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Human Capital

Original title: Il capitale umano
  • 2013
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 51m
IMDb RATING
7.2/10
14K
YOUR RATING
Valeria Bruni Tedeschi in Human Capital (2013)
Trailer for Human Capital
Play trailer2:03
2 Videos
25 Photos
CrimeDrama

The destinies of two families are irrevocably tied together after a cyclist is hit off the road by a jeep in the night before Christmas Eve.The destinies of two families are irrevocably tied together after a cyclist is hit off the road by a jeep in the night before Christmas Eve.The destinies of two families are irrevocably tied together after a cyclist is hit off the road by a jeep in the night before Christmas Eve.

  • Director
    • Paolo Virzì
  • Writers
    • Stephen Amidon
    • Paolo Virzì
    • Francesco Bruni
  • Stars
    • Fabrizio Bentivoglio
    • Matilde Gioli
    • Valeria Bruni Tedeschi
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.2/10
    14K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Paolo Virzì
    • Writers
      • Stephen Amidon
      • Paolo Virzì
      • Francesco Bruni
    • Stars
      • Fabrizio Bentivoglio
      • Matilde Gioli
      • Valeria Bruni Tedeschi
    • 28User reviews
    • 128Critic reviews
    • 63Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 47 wins & 30 nominations total

    Videos2

    Human Capital
    Trailer 2:03
    Human Capital
    HUMAN CAPITAL - Official US Trailer
    Trailer 2:02
    HUMAN CAPITAL - Official US Trailer
    HUMAN CAPITAL - Official US Trailer
    Trailer 2:02
    HUMAN CAPITAL - Official US Trailer

    Photos24

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    Top cast58

    Edit
    Fabrizio Bentivoglio
    Fabrizio Bentivoglio
    • Dino Ossola
    Matilde Gioli
    Matilde Gioli
    • Serena Ossola
    Valeria Bruni Tedeschi
    Valeria Bruni Tedeschi
    • Carla Bernaschi
    Guglielmo Pinelli
    Guglielmo Pinelli
    • Massimiliano Bernaschi
    Fabrizio Gifuni
    Fabrizio Gifuni
    • Giovanni Bernaschi
    Gigio Alberti
    Gigio Alberti
    • Giampi
    Valeria Golino
    Valeria Golino
    • Roberta
    Silvia Cohen
    Silvia Cohen
    • Adriana Crosetti
    Luigi Lo Cascio
    Luigi Lo Cascio
    • Donato, il professor Russomanno
    Bebo Storti
    Bebo Storti
    • L'ispettore
    Giovanni Anzaldo
    Giovanni Anzaldo
    • Luca Ambrosini
    Paolo Pierobon
    Paolo Pierobon
    • Lo zio Davide
    Gianluca Di Lauro
    • Fabrizio, il cameriere in bici
    Stefano Fiorentino
    • Amico e socio di Bernaschi
    Fulvio Milani
    Fulvio Milani
    • Altro amico di Bernaschi
    Vincent Nemeth
    Vincent Nemeth
    • L'avvocato Gérard Pierret
    Francesca Lancini
    • Florence, la segretaria di Bernaschi
    Michael Sart
    Michael Sart
    • Jean Louis, l'assistente di Bernaschi
    • (as Nicola Centonze)
    • Director
      • Paolo Virzì
    • Writers
      • Stephen Amidon
      • Paolo Virzì
      • Francesco Bruni
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews28

    7.213.9K
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    Featured reviews

    8paul-allaer

    Excellent Italian murder mystery/biting social commentary based on the US novel

    "Human Capital" (2013 release from Italy; 110 min.) brings the story of two families, whose fates are so different yet intertwined. As the movie opens, we see a staff person bike home late at night after having worked at a big event of some sort. We also see a speeding SUV and the SUV appears to accidentally hit the biker, but doesn't stop. Whoa! Who was that? What just happened? After the opening credits, we are told we are "Six Months Earlier - Chapter 1 - Dino" and we get to know a number of characters: there is Dino, the real estate guy whose daughter Serena is dating Massimiliano, the son of a hedge-fund manager. Dino convinces the latter to let him buy in, but soon regrets doing so when the market tanks. To tell you more would spoil your viewing experience, you'll just have to see for yourself how it all plays out.

    Couple of comments: first, this is the big screen version of American author Stephen Amidon's acclaimed 2005 novel of the same name. How often do you see a big screen adaptation of an American novel that is made abroad, rather than in the US? Director Paolo Virzi transposes the story from Connecticut to Northern Italy very nicely, and along the way adds other elements to make this his own story. Second, the movie works on different levels: there is the immediate question as to what exactly happened at that hit-and-run late night accident (?). Then there is the social commentary about today's society and the influence of money on people (keep in mind: this is Italy, where they have been going through a Great Recession for YEARS now). The movie is split into 4 chapters, and we rehash more or less the same events from different people's perspectives (Dino, Carla, Serena). It's a technique that has been used before, but when executed well, as in this movie, it elevates the movie, as you discover new details in each new perspective of the same events. Last but not least, the movie features a great ensemble cast (there are about 7 or 8 key characters to keep track of). Bottom line: this is a movie that caught my attention from start to finish.

    This movie is the May, 2015 release of Film Movement's on-going DVD Of the Month club. No idea why a 2013 release only now gets exposed to US audiences but better late than never I suppose. As always, the Film Movement DVD comes with a number of bonus materials, including an okay "making of", but far better is the bonus shortie. This time we get "Job Interview", an excellent 9 min. shortie from Germany about a woman (Lisa) being interviewed by another woman for a job. Just watch! Meanwhile, "Human Capital" is a worthwhile addition to Film Movement's ever-growing library of foreign and indie movies. HIGHLY RECOMMENDED!
    8claudio_carvalho

    Who Hit-and-Run the Waiter?

    After working at a private school party in a small town in Italy on the Christmas Eve, the waiter Fabrizio (Gianluca Di Lauro) is riding his bicycle home. Out of the blue, the driver of a SUV hit-and-run the waiter and leaves him seriously injured on the road. The ambitious real estate agent Dino Ossola (Fabrizio Bentivoglio) drives his daughter Serena (Matilde Gioli) to the manor of her boyfriend Massimiliano Bernaschi (Guglielmo Pinelli). He snoops around and befriends his wealthy father Giovanni Bernaschi (Fabrizio Gifuni) expecting to get along with him and invest in his investment fund. Dino lies and hires a secured loan of 700 thousand Euros from Giampi (Gigio Alberti) to invest in Bernaschi's speculative fund expecting to have 40% a year in return, and disregards the risks involved. His guarantee is Sarana's house, where he lives with his second wife, the psychologist Roberta (Valeria Golino) that is pregnant, and Serena. Meanwhile, Giovanni's wife Carla Bernaschi (Valeria Bruni Tedeschi) sees an old theater that will be demolished and convinces her husband to buy the building and restore the theater. She invites her former theater Professor Donato Russomanno (Luigi Lo Cascio), who has a crush on her, to be the art director and gets closer to him. Things go awry when Bernaschi's fund flops and loses 90% of its value and the cyclist dies at the hospital. The police inspector finds that Massimiliano's SUV was responsible for the hit-and-run. But who was driving the car? The alcoholic Massimiliano? His girlfriend Serena? Or someone else?

    "Il capitale umano" (2013) is a great film by Paolo Virzì with the mystery of who hit-and-run the waiter Fabrizio? The screenplay, divided in four chapters (Dino, Carla, Serena and Human Capital is very well written, with a perfect and concise development. The performances of unknown actors and actresses (Valeria Golino is the exception) are outstanding. The scum Dino Ossola is the representation of the worst in the mankind, a garbage as human being. The mystery of who killed Fabrizio is disclosed in the end. The ironic value of a human life closes this film with golden key. My vote is eight.

    Title (Brazil): "Capital Humana" ("Human Capital")
    7minunimion

    Both of them

    I watched both of the movies in their original languages... I mean this one and the American version shot in 2019... both of them are from the same book, so obviously they are very similar, not exactly the same as many people told, but you can understand that only if you're really able to understand both of the languages... the subtitles don't count... I think that those who don't understand the language, well, they shouldn't judge this movie, even using the subtitles.... the review wouldn't make any sense. I appreciated more the American version than this one... IMHO is much better, but you have to decide for yourself. My advice for those who watched this version... if you don't understand perfectly Italian, don't write any review, a low score wouldn't be fair, this movie doesn't deserve a low score. The right score should start from 7, less of that would mean that you didn't understand enough.
    7rooee

    The cost of living

    In the closing moments of this intricate drama, "Human capital" is defined as an insurance industry term, referring to the way damages payouts are calculated upon death, partly dependent on the individual's "emotional bonds". But the phrase more broadly refers to the way that the productivity and creativity of people can be converted into economic value. These definitions tell us everything we need to know about the themes at hand in Paolo Virzì's deconstruction of the Italian upper middle.

    Human Capital is Italy's entry for next year's Academy Awards, and it's not hard to see why. It's a handsome, solid, complex, character-driven drama with an already award-winning performance from Valeria Bruni Tedeschi at its centre. She plays Carla Bernaschi, the wife of a businessman on the cusp of ruin. She persuades him to buy her a crumbling theatre – a pet project – as a gift. But it quickly becomes apparent that the theatre isn't economically viable. It'll have to be converted into flats instead.

    The film is full of such soul-crushing moments. One needn't look far for metaphors. The various subplots revolve around a car crash (The Crash), and the fallout which threatens to ruin those at the bottom of the social ladder, leaving those at the top untainted. One needn't, also, look far for comparisons: Paul Haggis's award-friendly Crash, and the work of Alejandro Iñárritu, in the way that chronologically concurrent stories are shown one after another.

    But Virzì's film is less aggravatingly worthy than the work of Haggis and less laborious than Iñárritu's English-language work. Indeed, the first of four "chapters" plays out with wicked dry humour, as Dino Ossola (Fabrizio Bentivoglio) desperately claws at the deal of a lifetime in order to break into the business elite. He's trying to seduce that wretched husband of Carla's, Giovanni (Fabrizio Gigfuni), but he only recognises the capital, not the humanity. It leaves Carla bereft; searching for meaning and affection. Meanwhile, both the Ossolas and the Bernaschis are bound by their kids. Serena Ossola (Matilde Gioli, resembling a younger Eva Green) knows something about the car crash, and the cost of keeping or revealing the secret is where the real meaning of the film's title will become known.

    Virzì's style starts out dead pretty; all fairy tale lighting and wintry wonderlands, mirroring the illusory worlds the wealthy (or would-be-wealthy) inhabit. But as the cost of these characters' decisions become known, the camera leaves the tripod and the style gets grittier. Virzì is clearly aware of the inherent humour and horror in seeing the same events from multiple perspectives. While comedy gives way to tragedy, the twists and turns don't feel manipulative, and ultimately this is a story imbued with hope. In part this is due to the villain of the piece – the apparently heartless Giovanni – never being reduced to a mere monster.

    The structure does mean that at times the chronology of events becomes muddled. It's not always completely clear how much time is supposed to have passed between scenes, leading to some false impressions of certain relationships. And, inevitably for such a tightly woven story, narrative contrivance and convenience is never far away. But then, what does one expect from a morality play? And a thoroughly modern one at that. This is an intelligent, accessible film, wise to focus on the most interesting characters in the room: those on the margins; those with most to lose. A fine contender.
    8kosmasp

    Money money money ... it's so funny

    Although not always for people involved or those who actually want to make a lot of it. Then there are others who just don't care about it (having a lot of it might add to that secure feeling of course). This movie is about getting rich, about getting into families, about greed and about human behavior in general.

    In the beginning I thought this was going to be simple. And in a way I guess it is simple. But the way the movie works (the structure, the backtracking, the seeing things from a different perspective and so on) could and might suggest otherwise. You might feel a bit annoyed seeing a couple of things "twice", but in the grand scheme of it all, it will make sense in the end ... although some decisions are so bad, you do wonder why they were taken in the first place ... still nicely told.

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    Related interests

    James Gandolfini, Edie Falco, Sharon Angela, Max Casella, Dan Grimaldi, Joe Perrino, Donna Pescow, Jamie-Lynn Sigler, Tony Sirico, and Michael Drayer in The Sopranos (1999)
    Crime
    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Official submission of Italy to the best foreign language film category of the 87th Academy Awards 2015.
    • Connections
      Features Our Lady of the Turks (1968)
    • Soundtracks
      Rehab
      Written by Amy Winehouse

      Performed by Amy Winehouse

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    FAQ19

    • How long is Human Capital?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • January 9, 2014 (Italy)
    • Countries of origin
      • Italy
      • France
    • Official sites
      • Official Facebook
      • Official site (Japan)
    • Languages
      • Italian
      • English
    • Also known as
      • El capital humano
    • Filming locations
      • Fortunago, Pavia, Lombardia, Italy(villa Bernaschi)
    • Production companies
      • Indiana Production
      • Motorino Amaranto
      • Manny Films
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • €6,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $158,549
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $21,669
      • Jan 19, 2015
    • Gross worldwide
      • $9,113,941
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 51m(111 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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