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Director:
Francesca Archibugi
Screenplay:
Doriana Leondeff, Francesca
Archibugi
Photography:
Pasquale Mari
Music:
Battista Lena
Cast:
Giovanna Mezzogiorno, Tom Karumathy, Andrea Miglio Risi,
Anna Galiena, Angela Finocchiaro
Editing:
Esmeralda Calabria, Jacopo Quadri
Production:
Cattleya
in collaboration with
Rai Cinema;co-produced by
Aquarius Films
(UK),
Khussro Films
(India),
Babe Films
(France) and
Cinemello
International Distribution:
TF1 International,
9 rue Maurice Mallet, Immeuble Central Park, 92130
Issy-les-Moulineux (France),
tel. +33 141411763, fax +33.141411769, e-mail
sales@tf1.fr,
www.tf1international.com
Year: 2006. Running Time: 106’
Chicken (Andrea Miglio Risi)
and Curry
(Tom Karumathy) are two schoolmates whose nicknames
refer to the fact that they are always together. After
failing their high school finals, they try to deflect
the wrath of their families by claiming that Curry (an
adopted Indian boy) is suffering from an identity crisis
and needs to go to India (in the company of his
inseparable friend) to discover his roots. The two leave
for India, but the trip turns out to be completely
different from what they had imagined. Chicken falls in
love with a considerably older lady doctor, Chiara
(Giovanna Mezzogiorno), who works for “Doctors without
Borders”, while Curry discovers India, at first
rejecting it and then becoming enthralled.
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Francesca Archibugi
Born in 1961, she is one of the most talented Italian young
directors. Known internationally for her first film Mignon
Has Come to Stay, she has a natural artistic sensibility for
the world of children and adolescents, a theme which has been
treated with extreme delicacy in all her films. In 1980 she
began attending the Centro Sperimentale di Cinematografia (Experimental
Film Center) where she studied with Mario Monicelli (director),
Carlo de Palma (cinematographer), Furio Scarpelli and Ugo Pirro
(screenplayers), Perpignani (editor) and Piero Tosi (costumes).
From 1980 to 1983 she realized four short films and a
documentary. In 1987 her first debut as a director with
Mignon Has Come to Stay won her six David di
Donatello, the most prestigious Italian Cinema Awards, for Best
Film, Best Director, Best Script, Best Actress, Best Actor, and
Best Direct Sound. Mignon Has Come to Stay also won the
Best First Film Award at the San Sebastian Film Festival. The
same film was presented at the first edition of Nice Festival in
New York. In 1990 her second film At Night Fall, with
Marcello Mastroianni starring, won 2 Awards: the David di
Donatello and the Nastro d’Argento. In 1993 Francesca Archibugi
realized her third film The Great Pumikin for
which she was awarded the David di Donatello for best film, best
screenplay and best actor. In 1994 her fourth film was Closed
Eyes, a work based on a famous novel by Federico Tozz ,
where the director experiments a challenging adaptation of a
written psychological drama. Her love for Jazz music inspired
the documentary La strana storia della banda sonora
presented at Venice International Film Festival in the “Immagini
e Musica Selection”. In 1997 The Pear Tree or Shooting
the Moon was selected at the Venice Festival. In 2000 she
made Domani, and later she worked for TV features and
documentaries.
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