Crítica: Notte prima degli esami 3.0
por Vittoria Scarpa
- Veinte años después de la peli de culto de Fausto Brizzi, llega la versión Gen Z de la comedia sobre las aventuras y emociones que acompañan a la fatídica selectividad y al tránsito a la edad adulta

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When Notte prima degli esami [+lee también:
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In this film too, nostalgia is key. Whilst the 2006 film was set in the ‘80s, this new chapter of the saga takes place in the present day and is led by modern-day teens, but it also nods to school-leavers from forty years ago, capturing two audiences in one foul swoop. The role formerly entrusted to Nicolas Vaporidis now falls to Tommaso Cassissa (a YouTube star who bears a striking resemblance to the now 44-year-old actor), while the teacher previously played by Giorgio Faletti has become a female teacher nicknamed “the beast”, to whom Sabrina Ferilli lends her features. Cassissa plays Giulio Sabatini, Ferilli plays the teacher, Ms Castelli. And there’s bad blood between the two of them. Giulio was certain he’d have to repeat his final year of high school, and he interprets his unexpected admission to the exams as a provocation: he’s convinced his perfidious teacher has only allowed him entry to humiliate him in front of the board. To prove this really isn’t the case, Giulio’s teacher personally offers to help him prepare for this ultimate test.
As the two of them spend time together over the course of their tutoring sessions, Giulio discovers Castelli’s weak point: an old flame who vanished into thin air and who doesn’t even have a social media account by which to contact him. Determined to get on her good side, Giulio decides to secretly track this man down and even acts in his place (virtually). He’s helped in his endeavour by his loyal friends and classmates (the cast includes Adriano Moretti, Alice Lupparelli, Alice Maselli, Aleandro Falciglia, Bea Barret and Christian Dei, with a bonus appearance from the rising singer-songwriter Ditonellapiaga), who, between repeating history and literature classes, go along with Giulio’s game and are lent vital support by one of their fathers (played by Gian Marco Tognazzi), who knows exactly how to win over an ‘80s girl.
Electronic registers, social networks, scooters, fluidity, polyamory, ecoanxiety, pokè: the film immerses itself in the Generation Z universe, but it also nods to the adults in the audience who once created mixed tapes to communicate their feelings to the objects of their desire. The film flows easily, raising plenty of smiles, and the cast are all in sync; unfortunately, the story is based on a misunderstanding which should have been better thought through from the outset in order to make the ensemble more convincing. All in all, it’s a gentle comedy which celebrates love in all its forms, but it also offers a snapshot of a generalised sense of uncertainty and disorientation among the youth of today and of yesterday.
Notte prima degli esami 3.0 was produced by Italian International Film together with RAI Cinema, in collaboration with Buonaluna.
(Traducción del italiano)
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