The lineup for the 2023 ST. ALi Italian Film Festival has been announced, showcasing a diverse range of contemporary Italian cinema.
From contemporary drama, comedy and documentaries to a retrospective honouring one of Italy’s greatest filmmakers, this year’s rich program will transport audiences with a cinematic escape to la bella Italia!
The ever-popular ST. ALi Italian Film Festival is back this year with a bumper crop of new works, and classics.
The long-awaited Italian Film Festival is finally back for 2020, thanks to partner-sponsor ST. ALi, and Palace Nova Cinemas.
When Claudia's grandmother dies, she is convinced to put the body in her freezer to keep claiming the pension cheques, even as romance begins to blossom between her and a romantically hapless Tax Police officer.
Check out all the pics from the Opening Night of the 16th Lavazza Italian Film Festival
The Art of Happiness by Alessandro Rak is a soulful animated drama about the “hidden wealth of everyday things”, reminding us to find beauty in the present.
Three generations of women uproot their lives to start afresh at the family’s olive grove in Puglia when the family textile mill is forced to shut.
An intimate documentary made up of a series of almost soundless, naturalistic snapshots of everyday life for those living along the grandest road in Italy.
There's plenty of laughs when an out-of-work pianist is sent undercover to a crime family wedding to identity a violent crime boss only known as The Ghost.
Asia Argento’s film is a powerful tale of childhood struggle centring around 9 year old Aria, caught in the midst of her famous parents' messy divorce.
A marriage guidance counsellor has never enjoyed a successful relationship himself because of a jinx where terrible accidents befall any woman he becomes involved with.
Opening this year’s Italian Film Festival is the Australian premiere of the biopic Marina, based on the life of 1950s Italian singer Rocco Granata.
Reality TV has always been ripe for satire. The whole concept is vaguely bizarre and About Face takes a wicked swipe at the notion of instant celebrity and its trappings.