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Dopo mezzanotte, Après minuit

Original title: Dopo mezzanotte
  • 2004
  • Unrated
  • 1h 32m
IMDb RATING
6.8/10
1.6K
YOUR RATING
Giorgio Pasotti, Fabio Troiano, and Francesca Inaudi in Dopo mezzanotte, Après minuit (2004)
Home Video Trailer from Avatar
Play trailer2:28
1 Video
4 Photos
ComedyRomance

The magical Mole Antonelliana (the cavernous Museum of Cinema in Turin, Italy) is the setting for a very unlikely love story. One fateful evening the museum's timid night watchman, comes to ... Read allThe magical Mole Antonelliana (the cavernous Museum of Cinema in Turin, Italy) is the setting for a very unlikely love story. One fateful evening the museum's timid night watchman, comes to the aid of an enchanting young fast-food cook on the run from the police. The museum's dre... Read allThe magical Mole Antonelliana (the cavernous Museum of Cinema in Turin, Italy) is the setting for a very unlikely love story. One fateful evening the museum's timid night watchman, comes to the aid of an enchanting young fast-food cook on the run from the police. The museum's dreamy kingdom of silent movie characters becomes a sanctuary for her as she awaits rescue by... Read all

  • Director
    • Davide Ferrario
  • Writer
    • Davide Ferrario
  • Stars
    • Giorgio Pasotti
    • Francesca Inaudi
    • Fabio Troiano
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.8/10
    1.6K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Davide Ferrario
    • Writer
      • Davide Ferrario
    • Stars
      • Giorgio Pasotti
      • Francesca Inaudi
      • Fabio Troiano
    • 10User reviews
    • 11Critic reviews
    • 56Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 9 wins & 15 nominations total

    Videos1

    After Midnight (2004)
    Trailer 2:28
    After Midnight (2004)

    Photos3

    View Poster
    View Poster
    View Poster

    Top cast18

    Edit
    Giorgio Pasotti
    Giorgio Pasotti
    • Martino
    Francesca Inaudi
    Francesca Inaudi
    • Amanda
    Fabio Troiano
    Fabio Troiano
    • The Angel of Falchera
    Francesca Picozza
    • Barbara
    Silvio Orlando
    Silvio Orlando
    • Narrator
    Pietro Eandi
    • Martino's Grandfather
    Andrea Romero
    • Fast Food Owner
    Giampiero Perone
    • Bruno the Night Watchman
    Francesco D'Alessio
    • Member of the Falchera's Gang
    Gianni Talia
    • Member of the Falchera's Gang
    Andrea Moretti
    • Member of the Falchera's Gang
    Gianna Cavalla
    • The Car Receiver
    Claudio Pagano
    • The Car Receiver's Bodyguard
    Maurizio Vaiana
    • Cousin Maurizio
    Ladis Zanini
    • The Ballsqueezer
    Ivan Negro
    • Ivan
    Lidia Streito Misdim
    • Indonesian Girl
    Alberto Barbera
    Alberto Barbera
    • The Museum Director
    • Director
      • Davide Ferrario
    • Writer
      • Davide Ferrario
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews10

    6.81.6K
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    Featured reviews

    10robert-temple-1

    The Triumph of Imagination

    This is a spectacular achievement, of a perfectly-judged fable whose every moment and every detail is successful. It was made on a shoestring (they even had to wheel the camera in a supermarket trolley because they could not afford a dolly), but the production values look like and feel like a big-budget movie. The cinematography is deeply intriguing, partially due to the use of a highly light-sensitive digital camera, which is able to film in dark and moody places by natural light. Davide Ferrario, the writer, producer and director, is a unique cinematic artist. It is insufficient to call him brilliant, and even the word 'inspired' seems too tepid to do him justice. I would prefer to call him 'a force', like the wind or the waves. This magical film captures a kind of metaphysical power of the imagination, which transforms reality in front of our eyes. All except one member of the cast were unknowns. The project was a huge risk. But the result is a complete triumph. The casting was perfectly judged, and the performers more than delivered the goods. The only one with experience, Giorgio Pasotti, says little because he plays a silent character, but evokes the character's inner being with total success. Even more astounding is the performance by Francesca Inaudi, and she is more than 'a natural', she is a 'supernatural', whose facial muscles were designed for film-making. Another star of the film is a bizarre and gigantic building in the city of Turin called 'the Mole'. It is one of the most mysterious film sets ever used, and what is more bizarre, it is all real. Nothing about this film is 'normal', thank God, since what is more boring than normality? And yet nothing is abnormal either, it is just that it is all happening in the imagination, which transcends the difference. Two stories intersect, like two intersecting light-cones in space-time, and from the crossing of their beams, brilliant and scintillating interference patterns emerge, and then the individual stories are re-directed and electrons and positrons spray out in different directions. The film is about a collision of two parallel universes. No, three. The third is us.
    8Dean_Moriarty

    After Midnight

    This film is a treat for all cinema lovers. This quirky comedy and love story about a modern Buster Keaton-like character takes place in the amazing Mole Museum of Cinematography in Torino, Italy—a place that is now on my list of places to visit. As the narrator informs us, this is story just as much about places as it is people. A sense of nostalgia weaves the film together with elements of classic silent film techniques, quirky slapstick comedy and expressionism.

    3 different film formats are used in shooting this film. The combination of 35mm, digital video and 9.5mm make this film a feast for the eyes. Ferrario utilizes the ever-classic iris in and iris out transition effect as a delightful homage to Keaton and other classic filmmakers of the day. He cleverly draws parallels between the characters in the film and characters in the classic films by cross-cutting between clips of Keaton and a German expressionist film (i don't believe i can't remember which one) and the main characters Martino (Giorgio Pasotti) and Amanda (Francessa Inaudi). The unbalanced lines in the mise- en-scene give a sort of throw back to expressionism, which works well in representing the character of Amanda.

    Ferrario makes many different allusions that are fun to connect, such as Fitzgerald's "eyes of TJ Eckelburg, Fibonacci's numbers, and of course the works of Buster Keaton. In and out this film is just a joy to watch. Stylistic, yet simple, and if nothing else charming.
    9mcongedi

    A love story and a heartfelt ode to cinema!

    What a find was this film! Set in Torino's Mole Antonelliana (the museum of cinema in that city), this is a picaresque and very charming love story with lots of cinematic references for film aficionados to soak up. The most obvious dedication is to the inimitable Buster Keaton, the main actor (Giorgio Pasotti) is as deadpan and silent as Buster was. But there are also loving references to the film-makers from Torino's silent cinema hey-day, the early 1910s, when Torino lead the world in cinema quality. Scenes from the silent film "Fuoco" by Italy's master silent film director Giovanni Pastrone are used throughout the film.

    Silent film techniques are used from time to time in the film in this charming, funny, entertaining and ultimately warm love story that doubles as a tribute to the cinema pioneers of the silent era.

    It is a master work from Director/Writer Davide Ferrario and one that deserves accolades.
    6smdusk

    Brilliant and slightly clever

    The 2004 new movie by one of the most intriguing Italian directors. Despite of a low budget and a not-famous cast (except for the narrating voice), this movie is purely entertaining and involving: fascinating sequences inside the Turin's wonderful Mole, actual venue of the most important Italian cinematographic museum. Not-so-profound characters and dialogs, and sometimes a bit of inaccuracy in playing, but a sincere view in the struggle for love, solitude and boredom. Very nice editing with sequences of early cinema movie clips, especially by Buster Keaton.
    9roland-104

    A smashing ode to film and love; don't miss it!

    This is a wonderfully inventive romantic comedy set primarily within the Mole Antonelliana, a fabulous 19th Century building in Turin that since 2000 has housed the Italian National Museum of Cinema.

    The love story is a triangular dilemma in which a young woman loves two men and cannot force herself to choose one over the other. Amanda (Francesca Inaudi in her film debut) is a fast food clerk whose life seems to be heading nowhere. Her boyfriend Angelo (Fabio Troiano) is a car thief and control freak who seems more closely bound to his trio of henchmen than to Amanda. Though handsome and charming in his way, he never stays the night and forgets about their dates.

    Then one evening Amanda urgently needs a place to stay and accidentally bumps into Martino (Giorgio Pasotti), a solitary cinephile who works and lives in the Museum, located near the burger joint where she works. He takes her in, and things begin to change for everybody.

    Martino hardly talks at all. For him life on the silver screen is reality, so he sees little point in social ties or even leaving the Museum, except for trips to the fast food place when Amanda's on duty. He hates the food but buys it anyway as a pretext to be close to her. He is so unobtrusive that she had never before noticed him, but for Martino, she is the dear if distant object of his total affection. He actually creates a film about the history of Turin, embedded within which are shots of Amanda taken from a distance.

    Buster Keaton is Martino's role model for conducting a relationship with a woman. The Keaton formula for success in love necessitates a series of struggles, pratfalls and temporary defeats ending in shy, glancing kisses and handholding. When circumstances dictate that Amanda stay in hiding at the Museum for several days, Martino proceeds to approach her in the Keaton manner. This isn't exactly Amanda's cup of tea. Their cavorting over the ensuing days is one of the more endearingly humorous sequences in recent cinema.

    Once Amanda is reunited with Angelo, he senses immediately that something has changed. He cleans up his romantic act, but his reforms come too late to neutralize Amanda's affection for Martino. Inspired by watching Buster Keaton take on a gigantic man to win the favors of the woman he loves, Martino comes to challenge Angelo. Priding himself on being 'principled,' Angelo proposes that, rather than him and his gang beating Martino to a pulp, the two lovers should instead let Amanda choose between them and abide by her decision. But she will not choose, leading to some amusingly awkward dates for the trio.

    The story is narrated by a sage fellow (Silvio Orlando, never seen) who treats the viewer almost as a godlike partner, joining him in enjoying the follies of these three earthlings. Actually it's four: I've left out Amanda's roommate, Barbara (Francesca Picozza, also making her film debut here), a beautician with horrid hair and makeup who lusts after Angelo and believes that love is always a zero sum game.

    All four principal roles are well acted. Distinctions in personalities of the characters are made vividly clear. Miss Inaudi is captivating. She is poised - confident, relaxed and natural - in her movements and speech, and has ivory skin, warm almond eyes, and a sweet, simple little smile that charms. But for me there's nothing quite as sexy as a broken looking nose on a woman (I think of Kristin Scott Thomas, for example), and Inaudi's marvelous shnozz looks like she took a tough blow sometime long ago, though most likely this feature of her anatomy is genetic.

    In fact, the most striking member of the cast is the Museum itself. Built between 1863 and 1889 as a Synagogue, it is one of Europe's largest masonry buildings. The City of Turin has owned the place since before the turn of the last century, and it was entirely remodeled in the late 90s so that the Cinema Museum could be relocated from the Palazzo Chiablese to these more dramatic quarters.

    The place has been designed to function something like the Guggenheim Museum in Manhattan, though it's much larger and more grand. The dominant feature of the building is a giant cupola. Now a glass walled elevator takes visitors high up into the cupola, from where they can descend, strolling on an inclined walkway that spirals downward past numerous displays on movie themes. The main floor houses a richly upholstered theater for larger screen presentations.

    The love triangle is, of course, too unstable to last, and it doesn't. Things do sort themselves out in the end, in a manner that, in the final scene, poetically entwines the boundaries of reality and cinema in the most visually lovely manner. This film reflects an inspired level of imagination on the part of Davide Ferrario, who wrote as well as directed. Its self-styled connections to great cinema from the past are not for a moment pretentious. This is a respectful homage, and, besides that, it's one terrific movie. (In Italian) My rating: 8.5/10 (A-). (Seen on 04/28/05). If you'd like to read more of my reviews, send me a message for directions to my websites.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Italian censorship visa # 97944 delivered on 19-4-2004.
    • Connections
      Features Le feu (1916)
    • Soundtracks
      Ricominciamo
      (1979)

      Performed by Adriano Pappalardo.

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • July 6, 2005 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • Italy
    • Official sites
      • Italian official website
      • United States website
    • Language
      • Italian
    • Also known as
      • Après Minuit
    • Filming locations
      • Turin, Piedmont, Italy
    • Production companies
      • Rossofuoco
      • Fargo Film
      • Film Commission Torino-Piemonte
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $50,469
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $7,634
      • Dec 5, 2004
    • Gross worldwide
      • $1,635,458
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 32 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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