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2024 Italian-French film by Francesca Comencini From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Time It Takes (Italian: Il tempo che ci vuole) is a 2024 Italian-French drama film directed by Francesca Comencini. It stars Romana Maggiora Vergano and Fabrizio Gifuni. It premiered at the 81st Venice International Film Festival on 6 September 2024 and received a theatrical release in Italy on 26 September 2024.
The Time It Takes | |
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Italian | Il tempo che ci vuole |
Directed by | Francesca Comencini |
Written by | Francesca Comencini |
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Starring | |
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Running time | 110 minutes |
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Language | Italian |
During the Years of Lead, a father and daughter share a passion for cinema. The film draws from director Francesca Comencini's relationship with her late father, the famous Italian director Luigi Comencini.[1][2] The film is set during Comencini's shooting of the 1972 miniseries The Adventures of Pinocchio.[3][4]
The film was announced in 2021 under the working title First Life, Then Cinema.[5] Filming began in Rome in late August 2023.[6][7]
Charades acquired the international distribution rights to the film on 3 September 2024.[8] The trailer was released two days later, on 5 September.[9]
The film premiered at the 81st Venice International Film Festival on 6 September 2024.[10] It received a theatrical release in Italy on 26 September 2024.[11]
Paola Casella of Mymovies.it gave the film four out of five stars and wrote, "With the courage of a lioness, Francesca Comencini recounts her relationship with her father, Luigi, in a free film that makes her personal story universal".[12]
Damiano Panattoni of Movieplayer.it gave the film three-and-a-half out of five stars and wrote, "Intimate and very sweet, Francesca Comencini's tribute has the ability to speak to the public thanks to the universality of a private story in which one can find oneself, between gestures, words, silences, hugs. It may suffer from a certain rhetorical redundancy, but the emotion and ardor are such as to make Il tempo che ci vuole a congruent and emotional work, in its sincere, personal and loving gratitude."[13]
Federico Pontiggia of Cinematografo.it gave the film two-and-a-half out of five stars, calling it "a touching and perfectible pas de deux", but criticizing its narrative structure.[14]
Giulio Zoppello of Today rated the film 6.5 out of 10 and wrote "Il tempo che ci vuole is a coherent film but perhaps something is missing, above all the ability from the middle onwards to develop a story that is more than just images, it is as if there were a missing part, a segment that has not been offered to us. However, in its ability to be incredibly intimate, in the disenchantment with which Francesca Comencini speaks of herself, of that difficult past, net of a slightly cloying ending, there is a lot of vitality".[15]
Anna Maria Pasetti of Il Fatto Quotidiano called the film "[Comencini's] most personal, emotional and thrilling film, and perhaps also her most beautiful."[16]
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