Vinicio Capossela Trailers
Natale fuori orario TrailerCiao Gabiàn! TrailerBella Ciao Trailer
Total trailers found: 18
07 August 2013
An odyssey across the places of origin of Western civilization: Greece, subsumed by economic crisis; where the mind, the soul, and the music of its people lie, specially the Rebetes, the Rebetiko singers, considered as the Hellenic equivalent to blues; this music against the establishment was born among refugees who arrived to Greece from Asia Minor and proliferated in poor urban neighborhoods.
24 February 2022
A timeless spa town, a 1940s hotel, a place that transports the present to who knows where. Not the past, Ornella Vanoni's life, but the revelation—current—of her intimacy, exhibited through a relationship: her relationship with the director.
28 September 2020
Documentary follows the life and work of Italian singer and composer Paolo Conte.
01 September 2020
What would Jesus preach in the 21st century? Who would his disciples be? And how would today's society respond to the return of the Son of God? With The New Gospel, Milo Rau is staging a "Revolt of Dignity".
26 September 2012
A documentary about Squallor, Italy's first and most successful "ghost band" project, created by four big bosses of 70's-80's Italian music business.
10 December 2009
Born of a chance meeting in Venice, Silvestro and Camilla's rocky romance unfolds over 10 winters as new lovers come and go but they are eternally thrust back into one another's arms.
19 April 2019
Capossela denounces the impossibility for mankind to realize the Christian precept: "Love your neighbor as yourself".
19 January 2016
Singer-songwriter Vinicio Capossela's journey through Irpinia, telling stories related to music and n
11 April 2022
For decades, wherever people have fought against injustice, they have sung “Bella ciao.” It is said to have been the anthem of Italian partisans fighting against fascism in the Second World War, but there are those who doubt the truth of this.
20 December 2010
Shut away in his home, at the top of a very steep staircase of thirty steps, Enzo Del Re manages—though not without effort—to bend the world to himself rather than be bent by it.