See You Tomorrow | |
---|---|
Directed by | Andrea Zaccariello |
Written by | Paolo Rossi Andrea Zaccariello |
Starring | |
Cinematography | Giancarlo Lodi |
Music by | Giovanni Luisi |
Release date |
|
Running time | 103 minutes |
Language | Italian |
See You Tomorrow (Italian : Ci vediamo domani) is a 2013 Italian comedy film written and directed by Andrea Zaccariello. [1] [2] [3] [4]
Marcello Santilli is looking for the opportunity of his life. All attempts to be successful at work and get rich have turned out to be failures and he is now bankrupt. His wife, who is tired of taking care of him like a mother, and his daughter do not value him and above all do not have confidence in his ability to achieve something good in his life. But he is not discouraged: he thinks he has found the opportunity to finally succeed in affirming himself. He discovers Petrafrisca, a small remote town in Puglia, where the population is made up mainly of residents over ninety years old, where there is no funeral home. He imagines that, given the average age of the inhabitants, there will be no shortage of potential "customers". He then launches into this new business and opens the agency. Unfortunately for him, the inhabitants of the village, despite his age, are all in excellent health and have no intention of becoming his "customers".
Vittorio De Sica was an Italian film director and actor, a leading figure in the neorealist movement.
Marcello Vincenzo Domenico Mastroianni was an Italian film actor and one of the country's most iconic male performers of the 20th century. He played leading roles for many of Italy's top directors in a career spanning 147 films between 1939 and 1996, and garnered many international honours including two BAFTA Awards, two Best Actor awards at the Venice and Cannes film festivals, two Golden Globes, and three Academy Award nominations.
Maurizio Costanzo was an Italian television host, journalist, screenwriter, and film director.
Giovanni "Nanni" Moretti is an Italian film director, producer, screenwriter, and actor.
Marcello Dell'Utri is a former Italian politician. He is best known for being a senior advisor to former prime minister Silvio Berlusconi, of whom he became a secretary in his early 20s and since the 1970s had worked for him at his many companies, including Publitalia '80 and Fininvest Rai. Dell'Utri's life and career have been marred by controversies and legal issues, including a conviction for external complicity in mafia association.
Yesterday, Today and Tomorrow is a 1963 comedy anthology film by Italian director Vittorio De Sica. It stars Sophia Loren and Marcello Mastroianni. The film consists of three short stories about couples in different parts of Italy. The film won the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film at the 37th Academy Awards.
Gian Luigi "Gianni" Morandi is an Italian pop singer, actor and entertainer. It is estimated that Morandi has sold about 50 million recordings.
Emanuela Trane, stage name "Dolcenera", is an Italian singer, songwriter and actress. She rose to fame in 2003, after winning the newcomers' section of the Sanremo Music Festival, but she achieved commercial success in Italy only in 2005, when she won the music-based reality show Music Farm and she released her second album, Un mondo perfetto. In 2005 she was also awarded Best New Artist of the Year at the Italian Meeting of Independent Record Labels and she received the De André Award for Best Emerging Artist.
The Conformist is a 1970 political drama film written and directed by Bernardo Bertolucci, based on the 1951 novel by Alberto Moravia. It stars Jean-Louis Trintignant, Stefania Sandrelli, Gastone Moschin, Enzo Tarascio, Fosco Giachetti, José Quaglio, Dominique Sanda and Pierre Clémenti. Set in 1930s Italy, The Conformist centers on a mid-level Fascist functionary (Trintignant) who is ordered to assassinate his former professor, an anti-Fascist dissident in Paris. His mission is complicated after he begins an affair with the professor's wife (Sanda).
Maurizio Ponzi is an Italian film director, screenwriter and cinema critic.
Evoluzione della specie is the fifth studio album by Italian singer-songwriter Dolcenera, released on 17 May 2011 by EMI Music Italy. It was preceded by the single "Il sole di domenica", released on 7 April 2011 and written by Dolcenera and Bandabardò's member Finaz. The second single from the album, "L'amore è un gioco", was released in Italy on 26 August 2011.
The discography of Dolcenera, an Italian singer-songwriter, consists of seven studio albums and one extended play, which spawned seventeen singles as a lead artist, three promotional singles and twenty-one music videos.
Watch Out, We're Mad! is a 1974 Italian-Spanish action comedy film, directed by Marcello Fondato and starring the film duo of Terence Hill and Bud Spencer. It was a co-production between Italy and Spain.
"Ci vediamo a casa" is a single by Italian singer Dolcenera, released by EMI Music Italy on 15 February 2012. It is included on the album Evoluzione della specie², a new edition of 2011's Evoluzione della specie. The song competed in the Sanremo Music Festival 2012, placing sixth in a field of fourteen. It is also the main song from the film of the same title, directed by Maurizio Ponzi.
María Isabel Solari Poggio, known as Liz Solari, is an Argentine actress and model. She developed a long career in modeling before becoming established as an actress in local and foreign cinema and television. She is a UNICEF Ambassador in Argentina.
Ennio Fantastichini was an Italian actor.
Enrico Brignano is an Italian actor, playwright, comedian, presenter and writer.
Fanny Cadeo is an Italian actress, television personality, singer, and model. Cadeo was born in Lavagna and studied acting with Beatrice Bracco. She achieved her first success in 1992 when she was one of the first showgirls to appear in Striscia la notizia and remained with the show until 1994. Since 2013, she has been the presenter of the Rai Due television show Il Cercasapori.
Poveri ma ricchissimi is a 2017 Italian comedy film directed by Fausto Brizzi.
This is a list of Italian television related events from 1996.