Nic Cassino, vedette de films d'action, se rend en Italie pour relancer sa carrière en jouant dans un film novateur, mais le tournage dérape, et le retour espéré se transforme en une suite d... Tout lireNic Cassino, vedette de films d'action, se rend en Italie pour relancer sa carrière en jouant dans un film novateur, mais le tournage dérape, et le retour espéré se transforme en une suite de mésaventures hilarantes.Nic Cassino, vedette de films d'action, se rend en Italie pour relancer sa carrière en jouant dans un film novateur, mais le tournage dérape, et le retour espéré se transforme en une suite de mésaventures hilarantes.
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This film reminded me of what the movies used to be. It was packed with great quirky characters and fun scenes. And the beautiful scenery shots are a bonus. While the movie is pitched with Domenic Purcell at its center, actors such as Ugo Dighero and Miriam Candurro were the highlights for me.
I'm sure more experienced reviewers and cynics can find things to criticize but I thought this movie was fun and funny and touching and beautifully shot. The movie loves Italy and I'm sure Italy will love it back. And to realize the original lead actor passed away in the middle of shooting just makes it more impressive.
I'm looking forward to watching this movie again. And I'm looking forward to seeing more from the Ciota brothers.
I'm sure more experienced reviewers and cynics can find things to criticize but I thought this movie was fun and funny and touching and beautifully shot. The movie loves Italy and I'm sure Italy will love it back. And to realize the original lead actor passed away in the middle of shooting just makes it more impressive.
I'm looking forward to watching this movie again. And I'm looking forward to seeing more from the Ciota brothers.
I really liked this film. Funny and often times poignant. The underlying premise of the movie sets up for a bunch of true and honest laughs and keeps things very interesting. The acting is great and the backstory of personal growth for Purcell's character is very interesting to watch develop. But the star of the show is the would be director seeking to return to his (imagined) past glory. He is a real comedic presence and his interaction with his family and would be in laws brought many laughs to me and my wife. The scenery of the locale is also quite beautiful and the director captured this beauty well. We truly enjoyed it.
I really enjoyed the movie. It had some poignant moments, as well as some hilarious scenes. A solid film with an interesting plot about a stunt man having to reinvent himself, with a director that needed a spark and found it surreptitiously.
The casting of the actors was absolutely spot on. And all of the characters seemed familiar, but with an Italian flair in most cases.
The acting was also quite solid for such an independent film. The screenwriting was solid, and the sets and scenery was fantastic as well.
And with some beautiful panorama shots of Italy and ischia. Can't wait to visit Ischia some day. It was gorgeous on film.
The casting of the actors was absolutely spot on. And all of the characters seemed familiar, but with an Italian flair in most cases.
The acting was also quite solid for such an independent film. The screenwriting was solid, and the sets and scenery was fantastic as well.
And with some beautiful panorama shots of Italy and ischia. Can't wait to visit Ischia some day. It was gorgeous on film.
With the recent Paramount / Republic Pictures release of Cassino in Ischia, starring Australian leading man, Dominic Purcell (Prison Break), the filmmaking tandem of brothers Joseph A. Ciota (writer) and Frank Ciota (director) continues its string of quality feature films, all of which bear their signature warmth and humor while giving us inside peeks at quirkily original slices of modern Italian-American family life on our shores -- The North End (1997), Stiffs (2010) -- as well as Americans trying their hands at making a living and a loving in the old country -- Ciao, America! (2002), Cassino in Ischia (2024).
For our protagonist, Joseph A. Ciota has drawn for us a shallow self-absorbed internationally famous actor, Nic Cassino, star of the wildly popular Spike and Death Trap super hero franchises. However, diminishing roles, along with kudos unforthcoming have triggered for Cassino a belated midlife crisis. Add to that some painful soul searching over a decades-old family grudge, and we can understand why the great Nic Cassino might want to lay low for a while, somewhere no one would recognize him.
Such a place turns out to be the Italian island town of Ischia, part of an ancient volcanic archipelago on the Gulf of Naples. It is here that the Ciota brothers deftly shed sympathetic light on this otherwise prototypical ugly American. In an industry which dispenses rejection like vagrancy fines to the homeless, Cassino's bravado and bluster bely the phobia-ridden superstar's repressed insecurities. Also, a number of sly references, visual and verbal, indirect and otherwise, to the Rocky franchise serve to underscore the underdog aspect of Cassino's character.
Like many successful leaders before them, the Ciotas, who also serve as executive producers on the project, have assembled a very talented cabinet, with a cast and crew comprised almost exclusively of native Italians. With principal photography having been shot on the gorgeous island location and thereabouts, it fell to cinematographer Patrizio Patrizi to help capture the primeval beauty of the place, and that is just what he and director Frank Ciota have done. At once vivid and lush, the outdoor photography is richly saturated with color. Scenes are never visually static. Individual shots within a particular scene flow smoothly into and out of one another, and meld together with the natural beautiful subtlety of the Mediterranean swallowing a setting Sun.
This film is a joy: original in story, assured throughout in tone, paced to perfection, and exceptionally pretty to look at.
Cassino in Ischia 113 mins, Dramatic Comedy, 13+, 2024, 4 Stars
Sent from AOL on Android.
For our protagonist, Joseph A. Ciota has drawn for us a shallow self-absorbed internationally famous actor, Nic Cassino, star of the wildly popular Spike and Death Trap super hero franchises. However, diminishing roles, along with kudos unforthcoming have triggered for Cassino a belated midlife crisis. Add to that some painful soul searching over a decades-old family grudge, and we can understand why the great Nic Cassino might want to lay low for a while, somewhere no one would recognize him.
Such a place turns out to be the Italian island town of Ischia, part of an ancient volcanic archipelago on the Gulf of Naples. It is here that the Ciota brothers deftly shed sympathetic light on this otherwise prototypical ugly American. In an industry which dispenses rejection like vagrancy fines to the homeless, Cassino's bravado and bluster bely the phobia-ridden superstar's repressed insecurities. Also, a number of sly references, visual and verbal, indirect and otherwise, to the Rocky franchise serve to underscore the underdog aspect of Cassino's character.
Like many successful leaders before them, the Ciotas, who also serve as executive producers on the project, have assembled a very talented cabinet, with a cast and crew comprised almost exclusively of native Italians. With principal photography having been shot on the gorgeous island location and thereabouts, it fell to cinematographer Patrizio Patrizi to help capture the primeval beauty of the place, and that is just what he and director Frank Ciota have done. At once vivid and lush, the outdoor photography is richly saturated with color. Scenes are never visually static. Individual shots within a particular scene flow smoothly into and out of one another, and meld together with the natural beautiful subtlety of the Mediterranean swallowing a setting Sun.
This film is a joy: original in story, assured throughout in tone, paced to perfection, and exceptionally pretty to look at.
Cassino in Ischia 113 mins, Dramatic Comedy, 13+, 2024, 4 Stars
Sent from AOL on Android.
Yeah I get that Purcell is trying to do kind of an ego stroke of himself as a sudo documentary about his career but frankly I feel this was the bottom of the barrel for him. He's a decent actor but needs to stick to what he knows... action and drama, bc he just wasn't funny in this. He was mediocre and awkward just like his character was supposed to be which yes was the point but the film was a waste of budget. The Italian actors and actresses were better. I know alot about him by following his career and this just wasn't his best work. Dominic is you ready this...you CAN do better. Get out of your head and try harder...stay away from comedy or family movies... those are career enders for an actor like you.
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- AnecdotesRay Stevenson was originally cast as Nic Cassino, but he died early into production after feeling suddenly ill on set and had been rushed to a hospital where he died shortly after. Filming had been halted because of this, but when it resumed, the late Ray Stevenson's role was replaced by Dominic Purcell.
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- How long is Cassino in Ischia?Alimenté par Alexa
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- Durée1 heure 53 minutes
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