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VERMIGLIO Trailer (2025) Drama Movie
VERMIGLIO Trailer (2025) Drama Movie
VERMIGLIO Trailer (2025) Drama Movie
© 2025 - Janus Films
"Men who come back from war. They have secrets." Janus Films has revealed the official US trailer for an acclaimed Italian film called Vermiglio, which is also the name of the town (which is real) the film takes place in. This premiered at the 2024 Venice Film Festival, where it won the second place Jury Prize, a major award right after the Golden Lion. 1944, a remote mountain village. The arrival of Pietro, a deserter, into the family of the local teacher, and his love for the eldest daughter, will change the course of everyone's life. Vermiglio shows the lives of a provincial family in a remote village suspended in time by the customs of a fading era - set right at the end of WWII. "Conjuring stories from her own family's past, Delpero creates a deeply personal and human tale that recalls the great neo-realist movement in Italian cinema, but through Lucia's perspective Vermiglio feels distinct & novel." With Tommaso Ragno, Roberta Rovelli, Martina Scrinzi, and Giuseppe De Domenico. The film is also Italy’s submission to the Academy Awards. Really stunning, beautiful film! Gorgeous mountain cinematography with a ravishing story about family and love.
Here's the official US trailer (+ poster) for Maura Delpero's film Vermigilio, direct from YouTube:
Vermiglio Film
Vermiglio Poster
The lush and breathtaking beauty of the Alps, filmed with painterly grace under natural light from frigid winter to redemptive spring, provides the physical & emotional backdrop for Vermiglio, Maura Delpero's visionary film, which won the Silver Lion at the Venice Film Festival. This singular portrait of a sprawling family, set in the mountainous village of Vermiglio during the waning days of WWII, follows a series of dramatic, consequential events after the arrival of a taciturn Sicilian soldier (Giuseppe De Domenico) who hides out in town after deserting the army. While there, the soldier develops a romance with the family's eldest daughter, Lucia (Martina Scrinzi). Vermigilio is written and directed by Italian filmmaker Maura Delpero, director of the films Nadea e Sveta and Maternal. Produced by Francesca Andreoli, Maura Delpero, Santiago Fondevila, and Leonardo Guerra Seràgnoli. This initially premiered at the 2024 Venice Film Festival, where it won the Silver Lion Grand Jury Prize. Janus Films will debut Delpero's Vermigilio in select US theaters starting December 25th, 2024 coming soon. Check the local art house theater listings.
Here’s your first official look at Vermiglio, the second feature from Italian filmmaker Maura Delpero.
Written and directed by Delpero, the pic, a portrait of a sprawling family, takes its title from a mountain village in the Italian Alps, which was home to the director’s family for generations.
The drama opens in the village in 1944. Largely cut off from the war across Europe, the arrival of a deserted soldier disrupts the life of the village teacher and his family as the eldest daughter falls for him, leading to an unexpected turn of fate.
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The film debuted at this year’s Venice Film Festival where it won the Silver Lion. It went on to pick up Best European Film and Best European Director noms at the European Film Awards and a Best Foreign Language Film nod from the Golden Globes.. The film has also been picked to represent Italy in the Best International Feature category at the 97th Academy Awards. Delpero is the first woman to represent Italy in 19 years.
Watch on Deadline
The film was shot by Mikhail Krichman (Leviathan). Starring are Tommaso Ragno, Giuseppe De Domenico, Roberta Rovelli, and Martina Scrinzi. Producers are Francesca Andreoli, Leonardo Guerra Seràgnoli, Maura Delpero, Santiago Fondevila Sancet, Carole Baraton, Pauline Boucheny Pinon, Jacques-Henri Bronckart, and Tatjana Kozar.
Sideshow and Janus Films will release the film in the US starting Dec 25. Sideshow and Janus Films together have received six Oscar nominations in three years including four for Drive My Car. This year they are also campaigning Payal Kapadia’s All We Imagine as Light in all categories and are handling Gints Zilbaldis’ Flow, the Latvian Oscar entry and Animated Feature contender. Charades and Anonymous Content are handling international sales.
Check out the trailer above.
Read More About:
Janus Films
Sideshow
Vermiglio
After receiving a nomination at the 82nd annual Golden Globes for Best Motion Picture – Non-English Language, Janus Films has released the trailer for Maura Delpero’s “Vermiglio.”
READ MORE: The 20 Best Films Of 2024
Written and directed by Delpero, the film stars Tommaso Ragno, Giuseppe De Domenico, Roberta Rovelli, and Martina Scrinzi. It received critical acclaim during its respective festival runs at Venice and Toronto and is Italy’s Official Submission for Best International Feature Film at the 97th Academy Awards.
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Here is the plot synopsis:
“In Vermiglio, a mountain village high up in the Italian Alps, war looms as a distant but constant threat. The arrival of Pietro, a deserted soldier, disrupts the dynamics of the local teacher’s family, changing them forever. During the four seasons marking the end of World War II, Pietro and Lucia, the eldest daughter of the teacher, are instantly drawn to each other leading to an unexpected fate. As the world emerges from tragedy, the family will face its own.”
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Produced by Delpero, Francesca Andreoli, Leonardo Guerra Seràgnoli, Santiago Fondevila Sancet, Carole Baraton, Pauline Boucheny Pinon, Jacques-Henri Bronckart, and Tatjana Kozar, the film will be released in select theatres on December 25 before expanding to more areas this January.
Watch the trailer below:
Vermiglio is one of those great films that's hard to fully capture in writing, because it is and does so many things. It won the Grand Jury Prize at the 2024 Venice Film Festival (essentially second place) and is gaining steam as Italy's submission to the Oscars, which paints one picture. It's an indie box office hit in its own country, which paints another. It's artful, atmospheric, and observant; a slice-of-life film told in a hushed tone. It's dedicated to recreating a specific time and place and dropping us into it. There's a gentle steadiness to the way it moves.
Drama
Set in post-World War II Italy, Vermiglio explores the transformative journey of three sisters living in a small mountain village, prompted by the arrival of a soldier. The film chronicles their personal growth and the evolution of their relationships amidst the backdrop of a changing world.
Release Date
December 25, 2024
Runtime
119 minutes
Cast
Tommaso Ragno , Roberta Rovelli , Giuseppe De Domenico , Carlotta Gamba , Orietta Notari , Sara Serraiocco , Santiago Fondevila
Director
Maura Delpero
Writers
Maura Delpero
It's also a family dramedy, well-plotted, and equal parts poignant and funny. Though the movie never has to raise its voice, it's not passive; as it studies character, it also builds narrative. Its themes are many, and they somehow all feel fully explored, but to call it multifaceted would belie the wholeness of it. Vermiglio achieves a kind of cohesion that I can only really explain by waving my hands and invoking the magic of cinema.
Vermiglio Is A Portrait Of A Time, A Place & A Family
With A Romance As Its Key Story Thread
The principal grace of Vermiglio, and its most immediately striking feature, is specificity. It's named for the remote village in the mountainous northern region of Trentino-Alto Adige, and while it's importantly Italian, the rest of the world feels miles away. The dialogue is almost entirely in the local dialect (the film plays subtitled in Italian theaters), and writer-director Maura Delpero is very attuned to the rhythms of daily life here. We develop a sense of this place very quickly, and with each step forward, our understanding deepens.
Though Vermiglio can feel like a village out of time, the film is crucially set in 1944; among the movie's many identities is a war film with no battles. The story centers on a particular family after two deserting soldiers have arrived at their doorstep. One is kin, nephew to Cesare (Tommaso Ragno), our patriarch, and the village schoolteacher. The other, Pietro (Giuseppe De Domenico), is Sicilian, meaning he may as well be from another planet. He's quiet but seems kind, and he quickly catches the eye of Cesare's oldest daughter, Lucia (Martina Scrinzi).
Pietro on top of Lucia as they gaze intently at each other in Vermiglio
Their budding romance is the most prominent story thread, but the rest of the family is under the camera's watchful eye, too. Sometimes we're watching them individually – Ada (Rachele Potrich), the middle of three sisters, is both the most obedient and the most pious. But she's discovered desire and self-pleasure, and as much as she wants to stay well-behaved, she finds resisting exceedingly difficult. Her journey through this struggle, which involves monastic acts of penance she designs for herself as (ineffective) deterrents, is endearingly funny.
The effect of the whole is that you feel as if you're really seeing lives being lived.
Sometimes we're watching their dynamic as a collective. The bonding between sisters, who share a room and huddle for nightly whispers. Cesare's preference for Flavia (Anna Thaler), his sharp youngest daughter, who he wants to send for further education instead of Ada, who greatly desires it. Little Pietrin (Enrico Panizza) and his adoration for his older brother Dino (Patrick Gardner), who is eternally at odds with his father. The constant pregnancy of the mother, Adele (Roberta Rovelli), at a time when not all infants survive, and how everyone processes that closeness of life and death.
Vermiglio's Beautiful Images Are Fueled By Empathy
Which Traces Back To The Movie's Genesis
Cesare smoking near an open window and looking contemplative in Vermiglio
Each scene in Vermiglio seems to serve several purposes, and I could spend this full review untangling them, examining the feelings and ideas captured in each. But the effect of the whole is that you feel as if you're really seeing lives being lived. Films are, by nature, selective, and the experiences of women in this constricted time are a focus of Delpero's selections. But it's clear everyone on camera is someone she finds interesting.
After seeing it the first time, in Venice, this feeling is what struck me the most. Vermiglio is one of the year's most beautiful films, and cinematographer Mikhail Krichman uses light in a way that gives the images a velvety softness. Despite the film being exceptionally snowy – consider it in the canon of great wintery atmospheres – its gaze is warm. The camera is unfailingly honest about what it sees but still relays that truth to us lovingly.
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1
I noticed this most in how we come to understand Cesare. As the chief instrument of patriarchal will, he is the subject of much critique, often guilty of centering himself at the expense of his loved ones. Delpero gives voice to the grievances of his wife and children and shows us they're merited. But Vermiglio also approaches him with great empathy, and not just through the depth of feeling in Ragno's stoic performance. The film sees his beliefs and ambitions. He, too, chafes against the smallness of his life.
When I learned later that Delpero based this family on her own, I understood. Vermiglio was born from the exercise of imagining her father's life as a child, as a way of processing her grief over his passing, and the emotion that brought her to the film has remained in it. How, exactly, I cannot say; I wonder if Delpero herself could pin it down. But whatever went into the alchemy of her process, the resulting art leaves a lingering impression.
Vermiglio releases in US theaters on Wednesday, December 25. The film is 119 minutes long and is not yet rated.
The arrival of a young army deserter from the South during the final year of World War II sends ripples through a remote mountain community, profoundly impacting the extended family of a local school teacher in this intimate drama that garnered multiple awards at the 2024 Venice Film Festival.
Congratulations to the Vermiglio team on making the shortlist for Best International Feature Film for the 97th Academy Awards!
Showtimes
Saturday, January 11, 2025
Mary Pickford 11-14
11:30 AM Reserve Now
film details
Director: Maura Delpero
Producers: Francesca Andreoli, Leonardo Guerra Seràgnoli, Maura Delpero, Santiago Fondevila Sancet
Screenwriter: Maura Delpero
Cinematographers: Mikhail Krichman
Editor: Luca Mattei
Music: Matteo Franceschini
Cast: Tommaso Ragno, Giuseppe De Domenico, Roberta Rovelli, Martina Scrinzi, Orietta Notari, Carlotta Gamba, Santiago Fondevila Sancet
Country: Italy
Language: In Italian with English subtitles
Year: 2024
Running Time: 119 minutes
Director Filmography: Maternal (2019)
Awards: Silver Lion - Grand Jury Prize, Sorriso Diverso Venezia Award for Best Italian Film, NUOVOIMAIE Talent Award for Best New Young Actress, La Pellicola d'Oro Award for Best Chief Electrician, Venice International Film Festival; Gold Hugo, Chicago International Film Festival
Primary Company: Sideshow
Vermiglio
International release poster
Directed by Maura Delpero
Written by Maura Delpero
Produced by Francesca Andreoli
Maura Delpero
Santiago Fondevila
Leonardo Guerra Seràgnoli
Starring Giuseppe De Domenico
Tommaso Ragno
Cinematography Mikhail Krichman[1]
Edited by Gian Luca Mattei[1]
Production
companies
Cinedora
Charades
Versus Production
Rai Cinema
Distributed by
Lucky Red (Italy)
Release date
September 2, 2024 (Venice)
Running time 119 minutes
Countries Italy
France
Belgium
Languages Ladin, Italian
Box office $2.6 million[2]
Vermiglio is a 2024 drama film written, co-produced and directed by Maura Delpero. The film premiered at the 81st Venice International Film Festival, where it won the Grand Jury Prize.[3] It was designated as the Italian entry for Best International Feature Film at the 97th Academy Awards.[4]
Plot
1944, Vermiglio, a remote mountain village. The arrival of Pietro, a deserter, into the family of the local teacher, and his love for the teacher's eldest daughter, will change the course of everyone's life.
Cast
Giuseppe De Domenico
Tommaso Ragno
Martina Scrinzi
Roberta Rovelli
Carlotta Gamba
Orietta Notari
Sara Serraiocco
Production
Principal photography started on 28 August 2023,[1] and shootings wrapped in December.[5] The film was shot between the Vermiglio, Carciato and Comasine towns in the Trentino-Alto Adige region.[6] It is produced by Cinedora (Italy), Charades (France), and Versus (Belgium).[7] Delpero decided to make the film after her father's death as a way to help ensure that the traditions in which he had grown up were not lost, including conducting many interviews with local people during pre-production.[8][9]
Release
The film world-premiered in competition at the 81st Venice International Film Festival.[10][11] It made its North American premiere at the 49th Toronto International Film Festival.[12]
It was featured in the Limelight section of the 54th International Film Festival Rotterdam to be screened in February 2025.[13]
Reception
Critical response
The film received general positive reviews by critics.[14][15] On the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, 90% of 21 critics' reviews are positive, with an average rating of 8.1/10.[16] Metacritic, which uses a weighted average, assigned the film a score of 81 out of 100, based on 10 critics, indicating "universal acclaim".[17]
Jessica Kiang of Variety affirmed that "economy" is the watchword of "deceptively formalist" film, that results from "deceptively formalist" direction, editing, musical compositions to costumes, contributing "to a fascinating narrative remove, which is belied by the close-up clarity of the imagery". Kiang wrote that although the plot is set in the past, it "operates like a future family secret playing out in the present tense" through " the spirit of the mothers and the sisters and the daughters who came before and after, and who trusted the imperious mountains to keep their secrets".[18]
Italian critics
The film received favorable reviews from Italian film critics.[19][20] Mattia Pasquini of Ciak wrote that like the previous film Maternal the screenplay is about the mother-child relationship set on an "extremely refined framework, both linguistically, stylistically and narratively coherent and homogeneous".[21] Federico Pontiggia of Cinematografo stated that the film draws on "[Delpero's] prior documentary experience with greater ambition, free will and calmness," observing that "the direction of actors is excellent, the anti-spectacle concept is cohesive and confident, the poetry of war and peace is marvelous. Here we have a consummate auteur: Maura Delpero."[22]
Accolades
Award Year Category Recipient(s) Result Ref.
Venice Film Festival 3 September 2024 Golden Lion Maura Delpero Nominated [23]
Grand Jury Prize Won [24]
Sorriso Diverso Venezia Award for Best Italian Film Won [25]
NUOVOIMAIE Talent Award for Best New Young Actress Martina Scrinzi Won
La Pellicola d'Oro Award for Best Chief Electrician Kristian De Martiis Won
Chicago International Film Festival 27 October 2024 Gold Hugo Vermiglio Won [26]
Camerimage 23 November 2024 Golden Frog for Best Cinematography Mikhail Krichman Nominated [27]
Gotham Awards 2 December 2024 Best International Feature Maura Delpero, Francesca Andreoli, Santiago Fondevila Sance, Leonardo Guerra Seràgnoli Nominated [28]
European Film Awards 7 December 2024 European Film Vermiglio Nominated [29]
European Director Maura Delpero Nominated
San Diego Film Critics Society 9 December 2024 Best Foreign Language Film Vermiglio Nominated [30]
Golden Globe Awards 5 January 2025 Best Motion Picture – Non-English Language Nominated [31]
See also
List of submissions to the 97th Academy Awards for Best International Feature Film
List of Italian submissions for the Academy Award for Best International Feature Film
References
Balaga, Marta (1 September 2023). "'Zero Zero Zero' Star Giuseppe De Domenico Joins 'Vermiglio, the Mountain Bride,' First Images Debut". Variety. Retrieved 24 July 2024.
"Vermiglio". The Numbers. Retrieved December 29, 2024.
Wiseman, Andreas; Tartaglione, Nancy (2024-09-07). "Venice Winners: Pedro Almodóvar's 'The Room Next Door' Wins The Golden Lion; Also Wins For Nicole Kidman, Brady Corbet, 'I'm Still Here' & More". Deadline Hollywood. Retrieved 2024-09-07.
"Il film italiano agli Oscar è 'Vermiglio', Leone d'argento a Venezia". la Repubblica (in Italian). 2024-09-24. Retrieved 2024-09-24.
Redazione (18 December 2023). "Fine riprese per Vermiglio, la sposa di montagna". ANSA. Retrieved 24 July 2024.
Scarpa, Vittorio (19 December 2023). "Ultimo ciak per Vermiglio, la sposa di montagna di Maura Delpero". Cineuropa (in Italian). Retrieved 5 September 2024.
Goodfellow, Melanie (30 August 2024). "'Vermiglio' Teaser: Maura Delpero's Charades-Sold Drama Capturing Past Lives In An Italian Mountain Village Is A Venice Golden Lion Contender". Deadline Hollywood. Retrieved 6 September 2024.
Finos, Arianna (2 September 2024). ""Vermiglio", la regista Maura Delpero: "Partita dal nulla sono arrivata a Venezia e ne sono felice". Tommaso Ragno: "Il lusso del film è prendersi del tempo"". La Repubblica (in Italian). Retrieved 5 September 2024.
Barone, Martina (2 September 2024). "Vermiglio, nella grandezza del suo paesaggio, racconta le piccole tradizioni del passato". GQ Italia (in Italian). Retrieved 5 September 2024.
Rosser, Michael; Parfitt, Orlando (23 July 2024). "Venice Film Festival reveals 2024 line-up". Screen International. Retrieved 24 July 2024.
L.S. (23 July 2024). "Vermiglio al Festival del cinema di Venezia". NOS Magazine (in Italian). Retrieved 24 July 2024.
"The TIFF '24 schedule is now live on tiff.net and includes 20 new additions to the slate". TIFF. 13 August 2024. Retrieved 2024-09-24.
"Limelight: Vermiglio". International Film Festival Rotterdam. Retrieved 7 January 2025.
Wise, Damon (3 September 2024). "'Vermiglio' Review: Maura Delpero's Personal Tale Of Wartime Infidelity In The Italian Alps – Venice Film Festival". Deadline Hollywood. Retrieved 5 September 2024.
Felperin, Leslie (2 September 2024). "'Vermiglio' Review: Sprawling Italian World War II Drama Engages and Impresses, but Never Rivets". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved 5 September 2024.
"Vermiglio". Rotten Tomatoes. Fandango Media. Retrieved 24 September 2024.
"Vermiglio". Metacritic. Fandom, Inc. Retrieved 25 December 2024.
Kiang, Jessica (2 September 2024). "'Vermiglio' Review: A Grave and Gorgeous Hymn to Life and Death in a Midcentury Italian Alpine Village". Variety. Retrieved 5 September 2024.
Donzelli, Mauro (2 September 2024). "Vermiglio: la recensione del film di Maura Delpero in concorso al Festival di Venezia". Comingsoon.it (in Italian). Retrieved 5 September 2024.
Nizza, Paolo (3 September 2024). "Vermiglio, la recensione del film in concorso a Venezia 2024". Sky TG24 (in Italian). Retrieved 5 September 2024.
Pasquini, Mattia (3 September 2024). "Vermiglio, la recensione del film che ha conquistato Venezia". Ciak (in Italian). Retrieved 5 September 2024.
Pontiggia, Federico (2 September 2024). "Maura Delpero trova guerra e pace in formato famiglia: brava, bravissima, tra Olmi e Philibert in Concorso". Cinematografo (in Italian). Retrieved 5 September 2024.
Lattanzio, Ryan (2024-07-23). "Venice Film Festival 2024 Lineup Revealed". IndieWire. Retrieved 2024-10-26.
"Official awards of the 81st Venice International Film Festival". La Biennale di Venezia. 2024-09-07. Retrieved 2024-10-26.
"Collateral awards of the 81st Venice Film Festival". La Biennale. Archived from the original on September 7, 2024. Retrieved September 6, 2024.
Blauvelt, Christian (2024-10-25). "Chicago International Film Festival Awards Top Prizes to Vermiglio', All We Imagine as Light". IndieWire. Retrieved 2024-10-26.
Giardina, Carolyn (30 October 2024). "Gladiator 2, Dune 2, Blitz Among Camerimage's 2024 Main Competition Lineup". Variety. Retrieved 30 October 2024.
"The Gothams Announce Award Nominees for 34th Edition". The Gotham. 2024-10-29. Retrieved 2024-10-30.
Shafer, Ellise (5 November 2024). "European Film Awards Nominations: Emilia Pérez, The Substance, The Room Next Door and More Up for Best Film". Variety. Retrieved 5 November 2024.
"2024 San Diego Film Critics Society Nominations". San Diego Film Critics Society. 2024-12-06. Retrieved 2024-12-07.
VanHoose, Benjamin (December 9, 2024). "2025 Golden Globe Nominations: 'Wicked,' 'The Substance,' 'The Bear' and 'Shōgun' All Score". People.com. Retrieved December 9, 2024.
External links
Vermiglio at IMDb
vte
Venice Film Festival Grand Jury Prize
vte
Italian submissions for Academy Award for Best International Feature Film
Categories: 2024 films2024 drama films2020s Italian films2020s Belgian films2020s French films2020s Italian-language filmsFilms set in Trentino-Alto Adige/SüdtirolFilms shot in Trentino-Alto Adige/SüdtirolVenice Grand Jury Prize winners
Vermiglio ou
La Mariée des montagnes
Données clés
Titre original Vermiglio
Réalisation Maura Delpero
Scénario Maura Delpero
Pays de production
Drapeau de l'Italie Italie
Drapeau de la France France
Drapeau de la Belgique Belgique
Genre drame
Durée 91 minutes
Sortie 2024
Pour plus de détails, voir Fiche technique et Distribution.
modifier
Vermiglio ou La Mariée des montagnes est un film italien réalisé par Maura Delpero et sorti en 2024.
Il est présenté en compétition à la Mostra de Venise 2024 où il remporte le Grand prix du jury.
Synopsis
Les trois sœurs Lucia, Ada et Flavia vivent sous le même toit dans le village de montagne italien de Vermiglio avec leur père excentrique, professeur au village. Les sœurs partagent le même lit. C'est la dernière année de la Seconde Guerre mondiale et le conflit est omnipresent.
Un soldat déserteur blessé Pietro se présente au domicile de la famille et épouse Lucia, la sœur aînée qui laisse ses sœurs avec leur père. Celles-ci se sentent désavantagées et leur relation devient conflictuelle.
Pietro et Lucia ont un enfant. Pietro à la fin de la guerre est tué d'un coup de feu lors d'un voyage en Sicile, son pays natal, laissant une veuve et une fille1,2,3.
Fiche technique
Icône signalant une information Sauf indication contraire ou complémentaire, les informations mentionnées dans cette section peuvent être confirmées par le site IMDb.
Cette section est vide, insuffisamment détaillée ou incomplète. Votre aide est la bienvenue ! Comment faire ?
Titre : Vermiglio ou La Mariée des Montagnes
Réalisation et scénario : Maura Delpero
Photographie : Mikhaïl Kritchman
Pays de production : Drapeau de l'Italie Italie Drapeau de la France France Drapeau de la Belgique Belgique
Genre : drame
Durée : 119 minutes
Dates de sortie :
Italie : 2 septembre 2024 (Mostra de Venise 2024)
France : 19 mars 2025 (Date sujette à modification)
Distribution
Giuseppe De Domenico :
Tommaso Ragno :
Production
Cette section est vide, insuffisamment détaillée ou incomplète. Votre aide est la bienvenue ! Comment faire ?
Distinctions
Récompense
Mostra de Venise 2024 : Grand prix du jury4
Nomination
Golden Globes 2025 : Meilleur film en langue étrangère
Sélection
Mostra de Venise 2024 : sélection en compétition5
Notes et références
(en)Eric Lavallée: 2024 Venice Film Festival Predictions: Luca Guadagnino, Brady Corbet & Dea Kulumbegashvili. [archive] In: ioncinema.com, 19. juillet 2024.
(en)https://www.film.idm-suedtirol.com/de/funding/produktionsspiegel/vermiglio-o-la-sposa-di-montagna/65643 [archive]
(de)Edith Runer: Die Bergbraut. [archive] In: idm-suedtirol.com, 29 mars 2024.
Etienne Sorin, « Mostra de Venise : Pedro Almodovar, Lion d’or consensuel avec The Room next door [archive] », sur Le Figaro, 7 septembre 2024 (consulté le 7 septembre 2024).
« Almodóvar, “Joker 2”, Tim Burton : la Mostra de Venise 2024 révèle sa sélection [archive] », sur lesinrocks.com, 23 juillet 2024
Liens externes
Ressources relatives à l'audiovisuel : AllMovieAllocinéIMDbRotten TomatoesThe Movie Database
Ressource relative à plusieurs domaines : Metacritic
[afficher]
v · m
Grand prix du jury de la Mostra de Venise
[afficher]
v · m
Film représentant l'Italie à l'Oscar du meilleur film international
icône décorative Portail du cinéma italien icône décorative Portail des années 2020
Catégories : Film italien sorti en 2024Film dramatique italienFilm en italienGrand prix du jury à la Mostra de VeniseFilm nommé aux Golden Globes
All We Imagine as Light
Promotional poster
Directed by Payal Kapadia
Written by Payal Kapadia
Produced by
Thomas Hakim
Julien Graff
Starring
Kani Kusruti
Divya Prabha
Chhaya Kadam
Hridhu Haroon
Cinematography Ranabir Das
Edited by Clément Pinteaux
Music by
Topshe
Emahoy Tsegué-Maryam Guèbrou
Production
companies
Petit Chaos
Chalk & Cheese
BALDR Film
Les Films Fauves
Another Birth
Pulpa Films
Arte France Cinéma
Distributed by
Condor Distribution (France)
Spirit Media (India)
September Film (Netherlands)
Release dates
23 May 2024 (Cannes)
21 September 2024 (India)
2 October 2024 (France)
Running time 115 minutes
Countries
France
India
Netherlands
Luxembourg
Italy
Languages Malayalam
Hindi
Marathi
Box office $2.4 million[1]
All We Imagine as Light is a 2024 drama film written and directed by Payal Kapadia. The cast includes Kani Kusruti, Divya Prabha, Chhaya Kadam and Hridhu Haroon. Featuring Malayalam, Hindi, and Marathi dialogue, it was an international co-production involving companies from France, India, Netherlands, Luxembourg and Italy.
The film had its world premiere at the main competition of the 77th Cannes Film Festival on 23 May 2024, where it was nominated for the Palme d'Or and won the Grand Prix.[2][3] It was the first film from India to compete in the main competition since Swaham in 1994.
It received a limited release in Kerala, India, on 21 September 2024,[4] before opening wide on 29 November 2024 to positive reviews.[5] It topped the Sight & Sound poll for best film of 2024 and was named one of the top five international films of 2024 by the National Board of Review.[6][7] At the 82nd Golden Globe Awards, the film received two nominations, for Best Foreign Language Film and Best Director.[8]
Plot
Prabha and Anu are Malayali nurses living together in Mumbai. Prabha is straitlaced and upright, and yearns for her husband who lives in Germany and had only come to India once for a short arranged marriage with her, but has not called Prabha in over a year. Anu is more outgoing, and is having a secret affair with a Muslim man named Shiaz.[9] One day, Prabha and Anu receive a modern rice cooker from an unknown sender; the cooker is made in Germany. A doctor, Manoj, tries to woo Prabha, but she rejects his advances, claiming her marital status.
Prabha tries to help the cook at their hospital, Parvaty, fight against a capitalistic builder who wants to demolish Parvaty's chawl to build a skyscraper. Unable to claim legal tenancy, Parvaty decides to quit her job and move back to her village in Ratnagiri. Prabha and Anu travel with her, to help her relocate.
Unbeknownst to Prabha and Parvaty, Shiaz has followed Anu. They secretly meet up and have sex, which Prabha discovers. Meanwhile, Prabha rescues a middle-aged man from drowning by resuscitating him with CPR. While he is waiting for the local doctor, Prabha cleans and cares for him. She begins having a conversation with him, transforming him into her husband. He apologises for abandoning her and seeks her apology, but she tells him that she does not want to see him ever again.
Late at night at a beach shack, Prabha asks a surprised Anu to invite Shiaz to sit with herself and Parvaty. They all chat happily, as the lights of the shack shine over them.
Cast
Kani Kusruti as Prabha
Divya Prabha as Anu
Chhaya Kadam as Parvaty
Hridhu Haroon as Shiaz
Azees Nedumangad as Dr. Manoj
Tintumol Joseph as Nurse Shanet
Anand Sami as Drowned Man
Production
The film was produced by Thomas Hakim and Julian Graff through their French-based company Petit Chaos, in co-production with the Indian companies Chalk & Cheese and Another Birth, as well as by the Netherlands's BALDR Film, Luxembourg's Les Films Fauves, Italy's Pulpa Films and France's Arte France Cinéma. Hakim first met Kapadia at the 68th Berlin International Film Festival in 2018. This was the first feature film produced by Chalk & Cheese, which previously produced commercials for nine years.[10][11]
Kapadia used money from the Huub Bals grant and Cinéfondation to reside in Europe in order to plan the film production with Hakim. Financing for the film was obtained from Arte, Cineworld, CNC, Condor, Eurimages, Gan Foundation, Hubert Bals Fund, Luxbox, Pulpa Film, and Visions Sud Est.[10]
Filming was done in Mumbai over the course of twenty-five days and then in Ratnagiri for fifteen days.[10]
Release
Actresses Chhaya Kadam, Divya Prabha, director Payal Kapadia, actress Kani Kusruti, and actor Hridhu Haroon at a press conference at 2024 Cannes Film Festival
All We Imagine as Light was selected to compete for the Palme d'Or at the 2024 Cannes Film Festival, where it had its world premiere on 23 May,[12] and received an eight minute standing ovation at the end of its screening.[13][14] This is the first film from India to compete in the main competition at Cannes since Swaham in 1994, and Kapadia is the first Indian female filmmaker to do so.[10] It won the Grand Prix, becoming the first Indian film to do so.[15]
On 9 September 2024, it was announced that Spirit Media, founded by Indian actor Rana Daggubati, had acquired Indian distribution rights to the film.[16] Spirit Media announced that the film would begin its Oscar-qualifying release with a limited theatrical release in Kerala starting on 21 September under the Malayalam title 'പ്രഭയായ് നിനച്ചതെല്ലാം' i.e. Prabhayay Ninachathellam.[17]
The film has been selected as the opening film for the MAMI Mumbai Film Festival 2024.[18] The film will be released theatrically in India on 22 November 2024.[19][20]
Janus Films and distribution partner Sideshow acquired the North American rights for the film on 20 May 2024,[21] and released the film on 15 November 2024 in New York and Los Angeles, with a nationwide expansion planned.[22] The film was also played at the Toronto International Film Festival on 5 September 2024.[23] It was released in France by Condor Distribution on 2 October 2024.[24] It was featured in the accolades section of the 55th IFFI,[25][26] and Limelight section of the 54th International Film Festival Rotterdam to be screened on 30 January 2025.[27]
Reception
Critical response
On the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, 100% of 126 critics' reviews are positive, with an average rating of 8.5/10. The website's consensus reads: "Capturing the here and now of modern India with the spontaneity of a candid photograph, All We Imagine as Light is a lustrous achievement that announces Payal Kapadia as an essential filmmaker."[28] Metacritic, which uses a weighted average, assigned the film a score of 94 out of 100, based on 33 critics, indicating "universal acclaim".[29] On AlloCiné, the film received an average rating of 3.8 out of 5, based on 31 reviews from French critics.[30]
Peter Bradshaw, writing in The Guardian, gave the film five stars and praised it as an "absorbing story of three nurses that is full of humanity".[31] Nicholas Barber, writing in the BBC, also gave the film five stars.[32]
The British film magazine Sight & Sound named it the best film of 2024 in its poll of over 100 critics worldwide.[6]
The film was ranked 5th among the top 25 European works of 2024 by the journalists at Cineuropa.[33]
Academy Awards selection controversy
For the 97th Academy Awards, All We Imagine As Light was not selected to be submitted by either France or India, with the former submitting Emilia Pérez, and the latter submitting Laapataa Ladies. The film had been shortlisted for France's submission.[34] The Film Federation of India's (FFI) decision to not submit the film was unexpected, with NPR's Diaa Hadid remarking that the film's international reception had "garnered raised hopes that India might finally have a serious contender for an Oscar in the best foreign film category".[35] Many like Naman Ramachandran of Variety drew comparisons to India's decision to not select The Lunchbox (2013) and RRR (2022) for its Academy Awards submissions, particularly in light of the film's success at the Cannes Film Festival with it having won the Grand Jury Prize.[36]
At the initial news announcing the selection of Laapataa Ladies, FFI president Ravi Kottarakara explained All That We Imagine As Light's exclusion, saying "The jury said that they were watching a European film taking place in India, not an Indian film taking place in India."[37] Justifying its selection, the FFI noted on Laapataa Ladies, "Indian women are a strange mixture of submission and dominance. Well-defined, powerful characters in one world, a Laapataa Ladies (Hindi) captures this diversity perfectly, though in a semi-idyllic world and in a tongue-in-cheek way."[37] Kapadia responded to the controversy by expressing her appreciation for Kiran Rao's works, saying to Indiewire "I just think it’s really great that there are two films from India that are doing this well, and they’re both by women."[38]
On December 17, the Academy of Motion Pictures, Arts and Sciences released its shortlist for a variety of categories, including best International Feature Film, and India's selection (Laapataa Ladies) was not selected, triggering a renewed discussion on the decision to "snub" the film.[39] Industry figures like director Hansal Mehta and Ricky Kej publicly voiced their discontent with the FFI's decision to not send All We Imagine As Light, with the former sarcastically remarking "Film Federation of India does it again! Their strike rate and selection of films year after year is impeccable."[40]
In light of the renewed controversy following the release of the Academy Award shortlist, Jahnu Barua, the head of the 13-member all-male jury remarked to the Hindustan Times that people ought to be "respectful of the process".[41] Elaborating on the decision to not consider All That We Imagine As Light, Barua said "The jury felt that her film was very poor technically."[41]
Accolades
Award Date of ceremony Category Recipient(s) Result Ref.
Cannes Film Festival 25 May 2024 Palme d'Or Payal Kapadia Nominated [42]
Grand Prix Won [43]
Prix des Cinémas Art et Essai – Special Mention Won [44]
Sydney Film Festival 16 June 2024 Best Film All We Imagine as Light Nominated [45]
San Sebastián International Film Festival 28 September 2024 RTVE-Another Look Award Won [46]
Chicago International Film Festival 27 October 2024 Gold Hugo Nominated [47]
Silver Hugo – Jury Prize Won [48]
Montclair Film Festival 28 October 2024 Fiction Feature Prize Won [49]
Cahiers du Cinéma 2024 Annual Top 10 5th place [50]
Kyiv International Film Festival "Molodist" 2 November 2024 Best Full Length Film Won [51]
Asia Pacific Screen Awards 30 November 2024 Best Film All We Imagine as Light Nominated [52]
Best Director Payal Kapadia Nominated
Best Screenplay Nominated
Best Performance Kani Kusruti Nominated
Best Cinematography Ranabir Das Nominated
Jury Grand Prize All We Imagine as Light Won [53]
Gotham Awards 2 December 2024 Best Director Payal Kapadia Nominated [54]
[55]
Best International Feature Payal Kapadia, Thomas Hakim, Julien Graff Won
New York Film Critics Circle 3 December 2024 Best International Film All We Imagine as Light Won [56]
National Board of Review 4 December 2024 Top Five International Films Won[a] [57]
British Independent Film Awards 8 December 2024 Best International Independent Film Payal Kapadia, Thomas Hakim, Julien Graff Nominated [58]
Astra Film Awards 8 December 2024 Best International Feature All We Imagine as Light Nominated [59]
Los Angeles Film Critics Association 8 December 2024 Best Foreign Language Film Won [60]
San Diego Film Critics Society 9 December 2024 Best Foreign Language Film Won [61]
Chicago Film Critics Association 11 December 2024 Milos Stehlik Award for Breakthrough Filmmaker Payal Kapadia Nominated [62]
[63]
Best Foreign Language Film All We Imagine as Light Won
Phoenix Critics Circle 13 December 2024 Best Foreign Language Film Won [64]
St. Louis Film Critics Association 15 December 2024 Best International Feature Film Nominated [65]
San Francisco Bay Area Film Critics Circle 15 December 2024 Best International Feature Film Nominated [66]
Toronto Film Critics Association 15 December 2024 Best Director Payal Kapadia Runner-up [67]
Best Original Screenplay Won
Best International Feature All We Imagine as Light Won
New York Film Critics Online 16 December 2024 Best International Feature Won [68]
Dallas–Fort Worth Film Critics Association 18 December 2024 Best Foreign Language Film 3rd place [69]
Dublin Film Critics' Circle 19 December 2024 Best Film Nominated [70]
Black Film Critics Circle 19 December 2024 Best Foreign Film Won [71]
Philadelphia Film Critics Circle 21 December 2024 Best Foreign Film Won [72]
Florida Film Critics Circle 21 December 2024 Best International Film Won [73]
Best Ensemble Nominated
Best Director Payal Kapadia Nominated
Online Association of Female Film Critics 23 December 2024 Best International Feature All We Imagine as Light Won [74]
North Texas Film Critics Association 30 December 2024 Best Foreign Language Film Nominated [75]
Columbus Film Critics Association 2 January 2025 Best Foreign Language Film Runner-up [76]
North Carolina Film Critics Association 3 January 2025 Best Foreign Language Film Won [77]
Kansas City Film Critics Circle 4 January 2025 Best Foreign Language Film All We Imagine as Light Nominated [78]
DiscussingFilm Critic Awards 4 January 2025 Best International Feature Film All We Imagine as Light Runner-up [79]
Greater Western New York Film Critics Association 4 January 2025 Best Foreign Language Film All We Imagine as Light Nominated [80]
National Society of Film Critics 4 January 2025 Best Film All We Imagine as Light Runner-up [81]
[82]
Best Film Not In English Language Won
Best Director Payal Kapadia Won
Golden Globe Awards 5 January 2025 Best Foreign Language Film All We Imagine as Light Nominated [83]
Best Director Payal Kapadia Nominated
Georgia Film Critics Association 7 January 2025 Best International Film All We Imagine as Light Runner-up [84]
Alliance of Women Film Journalists 7 January 2025 Best International Film All We Imagine as Light Nominated [85]
[86]
Best Director Payal Kapadia Nominated
Best Original Screenplay Nominated
Best Woman Director Won
Best Woman Screenwriter Won
Utah Film Critics Association 11 January 2025 Best Non-English Feature Pending [87]
Critics' Choice Movie Awards 12 January 2025 Best Foreign Language Film All We Imagine as Light Pending [88]
Hawaii Film Critics Society 13 January 2025 Best Foreign Language Film Pending [89]
North Dakota Film Society Awards 13 January 2025 Best International Feature Pending [90]
Chicago Indie Critics 18 January 2025 Best International Film Pending [91]
Lumière Awards 20 January 2025 Best Film Pending [92]
Houston Film Critics Society 22 January 2025 Best Foreign Language Feature Pending [93]
London Film Critics' Circle 2 February 2025 Film of the Year Pending [94]
Foreign Language Film of the Year Pending
Directors Guild of America Awards 8 February 2025 Michael Apted Award for Outstanding Directorial Achievement in First-Time Theatrical Feature Film Payal Kapadia Pending [95]
Independent Spirit Awards 22 February 2025 Best International Film All We Imagine as Light Pending [96]
Notes
This award does not have a single winner, but recognizes multiple films.
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Lang, Brent; Moreau, Jordan (4 December 2024). "Spirit Awards 2025 Nominations: 'Anora' and 'I Saw the TV Glow' Lead Film Categories, 'Shōgun' Rules TV". Variety. Archived from the original on 5 December 2024. Retrieved 5 December 2024.
External links
All We Imagine as Light at IMDb Edit this at Wikidata
All We Imagine as Light at Letterboxd Edit this at Wikidata
Awards for All We Imagine as Light
Categories: 2024 films2024 independent films2020s Indian filmsFilms set in MumbaiIndian drama filmsIndian independent films2020s Malayalam-language films2020s Marathi-language filmsIndian multilingual filmsFilms shot in MumbaiFilms shot in RatnagiriFilms shot in MaharashtraArte France Cinéma films2020s French films2020s Italian filmsDutch drama filmsLuxembourgian drama filmsItalian drama filmsFrench drama filmsCannes Grand Prix winnersFilms about nurses
Film
Titel Vermiglio
Produktionsland Italien, Frankreich, Belgien
Originalsprache Solander Dialekt, Italienisch
Erscheinungsjahr 2024
Länge 119 Minuten
Stab
Regie Maura Delpero
Drehbuch Maura Delpero
Produktion Francesca Andreoli, Maura Delpero, Santiago Fondevila, Leonardo Guerra Seràgnoli
Musik Matteo Franceschini
Kamera Michail Kritschman
Schnitt Gianluca Mattei
Besetzung
Tommaso Ragno: Cesare
Giuseppe De Domenico: Pietro
Roberta Rovelli: Adele
Martina Scrinzi: Lucia
Orietta Notari: Tante Cesira
Carlotta Gamba: Virginia
Rachele Potrich: Ada
Anna Thaler: Flavia
Sara Serraiocco:
Vermiglio (internationaler englischsprachiger Titel Vermiglio, the Mountain Bride, auch Vermiglio o la sposa di montagna) ist ein Filmdrama von Maura Delpero. Der Film, der in dem gleichnamigen italienischen Bergdorf im Trentino spielt, feierte Anfang September 2024 bei den Internationalen Filmfestspielen von Venedig seine Premiere, wo er im Wettbewerb für den Goldenen Löwen gezeigt wurde. Ebenfalls im September 2024 kam der Film in die italienischen Kinos. Eine erste Vorstellung in Belgien ist im Oktober 2024 beim Film Fest Gent geplant. Der Kinostart in Frankreich ist im März 2025 geplant, in Deutschland Anfang Juni 2025. Vermiglio wurde von Italien als Beitrag für die Oscarverleihung 2025 als bester Internationaler Film eingereicht.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
1 Handlung
2 Produktion
2.1 Regie und Drehbuch
2.2 Besetzung und Dreharbeiten
2.3 Postproduktion
2.4 Marketing und Veröffentlichung
3 Rezeption
3.1 Kritiken
3.2 Auszeichnungen
4 Weblinks
5 Einzelnachweise
Handlung
Vermiglio liegt am Passo del Tonale
Die drei Schwestern Lucia, Ada und Flavia leben im italienischen Bergdorf Vermiglio unter einem Dach mit ihrem exzentrischen Vater Cesare und ihrer Mutter Adele. Sie sind keine Kinder mehr, aber auch noch keine Frauen. Ihr Vater ist der Lehrer im Dorf, und die Schwestern teilen sich ein Bett. Es ist das letzte Jahr des Zweiten Weltkrieges. Dieser ist zwar weit weg, aber doch allgegenwärtig.
Als der fahnenflüchtige Soldat Pietro, der sich in ihrem Dorf versteckt, bei ihnen auftaucht, heiratet er Lucia, die älteste Schwester. Sie lässt ih
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