After 40 years of absence, Felice returns to his hometown: Naples. He rediscovers the places, the codes of the city and a past that eats away at him.After 40 years of absence, Felice returns to his hometown: Naples. He rediscovers the places, the codes of the city and a past that eats away at him.After 40 years of absence, Felice returns to his hometown: Naples. He rediscovers the places, the codes of the city and a past that eats away at him.
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Beautiful film, intense characters. I was in la Sanita recently and actually spent time at the church of Don Luigi in the film and heard all about the Catholic local church movement rehabilitating the catacombs and the area, and the youth reclaming their neighbourhood. Naples has a soul and Nostalgia portrays that well. Loved that the film did not sugarcoat the city, and kept grit and all... the filming conveys a true to life filter. The real Naples still reeks of its history of violence and behind the Italian cliche romance, a lot of people have lived in fear. Beautiful movie and flowing acting. Loved the Oreste character portrayal. Nice fusion of Arabic culture as well.
This is the kind of movie that is very strange to me. Don't tell that to anyone, but coming from a Sicilian family, anything that happens in a city where the Napolitan mafia scares everyone, looks very familiar. Felice left Napoli 40 years before, and comes back to a city that looks like what he remembers, but feels completely different. He first comes back to see his dying mom, and spend some times with her before going back to his wife in Egypt. After 40 years, Felice has become Muslim, and has troubles speaking Italian (he usually speaks Arabic). He comes back to a Catholic Napoli, where the Catholic priest is leading the war against the Camorra, and its boss 'O malommo' (the bad man). Felice reminisces about his past, about an 'Oreste' that was his best friend, who defended him and helped him in every way, and you wonder what happened to him. As you go through his childhood in Napoli, the parallel is made with current Napoli, with the Catholic priest showing Felice that not everything is great, but that he is trying and giving everything he can to the kids of the neighbourhood, so that they get out of the Camorra's influence. The actors are great, and the story all too familiar to me, and I really liked that movie. Yes, the ending is expected, but it couldn't have been any other way.
Wow! A true masterpirce of cinematography!
This is a touching story showing the genuine power of time and its consequences.
Embraces the true feeling of nostalgia and memories, evem if aaccepting the new reality is difficult and not the reality you wished for, ehn coming back to your city of youth and to not know where you identify as your home.
It explores how time changes us as individuals and how our actings is based on our different experiences in life. Only to live up to the present of time in this moment.
Beautifully filmed and amazing manuscript aswell as the flowing acting. Interesting and deep characters.
Fantastic music!
The memory flashbacks is very well made and edited into the storyline!
Amazing and beautiful storytelling!
A difficult film to watch that really shows the difficulties when you no longer can trust your own mind and will and the accepta ce of the new reality.
The environment is also perfect and stunning filming and views of the city.
PURE ART!
I really recommend it!
This is a touching story showing the genuine power of time and its consequences.
Embraces the true feeling of nostalgia and memories, evem if aaccepting the new reality is difficult and not the reality you wished for, ehn coming back to your city of youth and to not know where you identify as your home.
It explores how time changes us as individuals and how our actings is based on our different experiences in life. Only to live up to the present of time in this moment.
Beautifully filmed and amazing manuscript aswell as the flowing acting. Interesting and deep characters.
Fantastic music!
The memory flashbacks is very well made and edited into the storyline!
Amazing and beautiful storytelling!
A difficult film to watch that really shows the difficulties when you no longer can trust your own mind and will and the accepta ce of the new reality.
The environment is also perfect and stunning filming and views of the city.
PURE ART!
I really recommend it!
Pierfrancesco Favino is "Felice", who returns to his native Naples to find his elderly mother "Teresa" (Aurora Quattrocchi) living in a basement apartment, rarely washing and taking much care of herself. He determines to hang around and help her get back on her feet whilst at the same time working with the local priest "Luigi" (Francesco Di Leva) to reunite with his childhood friend "Spasiano" (Tommaso Ragno) who has meantime become the elusive local criminal kingpin. It has been many a year since "Felice" could consider himself a local, and the city is largely new and unfamiliar to him, as is the angry and violent criminal fraternity that holds much of the place in it's grip. Can he meet and reconcile with his erstwhile friend? Is he even safe to do so? This is a great looking film capturing well the beauty and the turmoil of this ancient city whilst director Mario Martone offers us a chance to relive some of the memories this, now Muslim and married, visitor recalls as he retraces many of the steps of his childhood. There is very little joy in this film, it's a rather depressing affair that at times really does labour the despair facing many in this community. That's not to say it isn't worth watching, but after a while I felt drained and a bit confused before an ending that I couldn't quite get my head around. Anger? Spite? Pity, even? It's a long watch and I probably wouldn't ever watch it again - but I am glad that I did, once.
Naples, Camorra, crime, revenge. You feel as if not much can be added. But Martone gives it a good shake, and mostly succeeds. Some elements - the returning Neapolitan's aged mother - seem fresh and touching. Others - the priest who has the whole district on a string - are not new.
You can sort of half-guess the ending, and as it drew closer, I'm murmuring, let's not go there. If you reinterpret the ending as opportunistic rather than planned, nostalgic rather than spiteful, that might help get you over the line.
For pop connoisseurs, there's an obscure psychedelic 1967 track. Not 13th Floor Elevators, or Cryan' Shames, but "Greengrass" by The Ones.
You can sort of half-guess the ending, and as it drew closer, I'm murmuring, let's not go there. If you reinterpret the ending as opportunistic rather than planned, nostalgic rather than spiteful, that might help get you over the line.
For pop connoisseurs, there's an obscure psychedelic 1967 track. Not 13th Floor Elevators, or Cryan' Shames, but "Greengrass" by The Ones.
Did you know
- TriviaOfficial submission of Italy for the 'Best International Feature Film' category of the 95th Academy Awards in 2023.
- How long is Nostalgia?Powered by Alexa
Details
Box office
- Gross worldwide
- $3,015,604
- Runtime
- 1h 57m(117 min)
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1
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