did
    Clip 2:59
    Facing Windows Scene: I Don't Taste Things As Good As I Once Did
    Facing Windows Scene: What Can We Do About Him
    Clip 1:57
    Facing Windows Scene: What Can We Do About Him
    Facing Windows Scene: What Can We Do About Him
    Clip 1:57
    Facing Windows Scene: What Can We Do About Him
    Facing Windows Scene: Giovanna & Lorenzo At Their Facing Windows
    Clip 2:29
    Facing Windows Scene: Giovanna & Lorenzo At Their Facing Windows
    Facing Windows Scene: What Do You Know About Me?
    Clip 1:19
    Facing Windows Scene: What Do You Know About Me?
    Facing Windows Scene: Today Is Not The Day To Make Pastries
    Clip 1:18
    Facing Windows Scene: Today Is Not The Day To Make Pastries

    Photos15

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    Top cast31

    Edit
    Giovanna Mezzogiorno
    Giovanna Mezzogiorno
    • Giovanna
    Massimo Girotti
    Massimo Girotti
    • Simone…
    Raoul Bova
    Raoul Bova
    • Lorenzo
    Filippo Nigro
    Filippo Nigro
    • Filippo
    Serra Yilmaz
    • Eminè
    Maria Grazia Bon
    • Sara
    Massimo Poggio
    Massimo Poggio
    • Young Davide
    Ivan Bacchi
    • Simone
    Chiara Andreis
    Antonella Antinori
    Antonella Antinori
    • Tintora
    • (as Veronica Bruni)
    Olimpia Carlisi
    • Donna negozio stoffe
    Ohame-Brancy Chibuzo
    • Alessio
    • (as Ohame Brancy Chibuzo)
    Carlo Daniele
    • Marco
    Rosaria De Cicco
    • Barista
    Lucianna De Falco
    • Marilena
    Barbara Folchitto
    Barbara Folchitto
    Francesca Gamba
    Benedetta Gargari
    • Martina
    • Director
      • Ferzan Özpetek
    • Writers
      • Gianni Romoli
      • Ferzan Özpetek
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews52

    7.212K
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    Featured reviews

    ckiral

    a magnificent film with most elegant senses

    As soon as I walked out of the movie theatre I said to myself I should write something about this film. But, who am I to write about it? I am not a journalist or somebody like that whose opinions are read all over. So, I started to talk about it to all my close friends. At least I could have influenced the people close to me. Then came IMdB to my mind. I sat down to write about it, but then it took me several minutes to hit the keyboard. No, it's not because there is nothing to write about the film. On the contrary, there is just so much to write, I can't figure out how to start.

    Let me start to say like this: I watched it last night, and all my day today I have the frames hoovering around my mind, notes of the soundtrack ringing my ears. I spent extra hours in the middle of Istanbul's heavy traffic just get its soundtrack CD, but, my efforts in reaching it resembled Davide's efforts for finding Simone....all sold out.

    As they say about some legendary directors, Ferzan Ozpetek's film has something to do with the fragile senses of life, not so much to bring tears into your eyes, but so much to tickle your fragile senses. He never chose to create a full blown drama, he never used cliche Hollywood tactics. In this film, it starts out to be a story of an ordinary middle class Italian family, having the typical life problems. Then, as the time passes, the film grows into itself and turns out to be one of the finest enjoyments of the silver screen. The scenes where Giovanna and Lorenzo chase Davide to the closed shop and then to the little caffee, the seemless changes of characters as the camera moves in circular motion, the dance of Davide with Giovanna, the cake making, all like a gentle hand caressing our fragile feelings. Excellent director of photography, magnificent music, larger than life actings of Mezzagiorno and Girotti were the reminicinces of last night's feast in my mind.

    I don't know why, but Ozpetek always have something to say about gay relations. This film could have been as magnificent or may be more in a straight relationship story. Ozpetek moves his camera very gently, use the most relevent music themes to trigger quite elegant feelings of our lives. After seeing this film, I've realised how much I was surrounded by the cliche Hollywood films, all following pretty much the same formula. For those who haven't seen it yet, I guarantee at least that you shall experience a quite a different and interesting enjoyment, may be the most different one.

    The film ended, and I stayed to the very end of the credits just to listen more of the great music. The last scene where he zoomed into Mezzagiorno's enchanting eyes was like a Sergio Leone closeup. Leone chose to zoom into his men with no name, Ozpetek chose to zoom into his real life characters...those characters that have the most elegant feelings in their eyes....and Giovanna Mezzogiorno...how can I describe that plain beauty? If I was to encounter somebody like her, I'd undertake all the penalties of life just to look a bit into her eyes. I wouldn't be able cook as good cakes as Davide, but do whatever it takes to make sure she stays there forever.

    Go and see this film...make yourself a favor...get your feelings sense some of the most elegant moments of your life
    Peegee-3

    The grace of transformation through relationship

    What a rich and satisfying film this is! The complexity of lives interweaving, with a transformative impact is a rare experience in this medium.

    Life is full of chance meetings...often ignored...but in this film it is pivotal. A young couple, having serious relational problems, come upon a dazed old man on the street. His entrance in their lives, his own dramatic life and the wife's (Giovanna's) ultimate connection to him serves as a link to her profound choices...First, to risk a sexual encounter with the handsome neighbor she's watched through her facing windows and second, to recognize that her discontent has been with herself, more than her loving husband. The complexity of the old man's life...his survival of a concentration camp...giving up a beloved lover to save others...his success as a famous pastry chef...all contribute in a tangential way to Giovanna's transformation. The final scene is enormously moving and meaningful.

    Don't miss this gem...if humanism, great performances and cinematic richness are important to you.
    tccandler

    "You must demand to live in a better world... Don't be content to merely survive."

    "You must demand to live in a better world... Don't be content to merely survive."

    **********

    The warm colors, lovely performances, textured messages and thoughtful ideas that are layered throughout Ferzan Ozpetek's 'Facing Windows' will make you cherish cinema just a little bit more than you already do. It's a romantic treasure about unrequited love, familial responsibility, sexual longing and following the path in life that makes you happiest. The notion that you can really love someone else only when you've learned to love yourself may be a familiar one, but it is nice to be reminded every now and then. 'Facing Windows' is about all those things and the realization that the memories of those who truly touch our hearts can inspire us to live better lives.

    Giovanna (Giovanna Mezzogiorno) and her husband Filippo (Filippo Nigro) have settled into life. They both have jobs that make them unhappy. She works as an accountant. He works the graveyard shift because he is too weak to ask his boss for a daytime slot. They argue about money, sex, time and work... There is a subtle sense that this is a marriage whose love is dwindling fast. Perhaps they are only going through the motions for the sake of their kids.

    One morning, the two of them are walking home and cross paths with an elderly man (Massimo Girotti). He is utterly disoriented and has lost his memory. And despite Giovanna's protests, Filippo brings him back to their home for the night so that he can take him to the police the next morning in the hopes of unraveling the mystery. As complications ensue, that one night stretches to a few days. The old man experiences strange episodes, flashbacks of sorts, that reveal clues to his mysterious past. His actions lead to a meeting between Giovanna and Lorenzo (Raoul Bova). Lorenzo lives across the street from Giovanna and their apartment windows face each other. The sexual tension between the two is quite palpable as they have both been secretly watching and lusting after each other from their dimly lit windows.

    Giovanna and Lorenzo's instant friendship swiftly moves to flirtation and then to a passionate kiss. However, Lorenzo's job is transferring him to another city very soon and Giovanna is put in an awkward spot having to make a very quick decision. Her heart tells her she should act on her feelings. Her mind tells her to be responsible. Nevertheless, the two of them puzzle over the mystery of the old man as they try to come to terms with their feelings for one another.

    The beauty of this film is the way in which it balances many layers of story and character. Everyone in the film has something interesting happening in their lives and it all seems to revolve around the influence of the old man. These days, we are lucky if films give us one thing to think about, let alone many things. 'Facing Windows' (aka La Finestra di Fronte) is delightfully stimulating for both mind and heart.

    I have to point out the performances in this film. 'Facing Windows' swept the David di Donatello Awards (Italian Oscars) for good reason. The film is brilliant but the performances are spectacular. Giovanna Mezzogiorno has vaulted straight to the top of my list of favorite actresses with her role here and in 2002's lovely film 'The Last Kiss' (L'Ultimo Bacio). She is the most dramatic actress I think I have ever seen, able to combine genuine fragility with a toughness and intensity that will give you goose-bumps. She has the most cinematically beautiful face I think I've seen and a talent that is remarkably rare. In just two films, she has earned my trust entirely... I will be first in line to see anything else she does.

    Massimo Girotti is equally powerful as the mysterious old man. He is able to convey every necessary emotion in this tricky role. This was to be Girotti's final role before passing in 2003. It is a performance you won't soon forget.

    Raoul Bova and Filippo Nigro are great in the secondary roles and round out one of the best ensemble casts of 2004.

    'Facing Windows' is one of those aesthetically marvelous Italian films that sounds as great as it looks. It is fun and surprising, unpredictable and touching. Giovanna Mezzogiorno is a special actress who is fast becoming one of Europe's biggest stars. You will be seeing a lot more from her in the next two decades. I cannot recommend a film much more than this one.

    I highly recommend you seek this film out in theatres because it can take forever for these foreign gems to hit DVD (Sometimes up to 2 years). 'Facing Windows' will vie for a slot in my year end top ten list and deserves your time and money. Make an effort to find this great Italian film!

    **********

    TC Candler - Critical Mass Movies - www.tccandler.com

    **********
    8stefano1488

    What a surprise!

    I very much appreciated Ozpetek's previous film, "Le fate ignoranti", which has earned him a lot of respect on the part of both audiences and critics, in Italy and beyond. I was reluctant to go see this film because of the casting of Raoul Bova (a second-rate actor who doesn't have much substance behind his good looks and began his career as a teenage heartthrob - what a pity it didn't end there) and because of the reference to the Nazi deportation of Roman Jews, which took place on October 16th, 1943 - I just felt that to use this as a pretext for a gay love story was kind of cheap. But nearly everyone I knew who had gone see the film kept me telling that it was good, so I became so curious that I decided to go. Well, my friends were absolutely right.

    Ozpetek's strength is his ability to portray characters that are realistic without being obvious, so everyone can relate to them without identifying with them. He showed that already good ability in "Le fate ignoranti" as well, but this time he seems to have developed it even further. His approach is always personal, and this enables him to make films that are deeply introspective. It is the kind of films that the French are usually good at making, but Ozpetek in not an imitator. What makes his films so DIFFERENT is that there seems an emotional involvement that is very difficult to find elsewhere; at the same time, this never translates into trite sentimentalism or dull rhetoric.

    This is an outstanding film, and this is so also thanks to the performances given by most of the actors. Massimo Girotti, in his last appearance before his death, shows that, at about 80 years of age, he was still able to be a first-class actor (and this explains why he featured in so many films by Visconti); after this film, which is dedicated to him, we will all miss him even more than we already did. Giovanna Mezzogiorno, the daughter of a late actor herself, also gives an outstanding performance as the woman who finds herself at the crossroads and is torn between passion and the responsibilities of everyday life, between reality and desire, just like so many of us often are. Filippo Nigro, who also featured in a minor role in "Le fate ignoranti", is given a more important role in this film, and deservedly so. The only exception is Raoul Bova, and I wonder why Ozpetek seems to have a compelling need to cast "actors" who are more sort of toy boys, mostly in secondary roles (Bova in this case, Gabriel Garko in "Le fate ignoranti"), who usually have very limited acting abilities and who almost inevitably end up faring very poorly and suffering from the comparison that is inevitably drawn between their performances and those of the other actors who feature in the films; which is even more striking if we take into account the fact that Ozpetek seems to have the ability to rejuvenate actors and to make them play characters that are very different from their clichés (as an example, consider not only Massimo Girotti in this case, but also Margherita Buy in "le fate ignoranti").

    Just one word for the soundtrack, which made the film even more touching and has spawned a major Italian chart hit.

    The only criticism that can be made? How come that Italian directors seem to have lost the ability to say something about the society in which they live? In the past, they were able to be sardonic about it, and to intertwine the two levels, social and personal. Now the only films they seem able to make are personal-only stories, and that's a pity.

    Altogether, a deeply recommended film.
    noralee

    Past and Present Sentimentally Intersects in Contemporary Italy

    "Facing Windows (La Finestra di fronte)" is like a very European and more sophisticated take on "The Notebook," as it shifts between romantic and culinary past and present through the in-and-out consciousness of an elderly man.

    The "Rear Window" eroticism is just one element that accidentally brings together tangled, stymied lives swirling around lovely, exhausted, frustrated chef, wife and mother Giovanna Mezzogiorno, where each child, man, woman, friend and neighbor has separate priorities and fantasies that annoying real life interferes with, from the practical to the political.

    Each character and their ties are both delightfully and surprisingly complex and the actors are so comfortable bringing each to complete life that you think you too should be able to come out of the theater speaking Italian so naturally.

    But this is a frank, gritty, contemporary, urban Italy we don't usually get to see, with multi-racial immigrants, underemployment and a Fascist past.

    The sentimentalism of the live with no regrets lesson is leavened by the seriousness of the final revelations and the compromises that each character still makes.

    The music selections nicely fit each character.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Massimo Girotti died on 6 January 2003 and the movie is dedicated to his memory. Before he was cast, Ferzan Özpetek had considered also Jean Rochefort and Serge Reggiani for his role.
    • Soundtracks
      La Finestra di fronte
      Written by Andrea Guerra

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    FAQ18

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • December 14, 2005 (France)
    • Countries of origin
      • Italy
      • Turkey
      • Portugal
      • United Kingdom
    • Official sites
      • Sony Pictures Classics (United States)
      • Zootrope Films (France)
    • Language
      • Italian
    • Also known as
      • Facing Windows
    • Filming locations
      • Ponte Sisto, Rome, Lazio, Italy(where Giovanna and Filippo meet Simone)
    • Production companies
      • R&C Produzioni
      • AFS Film
      • Clap Filmes
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $543,354
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $36,061
      • Jun 20, 2004
    • Gross worldwide
      • $15,535,312
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 46m(106 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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