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Movies Starring Aldo Fruttuosi

Welcome to our dedicated collection of films featuring Aldo Fruttuosi. Here, you’ll find a diverse lineup of titles that showcase the actor’s range, talent, and unforgettable on-screen presence. Whether you’re a longtime admirer or discovering Aldo fruttuosi’s performances for the first time, this selection offers something for every taste—encompassing both critically acclaimed roles and underrated gems waiting to be explored.

Our catalog, currently presenting 2 outstanding films starring Aldo Fruttuosi, is regularly updated to ensure you’re always in touch with recent releases and timeless classics. Browse detailed descriptions, ratings, and reviews to find the perfect movie for your next viewing experience. Dive into the captivating worlds brought to life by Aldo Fruttuosi’s performances and enjoy the magic of cinema at its finest.

Communists (2014)

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Jean-Marie Straub pushes this musicality of blocks to a paroxysmal extreme, mixing blocks of time (40 years separate the various extracts that are going to be used, and what is to be filmed), blocks of text (Malraux, Fortini, Vittorini, Hölderlin) and blocks of language (French, Italian, German), and from this ruckus emerges the history of the world, yes, History with a capital H, and from the same movement, the political hope of its being overtaken. So this is an adventure film, about the Human adventure, still one that is always, in the end, overtaken by Nature. (Arnaud Dommerc)

The Return of the Prodigal Son (2003)

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In Italy, immediately subsequent to the war, a group of people who lost all they possessed during the conflict, settle in a village in ruins. They intend to restore the city from the rubble and re-start life, in imitation of the women of Messina who rebuilt their city, destroyed as it was by an earthquake. Oscillating between respect and suspicion, co-existence between group members is tense. Things become complicated when an envoy from the government arrives to say that nothing there belongs to them. The film is a free adaptation of fragments of the novella ‘The Women of Messina’, by Sicilian writer Elio Vittorini.