Title: To Forget Venice AKA: -- Year: 1979 Original title: Dimenticare Venezia Runtime: 1 hour, 46 minutes Country: Italy | France Language: Italian Subtitles: English (.srt) Genre: Drama
Director: Franco Brusati
Cast Mariangela Melato ... Anna Eleonora Giorgi ... Claudia Erland Josephson ... Nicky Nerina Montagnani ... Caterina David Pontremoli ... Picchio Armando Brancia ... Owner of restaurant Siria Betti ... Rossino's wife Peter Boom ... Caterina's grandson Anne Caudry Alessandro Doria Daniela Guzzi Fred Personne ... Rossino Hella Petri ... Marta Paolo Roversi
Plot / Synopsis
This effective drama about crisis and change in an unorthodox family is directed by Franco Brusati, best known for his earlier Bread and Chocolate. Marta lives in a large country estate after retiring from her career as an opera singer. She is not alone. Two women live with her, Claudia and Anna, of uncertain familial ties, though perhaps nieces. Claudia and Anna are established in a lesbian affair and both depend on Marta like daughters would depend on a mother. Marta's brother Nicky and his lover Picchio arrive one day because Marta wants to take the two couples for a brief trip to Venice. Circumstances conspire to change those plans as one crisis after another, as well as a tragedy, make Claudia, Anna, and Nicky rethink their dependent behavior. ~ Eleanor Mannikka, Allrovi
Nominated for Oscar
Seeding time: usually between 18:00 and 24:00 EET
Technical Specs Source: Internet Group/Ripper: Unknown / Thanks to the original ripper Video Format: AVI/MPEG-4 Visual Video Bitrate: 926 Kbps Frame Rate: 25.000 fps Aspect Ratio: 3:2 Resolution: 688 x 464 Bits/(Pixel*Frame): 0.101 Audio Format: MPEG Audio Audio Bitrate: 112 Kbps Sampling rate: 44100 Hz
thanks alot dear uploader i got this file but it stop(49%) please help me (reseed) if its possible be happy
19/11/2011 11.29 pm
Thanks for the film. Nominated for best foreign language Oscar. I hope someone can provide a better version. There were quite a few glitches and extraneous lead in to the film. But again, beggars can't be choosers.