L’Immensità (2022) Film Review from the 45th Annual Sundance Film Festival, a movie directed by Emanuele Crialese, starring Penélope Cruz, Vincenzo Amato, Luana Giuliani, Patrizio Francioni, María ...
L’immensità (2022)’s plot synopsis: “Clara & Felice (Penélope Cruz & Vincenzo Amato) have just moved into a new apartment. Their marriage is over: they no longer love each other but can’t break up.
Premiering in Venice competition, Italian director Emanuele Crialese’s deeply autobiographical work also explores a trans boy's first recognition of his gender dysphoria. By Leslie Felperin ...
Italian director Emanuele Crialese broke out with 2002 Cannes Critics Week winner “Respiro,” followed by “Nuovomondo” and “Terraferma,” which both scooped prizes in Venice. He’s back on the Lido with ...
Even before the title flashes up for Venice Film Festival competition entry L’Immensita, we know that Penelope Cruz is the most fun mom – most likely the only fun mom – in town. She doesn’t just set ...
The Spanish icon's star power is both an asset and a distraction in Italian director Emanuele Crialese's first film in over a decade, occasionally pulling focus from arresting newcomer Luana Giuliani.
Italian director Emanuele Crialese’s deeply autobiographical work sees Cruz playing the mother of a trans boy living in Rome in the 1970s. By Scott Roxborough Europe Bureau Chief Subscribe for full ...
“You and Dad made me wrong,” 12-year-old Andrea née Adriana (Giuliani) tells his mother, Clara (Cruz), in trying to explain his gender dysphoria in L’immensità, a vibrantly etched family drama set in ...
"What miracle do you need?" "You and dad made me wrong." Music Box Films has revealed the official US trailer for the Italian film L'immensità, which originally premiered at the 2022 Venice Film ...
Emanuele Crialese put in a buoyant performance at the Venice Film Festival Sunday, during which he discussed how his identity informed his Golden Lion contender L’immensità. “The inspiration was my ...
Like “Respiro,” “L’Immensità” is centered on the troubled rapport between a powerful female character and her family, especially her children. “Respiro” was the first time I explored a female ...