IMDb RATING
6.1/10
1.7K
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The corpse of a famous film producer is found in the Tiber. The investigations focus on three peculiar young scriptwriters.The corpse of a famous film producer is found in the Tiber. The investigations focus on three peculiar young scriptwriters.The corpse of a famous film producer is found in the Tiber. The investigations focus on three peculiar young scriptwriters.
- Awards
- 4 nominations
Eugenio Nicola Marinelli
- Gianfranco
- (as Eugenio Marinelli)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThe title is a line from "Un'estate italiana", the song composed by Giorgio Moroder that popular Italian singers Eduardo Bennato and Gianna Nannini wrote and sang for the 1990 FIFA World Cup. The movie takes place during the last month of the said tournament.
- GoofsAt the very beginning, a man is seeing wearing Ensiferum band shirt. The band was formed in 1995 and the story takes place in 1990.
- SoundtracksUn'estate italiana
Music by Giorgio Moroder
Lyrics by Edoardo Bennato and Gianna Nannini
Performed by Edoardo Bennato and Gianna Nannini
Featured review
"Notti Magiche" may not be "Il Capitale Umano", but it is close enough. It is a tragicomical, pictoresque portrayal of classic Italian cinema at its decline.
Virzì's latest film tells the story of three young screenwriters who, in the summer of 1990, are introduced to the world of filmmaking, and progressively get disillusioned as they are involved in an industry that rather than developing a form of art seems to crunch any form of artistic interpretation or depth between the wheels of its 'machine', a system that slowly transforms the screenwriters' works in something much less valuable than what the young protagonists envisioned. Casting and marketing choices aimed only to please the public, nepotism, screenplay ghost-writing and even physical abuses are themes that are tackled.
While the depth of the themes is evident, the tone of the film isn't exactly dark. Just as Virzì's "Il Capitale Umano", it is enjoyably melancholic, a real example of tragicomedy.
The film is set during a year when italian cinema was partly fading: the great, classic movie directors, like Fellini, Leone, Rosellini, Visconti and others were all already at the end of their careers or deceased (though Tornatore had just won an Oscar with 'Nuovo Cinema Paradiso'). I find it interesting that this period is re-explored in a film released following a year (2017) of crisis for italian cinema, due to a historically low income from italian releases. 2018 definitely seems a redemptive year, thanks to Garrone's 'Dogman', Sorrentino's 'Loro', Sollima's 'Soldado' (although an US production), the Netflix original 'Sulla mia Pelle', and now, with Paolo Virzì's 'Notti Magiche'.
Virzì's latest film tells the story of three young screenwriters who, in the summer of 1990, are introduced to the world of filmmaking, and progressively get disillusioned as they are involved in an industry that rather than developing a form of art seems to crunch any form of artistic interpretation or depth between the wheels of its 'machine', a system that slowly transforms the screenwriters' works in something much less valuable than what the young protagonists envisioned. Casting and marketing choices aimed only to please the public, nepotism, screenplay ghost-writing and even physical abuses are themes that are tackled.
While the depth of the themes is evident, the tone of the film isn't exactly dark. Just as Virzì's "Il Capitale Umano", it is enjoyably melancholic, a real example of tragicomedy.
The film is set during a year when italian cinema was partly fading: the great, classic movie directors, like Fellini, Leone, Rosellini, Visconti and others were all already at the end of their careers or deceased (though Tornatore had just won an Oscar with 'Nuovo Cinema Paradiso'). I find it interesting that this period is re-explored in a film released following a year (2017) of crisis for italian cinema, due to a historically low income from italian releases. 2018 definitely seems a redemptive year, thanks to Garrone's 'Dogman', Sorrentino's 'Loro', Sollima's 'Soldado' (although an US production), the Netflix original 'Sulla mia Pelle', and now, with Paolo Virzì's 'Notti Magiche'.
- Come-and-Review
- Nov 14, 2018
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Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Languages
- Also known as
- Notti magiche
- Filming locations
- Piombino, Tuscany, Italy(Luciano's house; Luciano's working place)
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Gross worldwide
- $1,520,738
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