Unletterboxd

Discover

  • Popular
  • Top Rated

Genres

loading...

TMDB logo

This product uses the TMDB API but is not endorsed or certified by TMDB.

  • Action
  • Adventure
  • Animation
  • Comedy
  • Crime
  • Documentary
  • Drama
  • Family
  • Fantasy
  • History
  • Horror
  • Music
  • Mystery
  • Romance
  • Science Fiction
  • TV Movie
  • Thriller
  • War
  • Western

Cast

Franco Maresco

Franco Maresco

Umberto Cantone

Umberto Cantone

Marco Alessi

Marco Alessi

Francesco Conticelli

Francesco Conticelli

Bernardo Greco

Bernardo Greco

Francesco Puma

Francesco Puma

Giuseppe Lo Piccolo

Giuseppe Lo Piccolo

Gino Carista

Gino Carista

Melino Imparato

Melino Imparato

Antonio Rezza

Antonio Rezza

Andrea Occhipinti

Andrea Occhipinti

Crew

Franco Maresco

Franco Maresco

Director

Andrea Occhipinti

Andrea Occhipinti

Producer

Marco Alessi

Marco Alessi

Producer

Daniele Occhipinti

Daniele Occhipinti

Producer

Franco Maresco

Franco Maresco

Screenplay

Claudia Uzzo

Claudia Uzzo

Screenplay

Francesco Guttuso

Francesco Guttuso

Screenplay

Umberto Cantone

Umberto Cantone

Screenplay

Alessandro Abate

Alessandro Abate

Director of Photography

Paola Freddi

Paola Freddi

Editor

Francesco Guttuso

Francesco Guttuso

Editor

Nicola Sferruzza

Nicola Sferruzza

Set Designer

Cesare Inzerillo

Cesare Inzerillo

Set Designer

Luisa Viglietti

Luisa Viglietti

Costume Design

Salvatore Bonafede

Salvatore Bonafede

Original Music Composer

Movie poster

Un film fatto per Bene

0.0 / 10100 min
Documentary

Overview

Filming on Franco Maresco's film about Carmelo Bene is abruptly halted after yet another on-set accident. Producer Andrea Occhipinti pulls the plug, exasperated by the endless takes and repeated delays. For his part, the director of Belluscone and The Mafia Is No Longer What It Was, accuses the production of "filmicide," and then disappears. Maresco's friend, Umberto Cantone, attempts to mend the rift by calling witnesses from all those involved in the project, in an investigation that offers an opportunity to retrace the personality and ideas of the most corrosive and apocalyptic auteur in Italian cinema. What if, meanwhile, far from everything and everyone, Maresco is finishing his film, which has become "the only way to give form to the anger and horror I feel for this shitty world"?