My Name Is Tanino

My Name is Tanino
Directed by Paolo Virzì
Produced by Vittorio Cecchi Gori
Giovanni Lovatelli
Written by Francesco Bruni
Francesco Piccolo
Paolo Virzì
Starring Corrado Fortuna
Rachel McAdams
Music by Carlo Virzì
Cinematography Arnaldo Catinari
Edited by Jacopo Quadri
Production
company
Cecchi Gori Group
Whizbang Films Inc.
Distributed by Medusa Film
Release date
5 July 2002 (2002-07-05) (Venice Film Festival)
Running time
124 minutes
Country Italy
Canada
Language Italian, English
Box office €1,044,026 (Italy)

My Name is Tanino is a 2002 comedy film directed by Paolo Virzì. The picaresque plot is about Tanino, an Italian liberal arts student who falls in love with a young American tourist he met in Sicily and decides to track her down in the United States.[1]

Plot

Gaetano Mendollia, nicknamed Tanino, is a native of the fictional Castelluzzo del Golfo, a small, Sicilian, seaside resort in the province of Trapani. He studies cinematography in Rome and dreams of becoming a movie director.

He meets Sally, an American girl vacationing in Italy, with whom he has a brief romance. At the end of her vacation, Sally returns to the fictional Seaport, Rhode Island but forgets her camera in Italy. Tanino decides to travel to the US with the pretext of returning Sally's camera to her but also to avoid Italian military service. He leaves at night without telling anyone.

After arriving in America, Tanino has a series of adventures with the somewhat shady Li Cause family, Italian-Americans living in the US. Eventually he leaves them and finally meets up with Sally and her "perfect" White Anglo-Saxon Protestant family, confounding them with his antics.

Later, Tanino escapes the clutches of the FBI by riding on the roof of a train and arrives in New York City where he meets his idol, director Seymour Chinawsky. However Chinawsky is reduced to poverty and dies soon after promising to make a film with Tanino.

Despite Tanino's many misadventures, he always comes out on top because of his ingenuity.

Cast

See also

References

  1. Paolo Mereghetti. Il Mereghetti - Dizionario dei film. B.C. Dalai Editore, 2010. ISBN 8860736269.


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