The Macaluso Sisters

The Macaluso Sisters (2020)

10/09/2020

#Drama

Overview

Maria, Pinuccia, Lia, Katia and Antonella are five sisters who live in an apartment in Palermo. They make a living by renting doves for ceremonies. On a normal day at the beach, tragedy strucks.

Status: Released

Rating: 70%

Original language: IT

Budget: $0

Revenue: $0

Official website:

Details

Production Companies

Rosamont

Rosamont

Minimum Fax Media

Minimum Fax Media

RAI Cinema

RAI Cinema

Social Network

IMDb: https://www.imdb.com/title/tt12789110

Wikipedia: https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q97828006

Facebook: No data

Instagram: No data

X: No data

Cast

Reviews (1)

Review by: CinemaSerf

Written by: CinemaSerf on 2025-03-19T15:25:54.479Z

There are five siblings all living in the same house in Sicily, of varying ages, and this film takes us through their lives, loves, trials and tribulations as they must deal with each other and their respective choices and aspirations as they all grow older and deal with tragedy. It’s told back to front, really, as we reflect on the life of “Antonella” (Viola Pusateri) whilst dancing around the timelines of what’s gone before. It was probably easiest to depict the initial stages of their lives as youngsters growing up and meeting life’s new challenges in different ways - boys, girls, hormones, you name it, and for me that segment of the film works best. As they all mature, though, it rather stagnates - a fair reflection on a daily grind best epitomised by the eldest, “Maria” (Eleonora De Luca) who has to take responsibility at a fairly young age and who never really loses, or knows how to lose, that, but not always the most scintillating to watch evolve. It’s that despair, with or without a capital ‘D’ that, together with the house in which they live, provides a rather depressing template for a story that sucks the joy and hope from their characters and leaves them as once aspirational now shells of women whom I found it quite difficult to either relate to nor to sympathise with. What I did like was the paucity of dialogue as it progressed. The imagery, repetitive at times but poignant too, starts to leave our own imagination to do some of the heavy lifting here as we fill in our own interpretation of many of the elements we don’t see or learn about directly from the screenplay. It’s at times quite a powerfully objective look at the constraining nature of close and intimate family life, but with little real attempt made to give these ladies much depth, I struggled to remain engaged.

Videos

Backdrops

See all...
/lbmAcK9e3qec2wJXOZZG70kbjem.jpg
/bVBLSAxAPKUR3L0V3D4BWHSFQNN.jpg
/7K66hvEiP25SNDMdN6OIbkIUhjV.jpg
/iEhkrqiS0x3mx2mqdtXXvrHke8g.jpg

Posters

See all...

/bc1yOTsepZxTTl7SqxtpwPBmUPl.jpg

/bBpfslKNy6VCTMu48o0sslJZgKy.jpg

/kABmzHHPWzVrjUUJVAun434lj3h.jpg

/s0uotE8G6zhzmT6yIpqySz4wiGz.jpg

/xEe9jnQAYoCm57FB0F32SS7KHDf.jpg

/tk6Trb3RUsC8do2gS1MzxqhtxSR.jpg

/9ZUlqzWVVLnVIvaR7Z3c4IwuYpM.jpg

/wrAt0pRIiR4s1Za0etDUvYT1uDv.jpg

Recommendations