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Don’t Move 2004 123movies

Don’t Move 2004 123movies

Mar. 12, 2004125 Min.
Your rating: 0
7 1 vote

Synopsis

Watch: Non ti muovere 2004 123movies, Full Movie Online – While waiting for the brain surgery of his daughter Angela, victim of a motorcycle accident, the surgeon Timoteo (Sergio Castellitto) recalls his torrid affair with and passion for Italia (Penélope Cruz), a simple woman from slums in the periphery of the big city where he lives. The ghost of the beloved and sexual object of desire Italia chases him in his memories..
Plot: While waiting for the brain surgery of his daughter Angela, victim of a motorcycle accident, the surgeon Timoteo recalls his torrid affair with and passion for Italia, a simple woman from slums in the periphery of the big city where he lives. The ghost of the beloved and sexual object of desire Italia chases him in his memories.
Smart Tags: #italy #mistress #guilt #doctor #surrealism #passive_aggression #cleavage #scantily_clad_female #breasts #nude_girl #nudity #no_panties #female_frontal_nudity #female_rear_nudity #female_removes_her_clothes #panties #voyeur #voyeurism #rape_victim #leg_spreading #sex_in_bed


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Ratings:

7.0/10 Votes: 8,220
46% | RottenTomatoes
59/100 | MetaCritic
N/A Votes: 249 Popularity: 8.264 | TMDB

Reviews:

Powerful Drama – Penélope Cruz Deserved a Nomination to the Oscar
While waiting for the brain surgery of his daughter Angela, victim of a motorcycle accident, the surgeon Timoteo (Sergio Castellitto) recalls his torrid affair with and passion for Italia (Penélope Cruz), a simple woman from slums in the periphery of the big city where he lives.

When I bought the DVD “Non ti Muovere”, I was expecting to see an above average dramatic romance. I felt attracted by name of Penélope Cruz in the credits and the good references in IMDb, but my best expectations were superseded. “Non ti Muovere” is a very intense low budget movie, a precious gem to be discovered by movie lovers, with a touching and sad love story that recalled me Fellini’s “Le Notti di Cabiria”: There are two points very similar in these films: the character of the lonely and simple Italia, who works cleaning hotels, and recalled me the prostitute Cabiria; and the very poor isolated location in the slums where both characters (Italia and Cabiria) live. “Non ti Muovere” is more erotic, but both stories are centered in the humble female lead character. Penélope Cruz is awesome, with a stunning and heartbreaking performance of an abused woman with no possessions. She really deserved a nomination to the Oscar for such a wonderful acting. I do not follow the work of the practically unknown (to me) Sergio Castellitto, but his direction and performance in this film are outstanding. My vote is nine.

Title (Brazil): “Não se Mova” (“Do not Move”)

Review By: claudio_carvalho
It’s about our own personal catharsis.
Well, I don’t. I can’t. I can hardly breathe. And I’m not the only one in the small screening room where we are invited for a preview of Sergio Castellitto’s movie, DON’T MOVE, some weeks before its official premiere in London.

I missed the beginning. But even as I was finding my seat in the darkness, I could feel from the vibe in the room that something was actually happening on the screen: One could feel the hot stifling air of a summer afternoon; the sheltering shadows of midday in the Italian south; the smell of dust in the streets; the smell of poverty. I know the out-of-the-way alleys and secret passages that hide Italia amidst the construction sites of a cancerous urban development; where I come from, these are not poetic metaphors. A young girl is urgently admitted to the Hospital where her father, Timoteo (Sergio Castellitto), works as a doctor. As he is helplessly waiting for the surgery to save his daughter’s life, Timoteo begins his confession: a painful account of his early years, of his suffocating relationship with his wife, Elsa (Claudia Gerini), of his acquaintance with a destitute Albanian émigré, Italia (Penelope Cruz), and of their tragic love-affair which started with her rape by Timoteo and ended with her death. I have met people like Timoteo: academic over-achievers who escaped poverty, successful professionals seeking comfort and oblivion in a new house by the beach, in a piece of jewellery or in a bottle of wine. The boundaries between social classes are nowhere less distinct than in southern Europe. Stepping out of your class, for the south is not the exception but the un-written rule that creates a colourful social landscape, an everyday Almodovarian comedy. The same imperative often brings forth forces of tragedy, like those that crashed Italia’s heart and body. But as the story was unfolding on the screen, I was starting to realise that this sense of familiarity was due not only to the characters and their misgivings, but also due to the artistic filter through which they were reaching my eyes. There is an almost painterly quality in this film. Materials are tangible, shimmering through the counterpoint of light and darkness, contradicting each other: soft linen against coarse hair, a black suit against a white dress, the daughter’s shaved hair on the linoleum of the hospital floor; an agitated universe of colour and texture; just like a Caravaggio painting. And as beautiful in its harshness.

There is definitely no beauty in rape. Or death. But they are both happening every day, right this moment, in nature, in civilized society, perhaps next door. And there is fear and awe whenever we encounter these forces. They are real as much as we are. Invisible forces that play us, with us, against us, in a cruel, mesmerizing puppetry. Forces within people, real people, just like us. The rape-scene in DON’T MOVE has been re-viewed unfavourably by some critics. Perhaps because it is shot with a clinical detachment that renders the account of a violent crime even more violent. The camera is gradually moving away as if closing its eyes from what is happening to Italia. As if God is absent from the scene. Surely, it could have been done in a different way. But would that have made a rape-scene equivalent to the self-evident message that “rape is a crime”? Do we even need a movie to tell us that? Or are we being hypocritical in our effort to shout to the world how politically correct we are? Moralizing from the safe pedestal of normality and sanity does not offer society protection from the dark forces within human nature. Putting these forces under the psychological microscope of an artistic medium gives us an opportunity to feel their power, reflect on the complicated nature of crimes and misfortunes and re-enact the agonizing struggle of their protagonists. A poetic re-enactment of tragic events, whether in theatre or in cinema, is still serving an almost therapeutic purpose. To quote a reliable authority on the subject, this is done by depicting “ incidents arousing pity and fear, wherewith to accomplish its catharsis of such emotions ” (Aristotle, Poetics) DON’T MOVE is more of a vehicle for catharsis than middle-class escapism through vice; who ever saw this movie as an erotic male hallucination had better seek professional help or do some research on the subject. Italia is not exactly standard male-fantasy material. She is too real for that. Repulsively real. In this light, the issue of the characters’ and the story’s credibility requires a slightly different approach: Timoteo is more complex a character than a rich, well-educated philanderer desperately trying to have it both ways; as Italia is a lot more than a provocative, vulgar, unrefined girl who happened to be raped; Timoteo’s wife, Elsa, has a private life of her own, safety exits and frustrations of her own; they all make choices and they all have to suffer through them. The story is fictional. The characters, however, very soon acquire a life of their own. They allow us to see their imperfections, their flaws and their crimes. Just like an assortment of ordinary people posing for Caravaggio in a dark, humid basement.

Review By: anna-217

Other Information:

Original Title Non ti muovere
Release Date 2004-03-12
Release Year 2004

Original Language it
Runtime 2 hr 5 min (125 min), 2 hr (120 min) (Ontario) (Canada)
Budget 0
Revenue 11837022
Status Released
Rated N/A
Genre Drama, Romance
Director Sergio Castellitto
Writer Margaret Mazzantini, Sergio Castellitto
Actors Penélope Cruz, Sergio Castellitto, Claudia Gerini
Country Italy, Spain, United Kingdom
Awards 16 wins & 28 nominations
Production Company N/A
Website N/A


Technical Information:

Sound Mix Dolby Digital
Aspect Ratio 2.35 : 1
Camera N/A
Laboratory DeLuxe
Film Length N/A
Negative Format N/A
Cinematographic Process N/A
Printed Film Format 35 mm

Don’t Move 2004 123movies
Don’t Move 2004 123movies
Don’t Move 2004 123movies
Original title Non ti muovere
TMDb Rating 6.994 249 votes

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