A Pure Formality
A Pure Formality | |
---|---|
DVD cover | |
Directed by | Giuseppe Tornatore |
Produced by |
Bruno Altissimi Mario Cecchi Gori Vittorio Cecchi Gori Jean-Louis Livi Alexandre Mnouchkine Claudio Saraceni |
Written by |
Giuseppe Tornatore Pascal Quignard |
Starring |
|
Music by | Ennio Morricone |
Cinematography | Blasco Giurato |
Edited by | Giuseppe Tornatore |
Production company |
Cecchi Gori Group Tiger Cinematografica DD Productions Film Par Film Orly Films Sidonie TF1 Films Production |
Distributed by |
AFMD (1994, France) Penta Distribuzione (1994, Italy) |
Release dates |
18 May 1994 (France) 12 January 1995 (Germany) 30 March 1995 (Spain) |
Running time | 108 minutes |
Country |
Italy France |
Language | French |
A Pure Formality (Italian: Una pura formalità) is a 1994 Italian-French drama thriller film co-written and directed by Giuseppe Tornatore. It stars Gérard Depardieu as a reclusive writer and Roman Polanski as a police detective.
Synopsis
Onoff (Depardieu) is a famous writer who is now a recluse. The Inspector (Polanski) is suspicious when Onoff is brought into the station one night, disoriented and suffering a kind of amnesia. As the head of an isolated, rural police station the Inspector tries to establish events through careful interrogation and deduction. By painstaking inquiry, he clears up a mysterious killing and brings the writer a new and strange realisation.
Cast
- Gérard Depardieu - Onoff
- Roman Polanski - Inspector
- Sergio Rubini - Andre, the Young Policeman
- Nicola Di Pinto - Captain
- Tano Cimarosa - Servant
- Paolo Lombardi - Marshall
- Maria Rosa Spagnolo - Paula
- Alberto Sironi
- Giovanni Morricone
- Mahdi Kraiem
- Massimo Vanni
- Sebastiano Filocamo
Reception
A Pure Formality was nominated for a Golden Palm at the 1994 Cannes Film Festival.[1] It also received a David di Donatello for Best Production Design (Andrea Crisanti).
Several films are inspired by A Pure Formality's idea (1994) of the mystery of the living versus the dead. The best example is The Sixth Sense (1999) by M. Night Shyamalan, another is The Others (2001) by Alejandro Amenábar.
References
- ↑ "Festival de Cannes: A Pure Formality". festival-cannes.com. Retrieved 2009-08-30.