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| caption =
| caption =
| director = [[Enzo Monteleone]]
| director = [[Enzo Monteleone]]
| producer = [[Hera International Film]]<br />[[Radiotelevisione Italiana]]
| producer = Hera International Film<br />[[Radiotelevisione Italiana]]
| writer = [[Horst Fantazzini]]<br />[[Angelo Orlando]]<br />[[Enzo Monteleone]]
| writer = [[Horst Fantazzini]]<br />[[Angelo Orlando]]<br />[[Enzo Monteleone]]
| starring = [[Stefano Accorsi]]<br />[[Giovanni Esposito (comedian)|Giovanni Esposito]]
| starring = {{plainlist|
*[[Stefano Accorsi]]
*[[Fabrizia Sacchi]]
*[[Emilio Solfrizzi]]
*[[Antonio Catania]]
}}
| music = [[Pivio and Aldo De Scalzi]]
| music = [[Pivio and Aldo De Scalzi]]
| cinematography = [[Arnaldo Catinari]]
| cinematography = [[Arnaldo Catinari]]

Revision as of 19:31, 21 December 2023

Ormai è fatta!
Directed byEnzo Monteleone
Written byHorst Fantazzini
Angelo Orlando
Enzo Monteleone
Produced byHera International Film
Radiotelevisione Italiana
Starring
CinematographyArnaldo Catinari
Music byPivio and Aldo De Scalzi
Release date
  • 23 April 1999 (1999-04-23)
Running time
98 minutes
CountryItaly
LanguageItalian

Outlaw (Template:Lang-it) is a 1999 Italian drama film directed by Enzo Monteleone. It is based on the book by the Italian anarchist Horst Fantazzini. It was entered into the 21st Moscow International Film Festival.[1]

Plot

On July 23, 1973, in the prison of Fossano, Piedmont, the young Horst Fantazzini, detained with a sentence of 22 years, decides that the time has come to try to escape. However, the operation soon turns out to be more difficult than expected, and Horst is forced to take two guards hostage. At this point the jailbreak can be said to have failed in practice, but Horst certainly has no intention of giving up. Thus begins a long day, punctuated by the slow passing of minutes and hours, along which negotiations, hopes, hostage fears, Fantazzini's wife's anxiety, the telephone calls of the lawyer who uselessly advises Horst to surrender, a phone call from his father, who reproaches his son for being a thief without a real motivation unlike when he had specific political and social goals.

Cast

References

  1. ^ "21st Moscow International Film Festival (1999)". MIFF. Archived from the original on 2013-03-22. Retrieved 2013-03-23.