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Caterina in the Big City

Original title: Caterina va in città
  • 2003
  • Unrated
  • 1h 47m
IMDb RATING
6.8/10
3.3K
YOUR RATING
Caterina in the Big City (2003)
ItalianComedyDrama

Caterina, forced to leave her small town at the age of thirteen, faces the complications of living in the big metropoly of Rome.Caterina, forced to leave her small town at the age of thirteen, faces the complications of living in the big metropoly of Rome.Caterina, forced to leave her small town at the age of thirteen, faces the complications of living in the big metropoly of Rome.

  • Director
    • Paolo Virzì
  • Writers
    • Francesco Bruni
    • Paolo Virzì
  • Stars
    • Alice Teghil
    • Sergio Castellitto
    • Margherita Buy
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.8/10
    3.3K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Paolo Virzì
    • Writers
      • Francesco Bruni
      • Paolo Virzì
    • Stars
      • Alice Teghil
      • Sergio Castellitto
      • Margherita Buy
    • 19User reviews
    • 25Critic reviews
    • 63Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 7 wins & 9 nominations total

    Photos5

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    Top Cast69

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    Alice Teghil
    • Caterina Iacovoni
    Sergio Castellitto
    Sergio Castellitto
    • Giancarlo Iacovoni
    Margherita Buy
    Margherita Buy
    • Agata Iacovoni
    Antonio Carnevale
    • Cesarino
    Silvio Vannucci
    • Fabietto Cruciani
    Federica Sbrenna
    • Daniela Germano
    Carolina Iaquaniello
    • Margherita Rossi Chaillet
    Zach Wallen
    • Edward
    • (as Zach -James Smith- Wallen)
    Martino Reviglio
    • Gianfilippo
    Claudio Amendola
    Claudio Amendola
    • Manlio Germano
    Flavio Bucci
    Flavio Bucci
    • Lorenzo Rossi Chaillet
    Paola Tiziana Cruciani
    • Zia Marisa
    Luigi Grilli
    • Zio Alfredo
    Tereza Paula Da Rosa
    • Teresa
    Renata Orso
    • Zia Adelina
    Margerita Mazzola
    • Martina
    • (as Margherita Mazzola)
    Martina Tasquetta
    • Alessia
    • (as Martina Taschetta)
    Giulia Gorietti
    Giulia Gorietti
    • Giada
    • (as Giulia Elettra Gorietti)
    • Director
      • Paolo Virzì
    • Writers
      • Francesco Bruni
      • Paolo Virzì
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews19

    6.83.2K
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    Featured reviews

    8F Gwynplaine MacIntyre

    That 1940s bomber crew are back...

    I saw 'Caterina va in Città' in Sydney, where the audience had mixed reactions to the schoolboy who speaks Italian with what's apparently meant to be a Sydneysider accent. In general, I was impressed by the ensemble acting, but I felt that the best performance was given by Margherita Buy as the heroine's mother Agata. I was disappointed that Agata has so little to do with the main plot of the film.

    The symbolism is just a trifle heavy-handed in this movie. Remember those Hollywood war movies from World War Two, in which the bomber crew conveniently had one member of every (white) ethnic group? (And there was usually one rich guy and one guy from the slums.) Well, director/co-scriptwriter Paolo Virzi has got that gimmick here, Italian style. When 15-year-old Caterina's parents move house from a Tuscan seaside town to Rome and enrol her in a big-city school, the student body conveniently includes the full spectrum of Italy's national archetypes. For example, Daniela is wealthy, beautiful and popular, the daughter of an official in the right-wing government. Margherita is a left-wing 'revolutionary', the daughter of a famous intellectual. Of course, the film implies that Margherita is somehow better and more 'authentic' than Daniela.

    Because I found the political subplots of this movie to be deeply clichéd -- especially since Italy is in no position to lecture any other nation on the subject of politics -- I was pleased that the film's political content stays firmly secondary. The main story of this movie is, rightly, Caterina's uneasy and awkward progress through adolescence and into adulthood. It's no surprise to discover that being a teenage girl in modern Italy is difficult, but surely every adolescent -- male, female, rich, poor, in any century or culture -- has found adolescence to be a difficult time of transition. Except for some of its political comments, I found this to be a very honest and intelligent film, with characters I really cared about. I'll rate 'Caterina va in Città' 8 out of 10, and I look forward to more films from Paolo Virzi. Brava, Caterina!
    7picouli

    Nice, as ususal... A bit too nice, maybe...

    I think Virzì is one of the most interesting director in Italy, at the present moment. His ability to portray the current Italian society is quite good, and he achieves this either with *characters* (the two families in "Ferie d'Agosto", the father in "Caterina va in città") and with *stories* (the story of "Ovosodo", a bit of an Italian "It's a wonderful life"... just a bit, obviously... :-).

    "Caterina va in città" is a good movie: the idea of showing chunks of the Italian society and habits through the eyes of an innocent teenager gives the movie a "fairy tale" twist that makes it really "light" and enjoyable. I also liked the mom's character, played by a really good and beautiful Margherita Buy: in general, I appreciated Virzì's idea that the "good" part of society is based on the strength of women, as all male characters in this movie either are donquixotesque losers or spoiled and arrogant over-grown babies.

    But, as for most of his movies, I think the same criticism again apply: Virzì is openly a left-wing director, but he stresses this a bit too much and sometimes its works sound too "ideological": art should make you think, not tell you what to think, I guess. In addiction, some characters are too stereotypical and don't come out of a really deep psychological analysis. Still, I think he is currently the director who knows best how to take on the screen what goes on in Italy.

    In conclusion, I think this movie - just like "Ovosodo" - is based on a simple yet powerful assumption: that happiness is the disease of the idiots...
    8dmeltz

    Funny, Sad, Touching. Worth your time

    Caterina gives us an opportunity to feel and a chance to hope. A young girl both naive and somehow mature, she is unsure of what she wants in life. Her task is learning to navigate the waters of a high school in Rome where she is the new girl from the sticks when her father is transfered from a small town on the coast. He fulfills his dream of returning to the cultural mecca of the capital where he hopes to take his "rightful" place among the intelligentsia. But the film turns on just this point–"rightful place". There are no simple answers, though we do have an opportunity to see how complex it is to find one's place, rightful or not, in the world. Caterina is something of a metaphor for the Italian populace at large, I would think. But she is more than this. There is something about her story that touched me, several decades and half a world away from the world she inhabits, a world stratified by cliques and patronage, prejudice and injustice...a world very much like the one I live in and the one I imagine most of us live in. Caterina–as the film that bears her name–does not take the easy way out in running away or self-repression or living a life of quiet desperation, even when her sheltered provincial upbringing and less-than-ideal family situation do not give her any clues on how to deal with her new life and classmates from prominent families. She tries to adjust to the fast-pace and superficiality of life in the Italian capital, and much of the fun of the movie is seeing her in the various situations she encounters along the way. Her father is great as the frustrated writer with no talent and a loud voice, a self-important boor. My heart goes out to all the Caterinas of the world, who go forward with optimism and pure heart even when they know the odds are against them.
    7andrabem

    Caterina and her parents

    "Caterina va in città" seems like your typical teen film. It somehow reminds me of "Thirteen", but it goes a little deeper than the average American teen film.

    In American teen films the parents are normally reduced to simple shadows that serve more as a background for their sons and daughters' lives - they are either of the preaching-repressive sort, or the tolerant, ever-forgiving parents, that eventually through love will help their children to the way of redemption.

    Not so, "Caterina va in città". In this film, not just Caterina ( Alice Teghil) but her parents as well are portrayed as three-dimensional human beings and this makes the film more interesting.

    Caterina and her parents move from a small Italian town to Rome. And there Caterina's life will be shaken. She goes to high school and meets new friends - many new things happen in her life. She feels uprooted from her old self, and doesn't know anymore who she really is.

    One can say that "Caterina va in città" is a coming of age film - it portrays her search for her place in the world - many American teen films tell the same story. But what differentiates this film from its American counterparts is the attention it gives to the parents. The father Giancarlo (Sergio Castellito) is a deeply disturbed personality. He thinks the world revolves around him and there's a conspiracy of important segments of society whose main aim is preventing him from succeeding in life. He is an egoist that treats his wife as a dumb servant and his daughter as a beautiful puppy. But no, he's not a "bad" man - in his own distorted way he loves his wife and his daughter. Sergio Castellito gives us a stellar interpretation as the problematic father, underlining his pathetic and quixotic traits. Agata (Margherita Buy), is his ever-enduring wife - she has a deeper layer than it may appear at first glance. And there's Caterina living with them, seeing them with her innocent eyes.

    The other characters in the film are what one could call walking clichés. Nothing that has not been shown before in American teen movies. Politics shows its colors in the film, but in a very superficial way. It's not really essential for the film's story - left and right could have been easily substituted for rival football teams.

    The ending (difficult to imagine in American films) will come as a surprise and have a liberating effect on the viewer. All in all, "Caterina va in città" is a good teen film thats stands a bit above the usual film of the genre.
    10Andy-296

    Disarming Italian comedy (with political undertones)

    This excellent Italian comedy is very similar in plot to Mean Girls (who came out in about the same time). The difference is that this is a much more politicized film. Caterina is a shy teenager from a small town in Italy, who moves to Rome with her long-suffering mother and her teacher father, when he is assigned to a new job there. In her new school, she has to choose to what clique to belong: the children of the progressive intellectuals or the children of the rich industrialists. The left or the right. What this film says is that these people are not terribly different between themselves. They both hold a degree of fame and power in Italian society, and look down upon those who don't. The outstanding performance in the movie is that of Caterina's father, the teacher Giancarlo (Sergio Castellito), a hothead angry that others have gotten all the breaks in life, who rants against the rich and privileged but who would sell his soul in a second in order to join the establishment. He is a familiar type of malcontent in real life but one who is seldom shown in the movies. There is a silly subplot of Caterina falling in love with an Australian boy (What they did that for? To reach an international market?), but all in all, this is one of the best Italian movies of the last years.

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    Related interests

    Lamberto Maggiorani in Bicycle Thieves (1948)
    Italian
    Will Ferrell in Anchorman: The Legend of Ron Burgundy (2004)
    Comedy
    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

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    • Trivia
      Sara Pallini's debut.
    • Goofs
      The story begins in 2003, but the dates do not match up with the days of the week for that year.
    • Connections
      References The Blues Brothers (1980)
    • Soundtracks
      Inno ufficiale dei giovani fascisti
      Music by Giuseppe Blanc and lyrics by Vittorio E. Bravetta

      Sung at the wedding reception

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    FAQ17

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • October 24, 2003 (Italy)
    • Country of origin
      • Italy
    • Language
      • Italian
    • Also known as
      • Caterina flyttar till stan
    • Filming locations
      • Rome, Lazio, Italy
    • Production companies
      • Cattleya
      • Rai Cinema
      • Sky Cinema
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $296,464
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $9,352
      • Jun 5, 2005
    • Gross worldwide
      • $4,407,426
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 47m(107 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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