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Nominated
Audience Award (Best Actress)
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Best Actor
David Di Donatello Awards (Italian Oscars®)
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Best Supporting Actor
David Di Donatello Awards (Italian Oscars®)
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Best Supporting Actress
David Di Donatello Awards (Italian Oscars®)
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AGATA AND THE STORM
AGATA AND THE STORM

Drama-Comedy | Italy | Italian w/ English Subtitles

"Another engaging magic realist adventure from Bread And Tulips director Silvio Soldini..."
   - Tom Dawson, BBC

Nominated for 8 David Di Donatello Awards (Italian Oscars®)

Running Time: 118 Minutes

Synopsis
A swirl of pop-art color, madcap magic, and the bittersweet call of life and love suddenly take the mature, ravishing, self-reliant Agata by storm. When Agata, the popular bookshop proprietor and dispenser of sunny wisdom in the form of books, is suddenly wooed by a man almost half her age, her electricity hits high-voltage. It even sends light bulbs bursting in her wake. Yet it is Agata's joy and 'explosive' magnetism in the face of life in all its irony that eventually offers the eye of the cyclone. There, all is supremely quiet and still, as Agata creates a haven of love and freedom to quell the storms of life's unfulfilled desires.
Additional Info
Rights: USA
Formats: Digi Beta, Beta SP, DVD
Cast and Crew
Starring: Licia Maglietta as Agata
Starring: Giuseppe Battiston as Romeo
Supporting: Emilio Solfrizzi as Gustavo
Supporting: Marina Massironi as Ines Silvestri
Supporting: Claudio Santamaria as Nico
Supporting: Giselda Volodi as Maria Liberia
Director: Silvio Soldini
Writer: Silvio Soldini
Writer: Doriana Leondeff
Writer: Francesco Piccolo
Director of Photography: Aranaldo Catinari
Art Director: Paola Bizzarri
Editor: Carlotta Cristiani
Costume Designer: Silvia Nebiolo
Music: Giovanni Venosta
Related Genres
  • Comedy
  • Romance
  • Drama
  • Photos

    To download: Click a image below for a full-sized image. Right click (or mac: ctrl + click) and select "Save this image as...", "Save picture as..." or "Download to disk".

    Licia Maglietta, Giuseppe Battiston, and Marina Massironi in Agata and the Storm
    Monica Nappo, Licia Maglietta, Emilio Solfrizzi, and Ann Eleonara Jorgensen in Agata and the Storm
    Giuseppe Battiston, Emilio Solfrizzi, and Licia Maglietta in Agata and the Storm
    Emilio Solfrizzi and Licia Maglietta in Agata and the Storm
    Licia Maglietta in Agata and the Storm
    Silvio Soldini Director of Agata and the Storm
    Agata and the Storm poster (hi res)
    Press
  • Agata and the Storm Press Kit
  • Discussion Guides
  • Agata an the Storm Discussion Questions
  • March 8, 2004

    By Deborah Young

    The bipolar Silvio Soldini follows his angst-ridden, quasi-melodramatic "Burning in the Wind" with a live-wire comedy painted in eye-popping colors. Story about a dazzling bookstore proprietor who blows out light bulbs with her emotional electricity, "Agata and the Storm" is much in the vein of Soldini's "Bread And Tulips" (2000), a sleeper that became one of the year's top-grossing films. After a strong opening weekend Feb. 27, pic looks set to turn into a high-voltage hit in Italy; a marketing strategy capitalizing on its witty modernity could help it strike lightning in neighboring markets, too.

    Pic adds good doses of Almodovar eccentricity and Jeunet whimsy to its portrait of a thoroughly emancipated woman, her brother and their friends. Holding together the many centrifugal plots which continually threaten to overbalance the tale is Agata (Licia Maglietta, the runaway housewife in "Bread and Tulips" and a top stage performer).

    Agata runs an airy store in downtown Genoa with the assistance of Maria Libera (comedienne Gisela Volodi), dispensing books to customers like they were medicine for the soul. She's such a ray of sunshine, it's no surprise when Nicola (Claudio Santamaria), 13 years her junior and married, declares he's madly in love with her.

    Agata's brother, Gustavo (Emilio Solfrizzi), a much more sober type, is a successful architect stifled in his marriage to a silly but famous TV marriage counselor.

    In a third story strand that at first seems unconnected, Romeo (Giuseppe Battiston), a natty traveling clothes salesman, runs around the provinces betraying his beloved wife, Daria (Monica Nappo), with a series of one-nighters. Back home he finds his elderly mother on her deathbed, where she reveals a great secret. Before he was born, she had another child out of wedlock, whom she gave up: Gustavo.

    Thus the two half-brothers meet. Gustavo is so shocked he opts out of his job, his family and even Agata to sell suits with Romeo. He remains in this catatonic state until Agata, who is suffering from a broken heart and has such a charge of feeling inside her she blows out street lamps and car batteries, catches up with them.

    Despite its surface frivolity and homespun surreality, underneath the film has a Buddha-like calm in pointing to love and freedom as life's true values. Sadly, the script starts to run out of steam in a string of multiple endings, each with a twist, which ought to have been telescoped into one wild, blowout grand finale.

    Heading the cast, Maglietta rewrites the cinematic rules of sex, age and beauty with her magnetism. Next to her everyone else fades into a character actor, including the deadpan Solfrizzi, love-crazed Santamaria (who revenges himself in a final fit of rage, however) and incurable womanizer Battiston. Volodi and Nappo are off-beat but attention-getting in supporting roles.

    Great efforts have been taken to make film a feast for the senses. Every scene, carefully lit by d.p. Arnaldo Catinari, is maliciously underlined by the garish colors and pattern madness of the sets and costumes, while the score titillates with its fresh selection of musical choices. Pic is further spiced with several movie-within-a-movie vignettes that come out of nowhere.

    --Deborah Young/ Variety - Review

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