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Fireworks

Original title: Stranizza d'amuri
  • 2023
  • 2h 14m
IMDb RATING
7.6/10
3.1K
YOUR RATING
Gabriele Pizzurro and Samuele Segreto in Fireworks (2023)
Trailer for the gay Italian romance/drama, Fireworks.
Play trailer2:11
1 Video
18 Photos
Coming-of-AgeTragic RomanceDramaRomance

The troubled relationship between Gianni and Nino, set in the narrow-minded and prejudicial Sicily of 1982.The troubled relationship between Gianni and Nino, set in the narrow-minded and prejudicial Sicily of 1982.The troubled relationship between Gianni and Nino, set in the narrow-minded and prejudicial Sicily of 1982.

  • Director
    • Giuseppe Fiorello
  • Writers
    • Giuseppe Fiorello
    • Andrea Cedrola
    • Carlo Salsa
  • Stars
    • Gabriele Pizzurro
    • Samuele Segreto
    • Simona Malato
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.6/10
    3.1K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Giuseppe Fiorello
    • Writers
      • Giuseppe Fiorello
      • Andrea Cedrola
      • Carlo Salsa
    • Stars
      • Gabriele Pizzurro
      • Samuele Segreto
      • Simona Malato
    • 17User reviews
    • 19Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 7 wins & 6 nominations total

    Videos1

    Fireworks
    Trailer 2:11
    Fireworks

    Photos18

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    + 13
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    Top cast28

    Edit
    Gabriele Pizzurro
    • Nino Scalia
    Samuele Segreto
    • Gianni Accordino
    Simona Malato
    • Lina, la mamma di Gianni
    Fabrizia Sacchi
    Fabrizia Sacchi
    • Carmela Scalia, la mamma di Nino
    Antonio De Matteo
    • Alfredo Scalia
    Enrico Roccaforte
    • Franco
    Roberto Salemi
    • zio Pietro
    Giuseppe Spata
    • zio Ciccio
    Simone Raffaele Cordiano
    • Totò
    • (as Raffaele Cordiano)
    Giuditta Vasile
    • Isabella Scalia
    Anita Pomario
    • Giuseppina
    Alessio Simonetti
    Alessio Simonetti
    • Turi
    Marta Castiglia
    • Marta
    Daniela Macaluso
    • Mamma Marta
    Giuseppe Lo Piccolo
    Giuseppe Lo Piccolo
    • Emmanuele
    Toti Mancuso
    • Priest
    Alessio Micieli
    • Giovane Muratore
    Felice Napolitano
    • Operaio Michele
    • Director
      • Giuseppe Fiorello
    • Writers
      • Giuseppe Fiorello
      • Andrea Cedrola
      • Carlo Salsa
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews17

    7.63.1K
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    Featured reviews

    10saturatedgrey

    Declaration of Love

    Firework is strange. We take risks with what is potentially dangerous, and turn them into something beautiful. The explosion of gunpowder, rocket propelling skyward, to the stunning array of colors within.

    While asking "what's your favorite color?" is considered a cliché for a first date, we commonly associate colors with our emotions. I believe it's because we experience life through a spectrum of colors from our earliest moments, from picking up our first crayon to gazing in awe at fireworks. When we take the time to delve deeper and ask why someone favors a certain color or what memories it evokes, we uncover a trove of life experiences, nothing less than a carefully crafted questions.

    Love is strange. We take risks with what is potentially dangerous, and turn them into something beautiful. Now do i only understand that love is like firework, and it is the most powerful declaration of emotions.

    Just like how Gianni and Nino's love ignited the establishment of the world's first Arcigay Association.
    10eltonlevin

    Authentic yet whimsical

    This movie captivates the senses with its meticulously crafted visuals and poignant storytelling. Every frame of this film is a testament to the director's vision, blending realism with a touch of whimsy to create an immersive experience. The deliberate pacing and composition of each shot invite the audience to engage deeply with the narrative.

    The characters are portrayed with authenticity that resonates with the times, making their journeys all the more compelling. The natural performances by the cast add a layer of sincerity to the narrative, further drawing the viewer into the world of the film. The editing complements the storytelling as well. Every frame has a purpose.

    The cinematography is truly exceptional, with each shot crafted to convey both intimacy and artistry. The setting of 1980s Italy, depicted with golden hues and a nostalgic atmosphere, adds a layer of charm to the film.
    9Mengedegna

    A gay Cavalleria Rusticana? Yes, but a very powerful one

    In the words of its director, Giuseppe Fiorello, a veteran actor here making his first film as director, "Fireworks" is a reimagining of a true, and tragic, event that occurred in a an emotionally straitened Sicily in the early 1980s. At the U. S. premiere this afternoon at Film at Lincoln Center, he stated that he made it not from any generic ambition to become a director, but from an urgent need to tell this specific story, and to tell it sincerely and without any genre encumberments - there is no post-facto investigation of the events, and no trial of the accused - only the events themselves, as seen mainly through the eyes of the two young protagonists, Gabriele Pizzuru and Samuele Segreto, who are both magnificent in their openness and spontaneity. Fiorello wanted, he said, to make this film to be about, above all, the "delicacy of adolescence" ("and we all have been adolescents," he added), and in achieving this, he chose well.

    The tale unfolds in small-town Sicily, at a time of Vespas, lire, and bellbottoms, with the 1982 FIFA World Cup as background (Italy's victories, played out locally on ancient TV screens, punctuate the action). While there are a few lovely seashore settings, this is not the Sicily of postcards, of the streets and cathedrals of Palermo or the majesty of Mt. Etna. This is a place where the earth is bruised by a huge quarry and where there is constant censure and bullying by a community of small minds, the better to enforce a stifling conformity, drawing on Mafia thugs to beat it into errant neighbors if all else fails. All this is portrayed by an ensemble cast that includes what seem like quite a few local amateurs. (For greater authenticity, the film is in the Sicilian language, with only occasional, and brief, code shifts into Italian - even the original title, "Stranizza d'amure", is in Sicilian. I assume the film must have been shown in Italy with subtitles.) In the Q&A, the still very boyish leads emphasized how working as part of such a collective of more experienced actors was deeply enriching.

    There are sequences that seem a bit overstaged (again, this is a début film), but this matters less and less as the boys meet by accident (literally, in a motorbike collision - too cute? Possibly, but very nicely done), and form an instant friendship that moves on to what,, in this setting, becomes far more perilous. Gianni is absorbed into Nino's welcoming extended family, and eventually joins Nino in his father's fireworks business (hence the English title). The intensity of all the many intersecting relationships increases bit by bit, reaching an almost unbearable level, until the hammer blows of local reality strike unforgivingly.

    Bring plenty of Kleenex for this one, but, with its powerful social and dramatic subtext, the film is something far more moving and meaningful than any simple weepy could ever be. Is it a bit operatic? Yes, for sure, but, as at the end of any decent performance of Mascagni's Sicilian masterpiece, you wipe away your tears and jump up to shout Bravo - as the audience this afternoon indeed did. May the fickle gods of U. S. distribution get this terrific gem onto as many screens as possible!
    Kirpianuscus

    a confession

    Maybe honesty is the basic virtue of this film about teenagers, their love, about Sicily and answers to what can not be accepted .

    It is a film of details, landscapes, people, tastes, colors, forms of seduction and intimancy.

    And , in same measure, it is an admirable expression of freshness , from acting to dialogue, from the moments of pure happiness to clashes in so many senses.

    A true story sounds, foer many reasons, a good kick to see it. But Stranizza d amuri has the precious gift to be an universal story, out of gay case, out of a place from Europe, out of cliches or melodrama.

    In many senses, a simple confession about love, people and rules of a land.
    10FilippoCarcaci

    Authentic in its own way

    As a Sicilian who was 13 during the World Cup, I find incredible levels of authenticity together with a representation of the places and of the social relationship that resembles more the 50s than the 80s. Nevertheless this film has given me real emotions, and appreciate the effort not to sugarcoat anything. But the story between the boys is so real and intense, and so delicate, didn't really need to have a brutal background to come forward. Maybe it was all like that, but that would have been a bit of an outlier, the place where the facts happened is a tourist destination and a commercial hub. Yet I've given 10 because in some places and at some time every single piece of land, language, dialogue, emotions, behaviour would have been real, and they are all portrayed magnificently.

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    • Trivia
      This film has a 100% rating based on 9 critic reviews on Rotten Tomatoes.

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • March 23, 2023 (Italy)
    • Country of origin
      • Italy
    • Languages
      • Italian
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Stranizza d'amuri
    • Production companies
      • Ibla Film
      • Fenix Entertainment
      • Rai Cinema
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Gross worldwide
      • $1,349,188
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      2 hours 14 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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