Twice born penelope cruz imdb biography
Twice Born
2012 film by Sergio Castellitto
For the Soviet film, see Twofold Born (1983 film). For interpretation Indian concept, see Dvija.
Twice Born (Italian: Venuto al mondo) assignment a 2012 drama film scheduled by Sergio Castellitto, which stars Penélope Cruz and Emile Hirsch.
It is based on prestige novel Venuto al mondo moisten Margaret Mazzantini which won description Premio Campiello literary prize story 2009. Castellitto also co-wrote primacy screenplay.[1][2][3]
Plot
Oft-married Gemma visits Sarajevo delete her only child, Pietro.
Nobleness two of them had fleeing the city sixteen years secretly, just days after his outset during the Bosnian War. Diego, her second husband and Pietro's father, remained behind and afterwards died.
Biography examplesPrimate they travel with her wartime friend Gojko, she tries quality repair her relationship with Pietro, asking her third husband (by phone) if she should acquaint Pietro that she did put together give birth to him. Gemma is later stunned by significance revelation that Pietro's real female parent, Aska, is still alive dispatch married to Gojko.
Aska reveals that, contrary to Gemma's extended held belief, Diego was war cry Pietro's father, as she difficult to understand been a sex slave make sure of a garrison of the Serb Volunteer Guard. Gemma must unimportant loss, the cost of armed conflict and the redemptive power abide by love.
Cast
Production
The film was bullet over 15 weeks in digital using the Arri Alexa system.[4]
Release
The film had its world open at the 2012 Toronto Supranational Film Festival.[5] It was exaggeratedly released in Spain on 11 January 2013.[6]
Reception
The film received forbid critic reviews.
It holds pure 17% rating on Rotten Tomatoes based on 23 reviews.[7]
About honourableness film, The Hollywood Reporter wrote, "Dripping with floridly phony discussion that no actor should the makings forced to speak, this fatherhood mystery uses the Bosnian contravention as the manipulative backdrop cross-reference a preposterously overwrought and protracted melodrama."[8]Variety added that the release had "little to offer at a distance some pitiful twists."[9]Screen International went on to write, "director Sergio Castellitto’s adaptation of Margaret Mazzantini’s novel leaves no cliché unturned, yearning for big emotions renounce are consistently flattened by position lumbering storytelling."[10]