Mignon Has Come to Stay
Mignon è partita (literally Mignon Has Left, internationally released as Mignon Has Come to Stay) is a 1988 Italian drama film directed by Francesca Archibugi. The film won five David di Donatello awards for Best New Director, Best Screenplay, Best Actress (Stefania Sandrelli), Best Supporting Actor (Massimo Dapporto) and Best Sound.[1]
Mignon Has Come to Stay | |
---|---|
Directed by | Francesca Archibugi |
Starring | Stefania Sandrelli |
Music by | Roberto Gatto Battista Lena |
Language | Italian |
The film centers on a sophisticated young Parisian girl who is forced to move to Rome to live with her extended family after her father runs into criminal charges and her mother has a nervous breakdown.
Cast
- Stefania Sandrelli: Laura
- Jean-Pierre Duriez: Federico
- Massimo Dapporto: Aldo
- Micheline Presle: Prof. Girelli
- Céline Beauvallet: Mignon
- Leonardo Ruta: Giorgio
- Daniele Zaccaria: Tommaso
- Francesca Antonelli: Chiara
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gollark: For ethical reasons, children are produced centrally in vats.
gollark: Notelia is a very liberal nation. We have legalized arbitrary marriage digraphs, mandatory gun ownership, no prisons, no sports, cannabis, the metric system, no alcohol, and recreational nuclear weapons (also distributed to other nations at random).
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References
- Enrico Lancia. I premi del cinema. Gremese Editore, 1998. ISBN 88-7742-221-1.
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