Mia Madre at Real Art Ways

Skip to main content

Event

Mia Madre

WINNER – 2015 CANNES FILM FESTIVAL – ECUMENICAL JURY PRIZE
NOMINEE – 2015 EUROPEAN FILM AWARDS – BEST DIRECTOR (Nanni Moretti) & BEST ACTRESS (Margherita Buy)
WINNER – 2015 ITALIAN ACADEMY AWARDS – BEST ACTRESS (Margherita Buy) & BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS (Guilia Lazzarini)

Acclaimed Italian auteur Nanni Moretti returns to brilliant form with his semi-autobiographical and award-winning new dramedy MIA MADRE, with the stunning Margherita Buy starring as a director struggling to balance life and art. John Turturro costars as an American actor starring in Buy’s film-within-a-film.

Margherita (Buy) is directing a new social drama, set against the backdrop of an industrial dispute. Try as she may to remain professional, the emotional turmoil of her private life is taking a toll: an affair with one of her actors (Enrico Ianniello) has come to an end, her adolescent daughter (Beatrice Mancini) is failing Latin, but most troubling is the recent hospitalization of her formidable, beloved mother Ada (Giulia Lazzarini).

While her brother Giovanni (Moretti) gradually allows himself to be engulfed by his mother’s last days, taking extended leave to prolong his bedside vigil, Margherita’s tough schedule makes more than a daily visit tricky.

Meanwhile, the famous American actor Barry Huggins (the fabulous John Turturro) has arrived, a needy and capricious personality whose brash presence on set sees things go from bad to worse, and whose general ineptitude might finally push Margherita over the edge…

With characteristic openness to life’s big questions, Moretti’s mature and hugely entertaining film skillfully manoeuvres between pathos and comedy as it considers the uneasy relationship between artistic ambition and everyday life, the real and the imagined. Widely acclaimed at the Cannes Film Festival as Moretti’s best film since the Palme d’Or winning The Son’s Room, and named best film of the year by the influential Cahiers du Cinéma, MIA MADRE is another rich and affectingly humanist work from one of world cinema’s true masters

"The biggest reason to see the Italian dramedy "Mia Madre" can be summed up in two words: John Turturro."

Richard Roeper Chicago Sun-Times

"Moretti knows how to orchestrate a good laugh when it's needed, but he can plumb more soulful, sorrowful depths, too."

Steven Rea Philadelphia Inquirer

"Tinged with the kind of honest sadness and comic frustrations that suggest a daily journal come to life."

Robert Abele Los Angeles Times