PRODUCTION / FINANCEMENT Italie / Belgique
Francesca Archibugi tourne actuellement Illusione
par Camillo De Marco
- La réalisatrice romaine à laquelle on doit Il colibrì prépare un récit dramatique sur les trafics sexuels internationaux, avec Jasmine Trinca et Michele Riondino

Cet article est disponible en anglais.
Shooting on Illusione, the new film directed by Francesca Archibugi, started a few days ago in Perugia, and will then move to Brussels and Strasbourg, for a total duration of eight weeks. Written by the director together with Laura Paolucci and Francesco Piccolo, Illusione is being produced by Fandango together with RAI Cinema and Tarantula Belgique, with support from the Fund for the development of cinema and audiovisual investments of the Ministry of Culture.
This disturbing story centred on international sex trafficking and related judicial investigations stars Jasmine Trinca – the multi award-winning actress and director, who recently starred in Diamanti [+lire aussi :
critique
bande-annonce
fiche film] by Ferzan Ozpetek (€16 million at the domestic box office and 2025 Audience David award winner) and in the Sky Atlantic mini-series The Art of Joy [+lire aussi :
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fiche série] directed by Valeria Golino, presented last year in Cannes – and Michele Riondino, winner of a David award in 2024 as actor in his appreciated directorial debut Palazzina Laf [+lire aussi :
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bande-annonce
fiche film]. Trinca and Riondino will be supported by young actress Angelina Andrei, in her debut, and Vittoria Puccini, seen recently in Trust [+lire aussi :
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interview : Daniele Luchetti
fiche film] and in the box-office champion Madly [+lire aussi :
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fiche film]. Completing the cast are Francesca Reggiani, Aurora Quattrocchi and Filippo Timi.
The film starts on the outskirts of Perugia, where a little girl (Andrei) is found in a ditch. She is wearing a haute couture suit and is beautiful. The police are about to take away the corpse when a sigh reveals she is still alive: she is called Rosa Lazar, from Moldavia, and isn’t yet 16. The deputy prosecutor Cristina Camponeschi (Trinca) and the psychologist Stefano Mangiaboschi (Riondino) are immediately called to take on the case. The investigation is more complicated than expected because Rosa doesn’t seem aware of the brutal violence she has experienced and is covering up the truth. Behind the mask of constant joy emerges a very disturbed psychological profile. How did this lolita, who doesn’t seem to be a typical sex worker and behave like a little girl, arrive in Perugia? For the prosecutor, Rosa will become the key to an international investigation regarding disturbing scenarios. For the psychologist, it will be another kind of investigation, one that will bring him to discover the real enigma of Rosa Lazar.
After her brilliant debut, Mignon Has Come to Stay, in 1988 (which garnered five David di Donatello Awards), Francesca Archibugi established herself with Verso sera, Il grande cocomero and Shooting the Moon, and as the screenwriter of successful films by Paolo Virzì, such as Like Crazy [+lire aussi :
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Q&A : Paolo Virzì
fiche film], for which she won the Suso Cecchi D’Amico award, The Leisure Seeker [+lire aussi :
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bande-annonce
Q&A : Paolo Virzì
fiche film], Magical Nights [+lire aussi :
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bande-annonce
fiche film], Dry [+lire aussi :
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bande-annonce
fiche film] and the recent Dieci minuti [+lire aussi :
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fiche film] by Maria Sole Tognazzi. In 2022, she returned to the big screen as director of The Hummingbird [+lire aussi :
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interview : Benedetta Porcaroli
fiche film], based on the eponymous novel by Sandro Veronesi, winner of the 2020 Strega award.
(Traduit de l'italien)
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