Sogni mostruosamente proibiti

Sogni mostruosamente proibiti (Monstrously Prohibited Dreams) is a 1982 Italian comedy film directed by Neri Parenti. The film is loosely inspired by The Secret Life of Walter Mitty.[1][2]

Sogni mostruosamente proibiti
Italian theatrical release poster by Renato Casaro
Directed byNeri Parenti
Written byNeri Parenti
Laura Toscano
Franco Marotta
StarringPaolo Villaggio
Janet Agren
Music byBruno Zambrini
CinematographyAlberto Spagnoli
Edited bySergio Montanari
Release date
1982
Running time
90 min
CountryItaly
LanguageItalian

Plot

Paolo Coniglio is a naive and bumbling writer in a publishing house of comics, bullied by the director and by his future mother-in-law. To escape the dreary daily routine, he finds himself the protagonist of very vivid daydreams in the company of Dalia, the beautiful heroine of the comic books who is responsible of translating.
In the course of his visions plays with effects tragicomic popular heroes of the literature and comics, like Parsifal, Superman and Tarzan. Every time his awakening is increasingly more abrupt, when one day, doing the grocery shopping, he meets a charming blonde girl identical to Dalia that, against his will, involves him in a shady intrigue.

Cast

gollark: Do we *pay* DS?
gollark: I've seen something which let you define processing chains as Lua scripts, which might be nicer than a graphical UI.
gollark: And I found out the computers all have keyloggers by typing a bunch of suspicious keywords into notepad (and not saving that). They complained that I had apparently wasted a bunch of time by doing so.
gollark: This has never been fixed because apparently the old software does everything they want fine.
gollark: Also, they use Raspberry Pis for some programming education, but connecting to the package repositories they need for updates is blocked by the filtering proxy.

See also

References

  1. Roberto Chiti; Roberto Poppi; Enrico Lancia. Dizionario del cinema italiano: I film. Gremese, 2000. ISBN 8877424230.
  2. Paolo Mereghetti. Il Mereghetti. B.C. Dalai Editore, 2010. ISBN 88-6073-626-9.


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