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Dark Eyes (Italian: Oci ciornie [ˈɔːtʃi ˈtʃɔrnje]; a transcription of Russian: Очи чёрные [ˈotɕɪ ˈtɕɵrnɨjɪ]) is a 1987 Italian and Soviet romantic comedy-drama film directed by Nikita Mikhalkov. Set in Italy and Russia in the years before the First World War, it tells the story of a married Italian man who falls in love ...
According to rtv Hannu Salonen, the director of the fourth film, pleases in Murder by the Lake 4 - Till Death do them Part with calm storytelling and unmistakable intuition for strong pictures. [10] In this film the main actors Matthias Koeberlin and Nora Waldstätten can convince as a well balanced team with sharp dialog as well. [11]
Marcello Vincenzo Domenico Mastroianni [a] Cavaliere di Gran Croce OMRI (28 September 1924 – 19 December 1996) was an Italian actor. He is generally regarded one of Italy's most iconic male performers of the 20th-century, who played leading roles for many of the country's top directors, in a career spanning 147 films between 1939 and 1996, garnering many international honours including two ...
“Play it more Mastroianni than Deneuve,” says director Nicole Garcia (played, sure enough, by Nicole Garcia) to our heroine during a halting, awkward audition for her latest film opposite ...
The Pale Blue Eye is a 2022 American mystery thriller film written and directed by Scott Cooper, [2] adapted from the 2006 novel of the same name by Louis Bayard. [3] The film features an ensemble cast that includes Christian Bale, Harry Melling, Gillian Anderson, Lucy Boynton, Charlotte Gainsbourg, Toby Jones, Harry Lawtey, Simon McBurney, Timothy Spall, and Robert Duvall.
A Dark-Adapted Eye (1986) is a psychological thriller novel by Ruth Rendell, written under the pen name Barbara Vine. The novel won the American Edgar Award . [ 1 ] It was adapted as a television film of the same name in 1994 by the BBC .
Nearly 50 gold pieces of art created by Italian sculptor Umberto Mastroianni were stolen from an exhibition near Lake Garda, Italy, on Wednesday night, the host of the exhibition, the Vittoriale ...
Of the first film, Film Threat wrote that while the first act was entertaining, the remainder of the film "turns out to be just another movie that hasn’t found anywhere new to go." [3] The Palm Beach Post and Sun Sentinel both panned Cabin by the Lake, with the Palm Beach Post writing that the film "takes the horror genre to new TV lows". [4] [5]