My Big Gay Italian Wedding (film)
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''My Big Gay Italian Wedding'' ( it, Puoi baciare lo sposo, lit=You can kiss the groom) is a 2018 Italian comedy-drama film directed by Alessandro Genovesi. It is based on the off-Broadway play ''
My Big Gay Italian Wedding ''My Big Gay Italian Wedding'' is a play written by Anthony J. Wilkinson that premiered off-Broadway in 2003, at the Actor's Playhouse in New York City. In September 2009, an updated version co-starring Scott Evans and with choreography by J. Au ...
'' by Anthony J. Wilkinson. The film stars Salvatore Esposito and Cristiano Caccamo as fiancés Paolo and Antonio;
Diego Abatantuono Diego Abatantuono (born 20 May 1955) is an Italian cinema and theatre actor, and screenwriter, three-time winner of the Nastro d'Argento. Biography and career Abatantuono was born in Milan to a father of Apulian origin and a mother from Como. T ...
and
Monica Guerritore Monica Guerritore (5 January 1958 in Rome, Italy) is an Italian actress of cinema, theatre and television. Biography Born in Rome to a Neapolitan father and a Calabrian mother, after her debut at just sixteen years of age under the direction of G ...
as Roberto and Anna, Antonio's parents; and Dino Abbrescia and
Diana Del Bufalo Diana Del Bufalo (born 8 February 1990) is an Italian actress, singer, and television host. Biography Diana Del Bufalo was born in Rome on the 8th of February 1990, her father is Dario Del Bufalo; an architect and archeologist and her mother i ...
as Donato and Benedetta, Antonio and Paolo's flatmates.


Plot

In Berlin, Antonio proposes to his live-in boyfriend, Paolo, who says yes. Paolo asks if he can accompany Antonio back to his Italian village,
Civita di Bagnoregio Civita di Bagnoregio is a town in the Province of Viterbo in central Italy, a ''suburb'' of the comune of Bagnoregio, east from it. It is about north of Rome. The only access is a footbridge from the nearby town, with a toll introduced in 20 ...
, for Easter, which Paolo suggests is a good time for Antonio to come out to his parents. Antonio and Paolo arrive in Civita with their flatmates Benedetta and Donato, and Antonio nervously announces his news at dinner. Antonio's father, Roberto, is shocked. His mother Anna announces that she is excited to celebrate the wedding, but she has conditions: it must happen in Civita; she will hire famous wedding planner Enzo Miccio; as mayor, Roberto will officiate the ceremony; and Paolo's mother must attend. Paolo explains that he has not spoken to his mother for three years since her negative reaction to the news that he is gay, but Anna is adamant. Roberto refuses to perform the ceremony yet is willing to attend the wedding elsewhere, but Anna exiles him from the house until he changes his mind. Anna brings Antonio and Paolo to Father Francesco, who agrees to help them convince Roberto, and to officiate the wedding if they are unsuccessful. With Antonio, Benendetta and Donato in tow, Paolo reluctantly visits his mother in Naples to invite her to the wedding. She has no interest, and
cross-dresser Cross-dressing is the act of wearing clothes usually worn by a different gender. From as early as pre-modern history, cross-dressing has been practiced in order to disguise, comfort, entertain, and self-express oneself. Cross-dressing has play ...
Donato offers to pose as Paolo's mother. Enzo enlists the entire town to create the beautiful wedding Anna is expecting at a local ruined church. Antonio's ex-girlfriend Camilla is still in love with him, and her attempts to insinuate herself into his new life make Paolo temporarily doubt Antonio's devotion. Anna threatens to file for divorce if Roberto does not capitulate. He, in turn, sets the wedding venue on fire, and has to be rescued by Antonio and Paolo. The next day, Roberto officiates the ceremony in the town square. Donato walks Paolo down the aisle dressed as a woman, but Paolo is pleasantly surprised to see that his real mother Vincenza is already there. Camilla interrupts the wedding with the reveal that she and Antonio slept together once after he and Paolo were together. Upset, Paolo moves to leave, but Antonio stops him by professing his love and singing "
Don't Leave Me This Way "Don't Leave Me This Way" is a song written by Kenneth Gamble, Leon Huff, and Cary Gilbert. It was originally released in 1975 by Harold Melvin & the Blue Notes featuring Teddy Pendergrass, an act signed to Gamble & Huff's Philadelphia Internat ...
", joined by the wedding guests.


Cast

*
Diego Abatantuono Diego Abatantuono (born 20 May 1955) is an Italian cinema and theatre actor, and screenwriter, three-time winner of the Nastro d'Argento. Biography and career Abatantuono was born in Milan to a father of Apulian origin and a mother from Como. T ...
as Roberto Brambilla, Antonio's father, the mayor of Civita. He is proud of his supposedly progressive views, but proves to be less tolerant of his son's homosexuality. *
Monica Guerritore Monica Guerritore (5 January 1958 in Rome, Italy) is an Italian actress of cinema, theatre and television. Biography Born in Rome to a Neapolitan father and a Calabrian mother, after her debut at just sixteen years of age under the direction of G ...
as Anna Di Gastoni, Antonio's mother. She is much more accepting of Antonio's lifestyle, but she has nonnegotiable conditions for his wedding, and delivers multiple ultimatums to Roberto in an effort to make him comply. * Salvatore Esposito as Paolo Baiello, Antonio's fiancé. He is a "burly, bearded guy not totally unlike Antonio's dad", and is estranged from his own mother. * Cristiano Caccamo as Antonio Brambilla, an Italian actor living in Berlin. After Paolo accepts his proposal, Antonio realizes he needs to tell his parents, who do not know he is gay. * Dino Abbrescia as Donato Lavopa, Antonio and Paolo's "chatty new flatmate who is battling personal issues and cannot be left alone", thus accompanying the group to Civita even though the others barely know him. *
Diana Del Bufalo Diana Del Bufalo (born 8 February 1990) is an Italian actress, singer, and television host. Biography Diana Del Bufalo was born in Rome on the 8th of February 1990, her father is Dario Del Bufalo; an architect and archeologist and her mother i ...
, Benedetta Stanchi, Antonio and Paolo's "skittish" and "no-filters" flatmate and landlady. Jake Wilson of ''The Age'' called Benedetta "easily the film's campiest character." * as Camilla Fonteggi, Antonio's "childhood-friend-and-brief-fling-turned-semi-psycho-stalker." She cannot accept that Antonio is gay, and will go to any lengths to get him to love her. * Rosaria D'Urso as Vincenza Quintone, Paolo's estranged mother *
Antonio Catania Antonio Catania (born 22 February 1952) is an Italian actor. Life and career Born in Acireale, Province of Catania, Antonio Catania studied acting at the Drama School of the Piccolo Teatro in Milan. After the graduation he started an intense ...
as Father Francesco Palmisani. He is a Franciscan friar and family friend who offers to marry Antonio and Paolo in a deconsecrated church if Roberto fails to change his mind. * Enzo Miccio as himself


Production

Based on the off-Broadway play ''
My Big Gay Italian Wedding ''My Big Gay Italian Wedding'' is a play written by Anthony J. Wilkinson that premiered off-Broadway in 2003, at the Actor's Playhouse in New York City. In September 2009, an updated version co-starring Scott Evans and with choreography by J. Au ...
'' by Anthony J. Wilkinson, the film was co-written by Giovanni Bognetti and Alessandro Genovesi, and directed by Genovesi. The cinematographer was Federico Masiero.


Release

''My Big Gay Italian Wedding'' was released in Italy on 1 March 2018. The same month, Breaking Glass Pictures acquired the US distribution rights to the film.


Critical reception

On
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, the film has an approval ratings of 67% based on 6 reviews, with an average score of 5.65/10. Matthew Breen of ''
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'' explained, "With overtones of ''The Birdcage'' and ''Mamma Mia'', the film toys playfully with Italy's lingering homophobia, preventing Italian same-sex couples from getting full marriage (rather than 'skim-milk'-style civil partnership)." Jake Wilson of ''The Age'' wrote that the film "aims to cater to the public while challenging it just a little—not by overturning accepted notions about family, gender or religion, but by demonstrating that same-sex unions pose no threat to these notions when things are properly understood." Steve Warren of the ''
Windy City Times ''Windy City Times'' is an LGBT newspaper in Chicago that published its first issue on September 26, 1985. History ''Windy City Times'' was founded in 1985 by Jeff McCourt, Bob Bearden, Drew Badanish and Tracy Baim, who started Sentury Publicat ...
'' called the film "fun", and suggested that it was intended to help make Italians more receptive to the same-sex civil unions made legal in Italy two years before. ''Broadway World'' wrote that "the aisle to the altar is paved with hilarity, hijinks, and lots of love", and Leigh Andrew Hill of '' OutInPerth'' stated that "this romantic comedy will leave you on a high." Matthew Toomey of ''The Film Pie'' called the film "a likeable crowd pleaser with plenty of genuine giggles", praising the cast and the "nice mix of scenes that balance the craziness with the tenderness." He noted, "Every character in the film has self-generated problems and instead of going for the obvious solution, they follow romantic comedy clichés and make life as difficult as possible." Toomey also criticized the script for rushing through some storylines, which he felt was "most evident during the quick-fire climax where some of the character transformations lack credibility." Pietrangelo Buttafuoco of ''
Il Foglio ''Il Foglio'' (English: "The Paper") is an Italian centrist daily newspaper with circulation around 25.000 copies per day (with an overall spread of 47.000). It was founded in 1996 by the Italian journalist and politician Giuliano Ferrara after ...
'' called Abbrescia a scene stealer, and noted that in the film, Italian comedy lends itself to teach viewers a lesson. D. M. Bradley of the ''
Adelaide Review ''The Adelaide Review'' (AR) was a monthly print arts magazine and dynamic website in Adelaide, South Australia. It was first published in 1984, but gained standing after one of its writers, Christopher Pearson, took it over in 1985. In March ...
'' wrote that the film places "serious, weightily-themed drama alongside audience-pleasing laughs", but noted that it "has a nice cast and a tough edge, but throws it all frustratingly away." He added that the "grievous sin" of an ending "casts all plot threads aside" in a sequence that "demonstrates that Genovesi (and Wilkinson) simply didn't know how to end it." Alex First of ''The Blurb'' called the film "absurdist" and "an embarrassment", criticizing the characterizations and the lack of chemistry between the leads.


References


External links

* * '' Puoi baciare lo sposo'' at the Italian Wikipedia
English translation
{{Alessandro Genovesi 2018 comedy-drama films 2018 films 2018 LGBT-related films Films directed by Alessandro Genovesi Italian comedy-drama films 2010s Italian-language films Italian LGBT-related films LGBT-related comedy-drama films Rainbow S.r.l. films Films about same-sex weddings