The Unknown Woman
The Unknown Woman | |
---|---|
Italian Original Theatrical Poster
|
|
Directed by | Giuseppe Tornatore |
Produced by | Laura Fattori, Franco Committeri |
Written by | Giuseppe Tornatore, Massimo De Rita |
Starring | Kseniya Rappoport |
Music by | Ennio Morricone |
Cinematography | Fabio Zamarion |
Edited by | Massimo Quaglia |
Production
company |
|
Distributed by | Medusa Film |
Release dates
|
<templatestyles src="Plainlist/styles.css"/>
|
Running time
|
118 minutes |
Country | Italy |
Language | Italian |
Box office | $6,850,853[1] |
The Unknown Woman (Italian: La sconosciuta , also known as The Other Woman) is a 2006 Italian psychological thriller mystery film, directed by Giuseppe Tornatore that depicts a woman alone in a foreign country, haunted by a horrible past, and in search of a lost daughter.
Plot
Irena (Kseniya Rappoport), a Ukrainian prostitute on the run, is determined to find a job in an elegant apartment building in northern Italy, and starts by cleaning the stairs. She does it in order to inch her way into working for a family residing in that building. She befriends Gina (Piera Degli Esposti), the nanny of the family's child, Thea (Clara Dossena), who also lives with them in their apartment. When the nanny is crippled in a fall—tripped by Irena—but presumed to be accidental, Irena is hired to take her place.[2] Through flashbacks, viewers learn that Irena has been physically and emotionally abused, and forced to bear nine children, all taken away at birth to be sold to adoptive families. After stabbing her pimp and leaving him for dead, she sets out to find her youngest child, whom she believes is Thea; hence the plot to work for them. Adoption documents in the apartment convince her that Thea is indeed her daughter. The mother grows suspicious of Irena and fires her, despite the loving relationship that has grown up between Irena and the child. Irena's pimp stalks her and sends out thugs to beat her up as she walks down the street. He rigs her employer's car, leading to a crash in which Thea's mother is killed. The pimp forces Irena to drive him to a location that may or may not contain the money Irena stole from him when she left him for dead. During a struggle, he falls and is killed as his head hits a rock. Thea's father moves to a new apartment and prepares a room for Irena, but as the police suspect foul play around the death of Thea's mother, Irena is taken into custody. She reveals both that the true culprit is the pimp and that she killed him. She is tried, and sent to jail. Thea stops eating until the judge allows Irena to visit her in the hospital and feed her. DNA testing reveals that Thea is not her daughter after all. After she is out of jail, she finds Thea, a young lady now waiting for her.
Cast
- Kseniya Rappoport as Irena (as Ksenia Rappoport)
- Michele Placido as Muffa
- Claudia Gerini as Valeria Adacher
- Piera Degli Esposti as Gina
- Alessandro Haber as Matteo
- Clara Dossena as Thea Adacher
- Ángela Molina as Lucrezia (as Angela Molina)
- Margherita Buy as Irena's lawyer
- Pierfrancesco Favino as Donato Adacher
- Paolo Elmo as Nello, Irena's lover
- Nicola Di Pinto as Judge
Awards and nominations
- David di Donatello (Italy)
- Won: Best Actress – Leading Role (Kseniya Rappoport)
- Won: Best Cinematography (Fabio Zamarion)
- Won: Best Director (Giuseppe Tornatore)
- Won: Best Film
- Won: Best Music (Ennio Morricone)
- Nominated: Best Actor – Leading Role (Michele Placido)
- Nominated: Best Costume Design (Nicoletta Ercole)
- Nominated: Best Editing (Massimo Quaglia)
- Nominated: Best Producer
- Nominated: Best Production Design (Tonino Zera)
- Nominated: Best Screenplay (Francesco Tornatore)
- Nominated: Best Sound (Gilberto Martinelli)
- European Film Awards
- Won: Audience Award – Best Film (Giuseppe Tornatore)
- Nominated: Best Actress – Leading Role (Kseniya Rappoport)
- Nominated: Best Cinematographer (Fabio Zamarion)
- Nominated: Best Director (Giuseppe Tornatore)
- Moscow Film Festival (Russia)[3]
- Won: Audience Award (Giuseppe Tornatore; tied with Molière)
- Won: Silver St. George – Best Director (Giuseppe Tornatore)
- Nominated: Golden St. George (Giuseppe Tornatore)
- Norwegian Film Festival (Norway)
- Won: Audience Award (Giuseppe Tornatore)
References
- ↑ http://www.boxofficemojo.com/movies/?page=main&id=unknownwoman.htm
- ↑ http://www.jff.org.il/?CategoryID=483&ArticleID=376
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
External links
Wikinews has related news: Oscar Foreign Film race narrowed to nine films |
- 2006 films
- Italian-language films
- Articles containing Italian-language text
- Lang and lang-xx using deprecated ISO 639 codes
- 2000s thriller films
- Psychological thriller films
- 2000s mystery films
- Films set in Italy
- Films directed by Giuseppe Tornatore
- Italian films
- Italian thriller films
- Works about human trafficking
- Film scores by Ennio Morricone
- Human trafficking in Ukraine
- European Film Awards winners (films)