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Golden Door

Original title: Nuovomondo
  • 2006
  • PG-13
  • 1h 58m
IMDb RATING
6.8/10
5.3K
YOUR RATING
Charlotte Gainsbourg and Vincenzo Amato in Golden Door (2006)
Theatrical Trailer from Miramax
Play trailer1:40
1 Video
45 Photos
DramaHistoryRomance

A Sicilian peasant begins the journey to the promised land and meets a beautiful Englishwoman. But neither is prepared for the harsh realities of Ellis Island. Can they make it through the g... Read allA Sicilian peasant begins the journey to the promised land and meets a beautiful Englishwoman. But neither is prepared for the harsh realities of Ellis Island. Can they make it through the golden door to the America of their dreams?A Sicilian peasant begins the journey to the promised land and meets a beautiful Englishwoman. But neither is prepared for the harsh realities of Ellis Island. Can they make it through the golden door to the America of their dreams?

  • Director
    • Emanuele Crialese
  • Writer
    • Emanuele Crialese
  • Stars
    • Charlotte Gainsbourg
    • Vincenzo Amato
    • Vincent Schiavelli
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.8/10
    5.3K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Emanuele Crialese
    • Writer
      • Emanuele Crialese
    • Stars
      • Charlotte Gainsbourg
      • Vincenzo Amato
      • Vincent Schiavelli
    • 37User reviews
    • 100Critic reviews
    • 74Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 22 wins & 29 nominations total

    Videos1

    The Golden Door
    Trailer 1:40
    The Golden Door

    Photos45

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    Top cast89

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    Charlotte Gainsbourg
    Charlotte Gainsbourg
    • Lucy Reed
    Vincenzo Amato
    Vincenzo Amato
    • Salvatore Mancuso
    Vincent Schiavelli
    Vincent Schiavelli
    • Marriage Broker - on board ship
    Aurora Quattrocchi
    Aurora Quattrocchi
    • Fortunata Mancuso
    Francesco Casisa
    Francesco Casisa
    • Angelo Mancuso
    Filippo Pucillo
    Filippo Pucillo
    • Pietro Mancuso
    Federica De Cola
    • Rita D'Agostini
    Isabella Ragonese
    Isabella Ragonese
    • Rosa Napolitano
    Filippo Luna
    Filippo Luna
    • Don Ercole
    Andrea Prodan
    • Mister Del Fiore
    Ernesto Mahieux
    Ernesto Mahieux
    • Dottor. Zampino
    Marcelo Benassi
    • Il Gatto
    • (as Paride Benassai)
    Giuseppe Sangiorgi
    • Uomo Olive
    Alessandra Fazzino
    • Santa
    Giuseppe Culino
    • Dottore
    • (as Giuseppe Cutino)
    Massimo Laguardia
    • Mangiapane
    • (as Massimo La Guardia)
    Antonio Castrignanò
    • Musicista 1
    Paul Perry
    • Ufficiale d'Immigrazione
    • Director
      • Emanuele Crialese
    • Writer
      • Emanuele Crialese
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews37

    6.85.2K
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    Featured reviews

    8greenylennon

    The Land of Plenty

    Some days ago, in Rome, a young Romanian man with criminal precedents assaulted and tortured to death a middle-age lady coming back home after an afternoon of shopping. A Romanian girl, who had seen everything, reported what happened.

    Therefore, it started a debate about the too much intense flow of immigrants from Romania, generalizing them as criminals, everyone, indiscriminately.

    I'm only 15, but I thought: what idea of affluence does Italy give to these poor people? How ever do they regard us as the Land of Plenty? Yesterday evening I finally saw NUOVOMONDO, and my question had an answer. When you have only a donkey and some goats, those propaganda postcards showing United States as a land with milk rivers and huge vegetables, makes such an impression.

    NUOVOMONDO is really a must-see film. It balances an ethereal symbolism (milk rivers, glances' play, hard and rocky mountains, the name and character Lucy/Luce) and a cruel realism (the mass of hopeful people on the ship, the procedures at Ellis Island). There's a mixed cast, going from the angelic Charlotte Gainsbourg to the realistic Vincenzo Amato, till a bitter and smashing Aurora Quattrocchi as the mother. But was it really so hard to enter in the New World?
    9howard.schumann

    A magical, mystery tour

    Enhanced by the expressive cinematography of Agnes Godard (Beau Travail), Golden Door is a visually striking tone poem that follows the journey of a peasant family from their primitive home in Sicily to Ellis Island in New York at the turn of the century. It is a surreal, enigmatic, often strange, but ultimately deeply rewarding experience. Interweaving dreamlike and symbolic imagery with gritty realism, the latest film by Emanuele Crialese (Respiro) is like an impressionistic painting - a cinematic artist's rendering of what the immigration process may have been like for our parents and grandparents. Crialese's "magical, mystery tour" came about as a result of his visit to the museum on Ellis Island, the looks on the faces of the immigrants depicted in photographs he saw, and his research into the harsh policies and procedures used during the admission of immigrants.

    Guided by letters he read of immigrants sent to relatives who remained at home, Crialese identifies with those impoverished immigrants who were able to see the positive side of things beyond their ordeal. To Salvatore Mancuso (Vincenzo Amato) and his older son Angelo (Francesco Casisa), America is a distant dream that they know nothing about. After climbing a rocky mountain to pray to the saints for a sign, they are rewarded when they are shown post cards by Salvatore's younger son, Pietro (Filippo Pucillo), a deaf mute, that depict the new world as a land where they can bathe in rivers of milk, sit under a money tree, or harvest giant onions and carrots.

    After disposing of their animals in exchange for shoes and suits, Salvatore, his two sons, and his elderly mother Fortunata (Aurora Quattrocchi) set out on their adventure with more hope than trepidation but the equation soon shifts the other way. As they board the boat and settle into their crowded third-class steerage compartments, the most-talked about scene in the film takes place. Using an overhead camera that shows masses of people standing, as the ship pulls away, the frame is divided into those aboard the ship and those waving goodbye from the dock and the way they are separated implies they are being torn asunder from everything familiar.

    Aboard the ship is a mysterious English woman named Lucy (Charlotte Gainsbourg). Crialese does not reveal her past or the reason she is traveling to America but she seems to stand for the onset of the modern world they are entering. Though they eye each other cautiously, Lucy becomes interested in Salvatore and asks him to marry her in order to allow her to enter the country. The voyage is treacherous with a violent storm buffeting the ship. Shot in almost complete darkness, passengers in steerage are tossed against the side of the boat and, afterward, bodies lie tangled and twisted on the floor as if in a macabre Totentanz. The rite of passage through immigration processing at Ellis Island does not become any easier and Crialese attacks the way illiterate peasants, in the name of preserving "civilized" society, are forced to put puzzles together, perform mathematical tasks, and undergo humiliating medical examinations to prove they are "fit".

    A marriage brokering ceremony feels like an auction block and the young women look despondent when they are matched with overweight middle-aged men. This is the only way they can enter the "Golden Door", however, since single women are rejected unless they have partners, ostensibly to prevent the threat of prostitution. Through the fog the immigrant's can barely see the land of milk and honey and there is no Statue of Liberty asking for the tired and the poor, the humbled masses yearning to breathe free. In their imagination, however, the river is still flowing, waiting for them to jump in. Though the ending is ambiguous and one door opens on to a blank wall, another door symbolizes a rebirth of the soul and the passage we must all take from the old world to the new.
    8juju-bee

    Excellent Movie, Surprisingly Factually Correct

    This review is in response to the submission wondering how factually correct the movie was...

    Saw this movie last year and found it inspiring that hopeful immigrants, like my Italian grandparents who came through Ellis Island at the turn of the last century, would subject themselves to all manner of invasive inspection just to enter America.

    It was certainly eye opening, since my grandparents never spoke of anything terrible while there. My grandmother was 5-years old and my grandfather 18 when they arrived.

    I just returned from a trip to New York where I had the pleasure of visiting Ellis Island and the museum actually walks you through the immigration evaluation process - The filmmaker obviously did his research, right down to the medical exams and equipment, questions and puzzles. They are all there at the museum. Even the wedding pictures and the review board room -- Factually correct! Anyone who has immigrant grandparents should see this movie. Inspirational to say the least.
    JohnDeSando

    Nobody ever said Chaplin was boring.

    So now I have a very good idea what my immigrant grandparents went through traveling by boat from Italy and through Ellis Island aka "Golden Door" in the early part of the twentieth century. Emanuel Crialese's Golden Door amply describes the primitive living circumstances that motivate these adventurers to leave home, the cramped weeks aboard a steamer, and the indignities. In fact, the director is so precise that most of the tale lumbers through the details of living and then processing at the island to the detriment of engaging story telling.

    The only relief from the boredom (like the voyage) is the occasional Fellini-like impressionism: One prominently has characters swimming in milk (as in the "land of milk and honey") more than once. It could be argued that the director doesn't prepare the audience for the abrupt transitions into the formalist episodes, but I felt relief with them.

    By contrast Mira Nair's recent Namesake is superior in telling an interesting story about identity and the new world, and Chaplin's Immigrant (1917) makes the boat ride a model of slapstick and the restaurant scene not only humorous but telling about the challenges immigrants inevitably face. Nobody ever said Chaplin was boring.

    Charlotte Gainsbourg stands out as Lucy, a husband-seeking Brit whose literate background makes her useful, and whose role as a strong, beautiful woman allows the film to explore the prejudices against women. She is unforgettable when she and other women sit in a room awaiting the magistrate's permission to marry a man often the woman is meeting for the first time. That a woman would need a man to qualify for entry into America may not be so anachronistic given Hilary needing Bill to make her political career in the twenty first century.

    Agnes Godard's cinematography is often the salvation of a scene, for instance when she catches two mountain climbers with rocks in their mouths deftly negotiating a rock-strewn hill top to arrive at a shrine. Mostly she photographs the climbers close up to keep the adventurous sense of surprise. Then she reduces them to just more rubble as she pulls back into a major bird's eye view losing them slowly just as their journey across the Atlantic will reduce them again.

    It's a slow journey.
    8Red-125

    "The Golden Door" personalizes the immigrant experience

    "Nuovomondo (2006)" (shown in the U.S. as "The Golden Door") was written and directed by Emanuele Crialese. This film is different--and, I think, better--than most movies about impoverished people who leave Europe and come to the United States.

    The film begins with scenes in a poor, rural region of Sicily. We always hear that Sicily is a rocky island, but you won't really understand the implications of that phrase until you see the first half-hour of "The Golden Door."

    The middle section of the film is devoted to the long voyage to the U.S. Most immigration films show us ten minutes of people in the third-class section becoming seasick, and then show us the Statue of Liberty. Not this movie--we get a sense for life below decks, and it isn't charming. (We never actually see the Statue of Liberty, either.)

    Finally, the typical movie will give us another ten minutes of Ellis Island, and then the immigrants are walking through New York's Lower East Side. Not here--the Ellis Island experience occupies about one-third of the footage.

    Vincenzo Amato is outstanding as Salvatore Mancuso, who is bringing his two sons and his mother to the new world. Charlotte Gainsbourg is equally good as Lucy Reed, a mysterious Englishwoman who also speaks fluent Italian.

    There are some strange touches in the movie, especially the sound track with songs by Nina Simone. There must be some symbolism there, but I couldn't make sense of it.

    Another reviewer has already pointed out that this film will do better viewed in a theater rather than on DVD. Still, large screen or small screen, it's worth seeking out.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Director Emanuele Crialese personally chose every one of the 700 extras who appeared in the film. He said he was looking for people who could evoke the same facial expressions of the actual immigrants whose photographs Crialese came across when he was researching the film.
    • Quotes

      Lucy Reed: Madam? Madam. Could you lower your voice? I have a headache.

      Fortunata Mancuso: Then have one! What do I care? Who does she think she is? This is the last thing I need. A journey like this ahead and she has a headache.

    • Connections
      Edited into Appunti per un viaggio alle radici dell'emigrazione vista al cinema... (2010)
    • Soundtracks
      Feeling good
      Words and Music by Leslie Bricusse and Anthony Newley, Adapted and Performed by Nina Simone

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    FAQ19

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • September 22, 2006 (Italy)
    • Countries of origin
      • Italy
      • France
    • Official sites
      • Miramax (United States)
      • Official site
    • Languages
      • Italian
      • English
      • Sicilian
    • Also known as
      • 燦爛新人生
    • Filming locations
      • Buenos Aires, Federal District, Argentina
    • Production companies
      • Rai Cinema
      • Respiro
      • Memento Films Production
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • €10,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $1,070,769
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $27,744
      • May 27, 2007
    • Gross worldwide
      • $7,228,273
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 58 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
      • DTS
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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