Halle Berry became a mother of two children after years of devoting herself to her career. She credited one film for pushing her to become a parent.
Halle Berry ‘tried and tried’ to get pregnant after doing this movie Halle Berry | Marc Piasecki/Getty Images
In 2007, Berry starred in the Susanna Bier movie Things We Lost in the Fire. The feature saw Berry playing a mother and widow of two children reeling from the loss of her husband. To make sure her performance was authentic, Berry went deep into the mindset of her tormented character.
“You know that was sort of like a delicate tight rope dance and I did everyday with Susanna trying to find the balance and trying to really find those little moments and hit them just right and really bring truth to the grieving process and not make it overly sentimental and really not be afraid...
Halle Berry ‘tried and tried’ to get pregnant after doing this movie Halle Berry | Marc Piasecki/Getty Images
In 2007, Berry starred in the Susanna Bier movie Things We Lost in the Fire. The feature saw Berry playing a mother and widow of two children reeling from the loss of her husband. To make sure her performance was authentic, Berry went deep into the mindset of her tormented character.
“You know that was sort of like a delicate tight rope dance and I did everyday with Susanna trying to find the balance and trying to really find those little moments and hit them just right and really bring truth to the grieving process and not make it overly sentimental and really not be afraid...
- 1/4/2024
- by Antonio Stallings
- Showbiz Cheat Sheet
Margherita Mazzucco on the connection with Saverio Costanzo, Susanna Nicchiarelli, and Chiara: “I was shooting My Brilliant Friend and I received this call from Susanna …” Photo: Anne-Katrin Titze
Susanna Nicchiarelli’s Chiara, starring Margherita Mazzucco was a highlight of Film at Lincoln Center and Cinecittà’s 22nd edition of Open Roads: New Italian Cinema. Resembling Bruno Dumont’s approach of how to look at past centuries through the cinema lens of the 21st century, there are dances and wielding wild nature and commonplace miracles that stun nevertheless.
Margherita Mazzucco as Chiara: “She did these incredible things by herself and I’m very happy to portray this character.”
Chiara, St. Clare of Assisi (played with vigour and poise by Mazzucco), a disciple of St. Francis of Assisi (Andrea Carpenzano), is front and centre in Nicchiarelli’s take on what it could have meant to be a woman in the 13th Century,...
Susanna Nicchiarelli’s Chiara, starring Margherita Mazzucco was a highlight of Film at Lincoln Center and Cinecittà’s 22nd edition of Open Roads: New Italian Cinema. Resembling Bruno Dumont’s approach of how to look at past centuries through the cinema lens of the 21st century, there are dances and wielding wild nature and commonplace miracles that stun nevertheless.
Margherita Mazzucco as Chiara: “She did these incredible things by herself and I’m very happy to portray this character.”
Chiara, St. Clare of Assisi (played with vigour and poise by Mazzucco), a disciple of St. Francis of Assisi (Andrea Carpenzano), is front and centre in Nicchiarelli’s take on what it could have meant to be a woman in the 13th Century,...
- 6/30/2023
- by Anne-Katrin Titze
- eyeforfilm.co.uk
“Join forces,’ says Susanna Nicchiarelli, Michela Occhipinti, Chiara Bellosi, and Maura Delpero.
Four Italian directors came together in London last week to call for greater support for female film directors in Italy’s male-dominated industry.
Films by female directors comprised just 13 of the total films produced in Italy in both 2019 and 2020, according to data released by Cinecittà, Italy’s largest production studio. However, this is a significant gain on the 2 figure of 2010.
“There is a cultural problem at the root of all this. I realised it when I tried to get my first film done,” said Susanna Nicchiarelli, of her debut fiction feature Cosmonaut,...
Four Italian directors came together in London last week to call for greater support for female film directors in Italy’s male-dominated industry.
Films by female directors comprised just 13 of the total films produced in Italy in both 2019 and 2020, according to data released by Cinecittà, Italy’s largest production studio. However, this is a significant gain on the 2 figure of 2010.
“There is a cultural problem at the root of all this. I realised it when I tried to get my first film done,” said Susanna Nicchiarelli, of her debut fiction feature Cosmonaut,...
- 6/22/2022
- by Alina Trabattoni
- ScreenDaily
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