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IMDbPro

Respiro

  • 2002
  • PG-13
  • 1h 30m
IMDb RATING
7.0/10
5K
YOUR RATING
Valeria Golino in Respiro (2002)
Theatrical Trailer from 20th Century Fox
Play trailer1:46
7 Videos
26 Photos
ItalianDrama

On an impoverished Italian island, a free-spirited woman is accused of madness by townspeople fed up with her antics.On an impoverished Italian island, a free-spirited woman is accused of madness by townspeople fed up with her antics.On an impoverished Italian island, a free-spirited woman is accused of madness by townspeople fed up with her antics.

  • Director
    • Emanuele Crialese
  • Writer
    • Emanuele Crialese
  • Stars
    • Valeria Golino
    • Vincenzo Amato
    • Francesco Casisa
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.0/10
    5K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Emanuele Crialese
    • Writer
      • Emanuele Crialese
    • Stars
      • Valeria Golino
      • Vincenzo Amato
      • Francesco Casisa
    • 50User reviews
    • 25Critic reviews
    • 65Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 21 wins & 11 nominations total

    Videos7

    Respiro
    Trailer 1:46
    Respiro
    Respiro
    Trailer 1:45
    Respiro
    Respiro
    Trailer 1:45
    Respiro
    Respiro Scene: Come With Me
    Clip 2:13
    Respiro Scene: Come With Me
    Respiro Scene: Why Did You Run Off?
    Clip 1:41
    Respiro Scene: Why Did You Run Off?
    Respiro Scene: Get Off The Boat!
    Clip 2:52
    Respiro Scene: Get Off The Boat!
    Respiro Scene: Come Here
    Clip 2:00
    Respiro Scene: Come Here

    Photos26

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    Top Cast59

    Edit
    Valeria Golino
    Valeria Golino
    • Grazia
    Vincenzo Amato
    Vincenzo Amato
    • Pietro
    Francesco Casisa
    Francesco Casisa
    • Pasquale
    Veronica D'Agostino
    Veronica D'Agostino
    • Marinella
    Filippo Pucillo
    Filippo Pucillo
    • Filippo
    Muzzi Loffredo
    • Nonna
    Elio Germano
    Elio Germano
    • Pier Luigi
    Avy Marciano
    • Velista Francese
    Giuseppe del Volgo
    • Zio Pino
    Matteo Solina
    • Zio Antonio
    Vincenzo Barreca
    • Cefalo
    Pasquale De Rubels
    • Bufalo
    Francesco Edoardo Anglieri
    Andrea Barreca
    Donatella Battiali
    Domenico Amato
    Fernando Bartifeci
    Giovan Battista Martello
    • Director
      • Emanuele Crialese
    • Writer
      • Emanuele Crialese
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews50

    7.05K
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    Featured reviews

    10howard.schumann

    Magic realism and natural beauty

    Emanuele Crialese's Respiro is alive, sensual, and transcendent. Set in Lampedusa, an island southwest of Sicily, it is a film about mothers and sons, accepting differences, and the power of love to bring renewal and reconciliation. Gorgeously filmed by cinematographer Fabio Zamarion, Respiro captivates us with its bright Mediterranean sunlight and the expressive faces of the people, tanned and strikingly beautiful. Winner of the 2002 Cannes Critics Week award, the film is based on a local legend about a mother whose behavior was found to be offensive by the community and whose subsequent disappearance was the catalyst that brought the people together. Crialese's film has the feeling of myth and legend but also the overtones of the great Italian realist dramas of the 50s and 60s.

    As gangs of unsupervised pre-teens carry out intermittent warfare among the desolate beaches and rocky landscapes, everyday life centers on fishing. While the husbands do the fishing, wives work in the fish processing plant and the boys help out their fathers and catch fish to use as trade for a chance to win an electric train set. Grazia (Valeria Golino) is the wife of macho but loving fisherman, Pietro (Vincenzo Amato) and mother of three: 13-year old Pasquale (Francesco Casisa), younger brother Filippo (Filippo Pucillo), and older sister Marinella (Veronica D'Agostino). Golina is radiant as the headstrong young mother and Casisa's performance as Pasquale completely captures the budding sexual awareness of a pre-teen. The film reflects the warmth of the Italian family and the closeness that Italian sons feel for their mothers but also depicts the old-fashioned attitudes of the tight-knit community, especially the subjugation of women.

    In a revealing scene, Pasquale's brother, the adorable but mouthy Filippo and his friends follow his older sister Marinella to a private meeting place where she is seeking privacy with a shy young policeman, Pier Luigi (Elio Germano). Affronted by their seeming public display of affection, Filippo, less than half their size, confronts the two lovers and threatens to beat them up unless his sister goes home immediately. Unfortunately, everything is not right on the island. Grazia's behavior is increasingly defined by erratic mood swings. She flings dishes across the room, swims naked with her sons, and releases a herd of dogs from captivity, but it is not clear if she is ill or just rebellious and the film walks a tightrope between suggesting madness or the eccentricities of a free spirit.

    It is soon apparent that the community has their own thoughts about her actions and she is seen as a threat to the social order. When Grazia's antics threaten to reach the breaking point, Pietro's family decides to send her to Milan to receive psychiatric treatment. Pasquale, however, always understanding and protective of his mother, hides her in one of the many caves along the rocky shore, bringing her food and reporting news of the search for her whereabouts. The ending can be interpreted in many different ways but I was touched by its haunting beauty. Is it to be taken literally, a dream of Pasquale's perhaps, or a fairy tale constructed from legend? I'm not sure but in any case, Respiro's combination of magic realism, natural beauty, and humanistic message will have you pricing the tickets for a trip to Lampedusa.
    argv

    Tries too hard to be an artsy film

    Emanuele Crialese's `Respiro' reminds me of Woody Allen's film, `Hollywood Ending', where a movie director makes a movie so bad, only the French would love it. While Allen's film is fictional, the French still gave "Respiro" the Critic's Week Prize at the 2003 Cannes Film Festival. I bet Woody had a chuckle over this one.

    The basis for the movie, `Respiro', comes from a legend told on the tiny Italian island of Lampedusa, where a young mother who behaved outside the rules of the small community, was thought to be insane, and thus ostracized by the townspeople. One day, she disappeared, leaving only her clothes on the beach. The community was left feeling guilty for having driven the woman to suicide, but the force of prayers brought her back to life from the sea, where she returned to normal life with her family.

    The main problems with `Respiro' the film, are two-fold: first, the mother, played by Valeria Golino (whose film debut was along side Tom Cruise in `Rain Man'), seemed incongruent to the intent of the legend, which intended to portray the woman as simply out of line with social norms. In the film, however, she is actually psychiatrically ill. This critical point changes our perception of the townspeople's attempt to help her – rather than they're seeming conformist and unjust in their attempts to help her, they actually seemed genuine and authentic. This very fact discredits almost the entire point of the film. The only left to keep it together are the character portrayals themselves. But here, the director fails again, but much like the way Allen satirized in his film, `Hollywood Ending': it's a case of the Emperor's New Clothes: none of the main characters have any depth or meaning (aside from one of the mother's young sons), but the director tells you they do, so those who awarded this film the Critic's Week Prize, seemed to see something that just wasn't there.

    Other problems with the film make it even less interesting, and by consequence, even more pretentious: The director intended to keep dialog extremely brief, but failed to replace their communication with anything else to portray character, mood, or even a sense of purpose. It seemed to be a series of scenes that were intended to be interpreted as `artful' in their abstraction and symbolism, but the director just assumed the audience would accept it because he told us to.

    The closest thing to compare this movie with would be `Il Postino', the Italian film about the romantic postman who writes love poems to a woman to win her love. That film had all of the features that `Respiro' attempted, but Postino had warm and interesting characters, a meaningful and motivated plotline, and didn't mind portraying a cute Italian island for the beautifully romantic place that it is.

    In the end, `Respiro' didn't move me at all, but if it's going to win film awards at Cannes, I'll give the credit more to Woody Allen, who seems to have an insight into those who think they know what a good artsy film is all about.
    pinkrebel

    un respiro profondo d'aria fresca..

    If you are religious, if you believe in miracles, if you believe that religion has nothing to do with miracles, if you HATE religion, if you are Catholic, if you are Roman Catholic, if you grew up in such a home, if you despise the hypocrisy of it all, you should see this movie. If you are Italian, if you speak Italian, if you are planning to travel to Italy, if you like Italian food, if you are learning Italian, if you even know anyone who is Italian you need to see this movie. If you've been affected by a psychological disorder, if you have a psychological disorder, if you are a psychologist, if you have a psychologist. If you have a mother. If you've seen Big Top Pee-Wee and thought "Gina" was hot. See Respiro.

    I saw this movie in a small theatre and could tell who the aforementioned italomaniacs were in the crowd by the eruptions of laughter that would occur before the (occasionally poorly translated) subtitles appeared. The friend I went to see this with was wont to turn to me at choice moments during the film and inquire as to "WHAT IS IT WITH YOU PEOPLE?!" Charming, warm. Absolutely beautiful location. Vibrant characters. Simplistic filming. Multi-faceted story, bringing together a family and a community and managing to tell several stories at once, I can't find anything bad to say about this movie.
    8emreyav3

    Sea, Sky and the Characters

    This movie is a good example of showing that it is possible to produce high quality films without spending too much. The scenario is very well written and characters are well chosen. Every single person fits their role very well that I couldn't help thinking that such a village really exists. Especially Grazia and her younger son are acting very well. The younger son is so natural and has great talent. As for the Grazia, she is showing the character of a caring and sometimes crazy mother with her gestures and talks. The landscape in the film makes you feel like going holiday in the Mediterranean. The sea, sky and the landscape are absolutely beautiful. After seeing this film, I have realized that the rural lives by the sea in many countries are similar, the differences are in the languages, but the feelings are same.
    ItalianGerry

    A "breath" of island air.

    RESPIRO is a lovely and intriguing film set on the lonely Mediterranean island of Lampedusa, between Sicily and Tunisia. The main character is Grazia, played by the marvelously beautiful Valeria Golino. She is a mother with a few problems connecting with reality, a wayward independent spirit who attracts the ire of the islanders, especially the women who view her almost as a witch and her husband Pietro (Vincenzo Amato) who is at his wit's end. It is a theme it shares in common with Tornatore's MALENA, made in 2000.

    Grazia has three children: a lovely daughter who is attracted to and attracted by a policeman from the mainland, and two adoring sons, whose affection is overtly and uncomfortably oedipal at times. They spend much of their energies comforting their mom, defending her against verbal attacks, supplying her with food when she goes off into hiding from those who want to send her to Milan for treatment, which, in truth, she probably could use. The rest of the time they are chasing birds, hanging out on the main drag with the girls and other friends. Pantsing each other on the beach seems to have become one of the island's most common sporting activities among the young.

    What I like most about the movie, besides the appealing scenery, was the interrelations of the characters, the humor, petty gossips, the impromptu emotional outbursts, the displays of maternal and filial affection. The two boys are tremendous: the older Pasquale (Francesco Casisa) is the more mature of the two. The younger Filippo (Filippo Pucillo) has an unregulated diarrhea mouth filled with hilarious and inspired ravings, often without sense. His rant against the busybody women is a treasure, as is his little-brother-as-big-brother protectiveness of his sister from the policeman-friend. The boy embodies an epic Italianate inflammability far beyond his years.

    The mysterious end evocative ending, in which Grazia, believed drowned, emerges from the water's depths on Saint Bartolo's Day, is quite beautifully conceived. Fine too are the musical score by John Surman, and the precise and suggestive direction by Emanuele Crialese. I enjoyed this film so much I went to see it several times.

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    Related interests

    Lamberto Maggiorani in Bicycle Thieves (1948)
    Italian
    Naomie Harris, Mahershala Ali, Janelle Monáe, André Holland, Herman Caheej McGloun, Edson Jean, Alex R. Hibbert, and Tanisha Cidel in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      First released in France in January 2003 in only 80 art-house theaters, by word-of-mouth the film became a big hit in the art-house world, and by the third week more copies were printed and it was screened in many more theaters. At the 4th week the movie had over 400.000 tickets sold, and it run a record-long 12 weeks in many art-house theaters. Almost unnoticed in Italy at first in 2002, it was then released again a second time in Italy in 2003.
    • Connections
      Referenced in Che saccio (2008)
    • Soundtracks
      La bambola
      Written by Ruggero Cini, Franco Migliacci (as Francesco Migliacci), and Bruno Zambrini

      Performed by Patty Pravo

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • May 22, 2002 (Italy)
    • Countries of origin
      • Italy
      • France
    • Languages
      • Italian
      • Sicilian
    • Also known as
      • Nefes Alıyorum
    • Filming locations
      • Lampedusa, Italy
    • Production companies
      • Fandango
      • Les Films des Tournelles
      • Roissy Films
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $1,072,834
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $71,677
      • May 25, 2003
    • Gross worldwide
      • $7,309,845
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 30m(90 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • DTS
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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