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#Monica Bellucci Movies
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MOVIES15 photosIrreversible
This film has one of the most graphic and harrowing rape scenes ever depicted on screen. Monica Bellucci plays the victim Alex, who is assaulted and annaly raped for several minutes. Monica Bellucci is an excellent actress in the film. Here you can find and watch best moments of Irréversible movie.
GALLERY28 photosMonica Bellucci Exclusive Secrets
Discover the secrets of Monica Bellucci who once confessed she has become more beautiful with age. The Italian star, who began her career as a 13-year-old model, has remained an evergreen presence on the international cinematic landscape. From starring in independent dramas to huge blockbusters, Bellucci is at ease playing a variety of characters. She has been a regular fixture on the covers of fashion magazines and at international film festivals. While pregnant with both her children, she posed semi-nude on the cover of Vanity Fair and has appeared on several ‘sexiest of the year’ lists. UNIQ presents exclusive interview with Monica Bellucci. Discover the secrets of world’s most beautiful woman…
MOVIES4 photosFresh Look at ‘Nekrotronic’
Monica Bellucci plays the queen of a demonic underworld in the film that held its World Premiere at last year’s Toronto International Film Festival. In Nekrotronic, a group of hunters known as Nekromancers do battle with evil forces that use social media apps to demonically possess the masses. Australian filmmaker brothers, Kiah and Tristan Roache-Turner, return with sci-fi film NEKROTRONIC. Entertainment One (eOne), Hopscotch Features and Guerilla Films have announced that it will make its world premiere at Toronto International Film Festival’s (TIFF) infamous Midnight Madness late-night program. Starring Monica Bellucci, Ben O’Toole, Caroline Ford, Tess Haubrich, Bob Savea and David Wenham star, the film (formerly known as Nekromancer) has been described as a “mind-bending, genre-mashing, sci-fi action-packed comedy.” This should be no surprise to people who enjoyed their last film, 2014’s Wyrmwood: Road of the Dead. Finnegan (Bellucci), the world’s greatest demon-hunting Nekromancer turned bad, is the first to discover evil spirits inside the internet, taking the mythical battle between good and evil into the digital realm. Years later, down-on-his-luck sewerage-waste worker Howard North (O’Toole) and Nekromancer sisters Molly (Ford) and Torquel (Haubrich) must destroy the plague of online demons and defeat the evil Finnegan before she can devour the souls of a million human beings addicted to their phones. NEKROTRONIC was shot in Sydney, Australia, with principal production investment from Entertainment One and Screen Australia, and financed with support from Create NSW. It will have an Australian release sometime in 2019 from eOne. Monica Bellucci at an event for Nekrotronic (2018) Production companies: Hopscotch, Guerilla Films Cast: Ben O’Toole, Monica Bellucci, Caroline Ford, Tess Haubrich, Epine Bob Savea, David Wenham Director: Kiah Roache-Turner Screenwriters: Kiah Roache-Turner, Tristan Roache-Turner Producers: Tristan Roache-Turner, Andrew Mason, Troy Lum Cinematographer: Tim Nagle Editor: Christine Cheung Music: Michael Lira
NEWS4 photosMonica Bellucci attends 2018 Marrakech Film Festival
All eyes were on Monica as she posed away on the red carpet in her gorgeous attire. She is one of the most beautiful women in entertainment. Monica Bellucci looked undeniably radiant as she attended the screening of Asterix & Obelix: Mission Cleopatra at Jemaa El Fna Place during the 17th Marrakech International Film Festival on Friday.
MOVIESMonica Bellucci sings "Can't Help Falling In Love"
Monica Bellucci sings "Can't Help Falling In Love". This time capsule from Ville-Marie. She plays Sophie Bernardt in Ville-Marie. An actress mother and her estranged gay son's lives intersect with those of two medical professionals after an unexpected tragedy, forcing secrets to be revealed and personal demons to be dealt with.
MOVIESSpider in the Web
Oscar-winning actor Ben Kingsley (“Gandhi,” “Schindler’s List”) and Monica Bellucci (“Spectre”) will co-star in “Spider in the Web,” a counterespionage thriller helmed by Eran Riklis (“Lemon Tree”). Film Constellation has pre-sold Ben Kingsley and Monica Bellucci espionage thriller “Spider in the Web” in territories including Germany and China, as the stars are seen together in an exclusive first-look image from the movie. Production has just wrapped on the film, which is helmed by Eran Riklis and was shot in Belgium and the Netherlands. Concorde has picked it up for Austria and Germany, and Lemon Tree Media for China. Tanweer has prebought it for Greece and Cyprus. A studio deal is thought to be in the cards in another major territory. Set in modern-day Europe and inspired by true events, the story follows a once-lauded but aging secret agent, Adereth (Kingsley), whose bosses want to put him out to grass. He embarks on a covert mission that involves finding the enigmatic Angela (Bellucci), while also being tracked by a rival agent played by Itay Tiran (“Lebanon”). Who is hunting whom becomes the question. The film is produced by United King Films’ Moshe Edery and Leon Edery, Michael Sharfshtein of Topia Communications, Eran Riklis, Jacqueline de Goeij for Ciné Cri de Coeur (Belgium), Sabine Brian and Ronald Versteeg for NL Films (Holland), and Eyal Edery for Dragocom (Portugal). Executive producers are Ira Riklis, Dana Lustig and Film Constellation’s Fabien Westerhoff. The screenplay was written by Gidon Maron and Emmanuel Nakkache. Film Constellation co-financed and is handling worldwide sales. It launched it internationally in Berlin.
MOVIESMalena in Italy
Monica Bellucci starring in "Malena", movie of Giuseppe Tornatore in Italy on October 25th, 2000
NEWSDinard British Film Festival
Monica Bellucci, Closing Ceremony of the 29th Dinard British Film Festival
NEWSDinard Film Festival 2018
The film took the Golden Hitchcock: Jury Grand Prize, the Hitchcock for Best Screenplay, and a special ad hoc performance Hitchcock award for young star Liv Hill, all presented by jury president Monica Bellucci. It also won the inaugural Critics Hitchcock, awarded for the first time in 2019. Held in the seaside town of Dinard in Brittany, France, the festival hosts an annual showcase of UK films and filmmakers. Joining Monica Bellucci on this year’s main jury was French actress and director Emmanuelle Bercot, British actress Kate Dickie, British actor Rupert Grint, British actor Ian Hart, French distributor Thierry Lacaze, French actor and director Alex Lutz and French actress Sabrina Ouazani. Monica Bellucci, the most French of Italian actresses, president of the jury of the 29th edition of the Dinard Film Festival, 26th to 30th September 2018.
INTERVIEWS2 photosAll you need to know about Monica Bellucci movie “On The Milky Road”
How she transcended her beauty in order to affirm her talent as an actress with the greatest directors ? UniqBeauties.com: You are gorgeous, shockingly beautiful… but don’t you ever get bored of people telling you that every five minutes? MONICA BELLUCCI: You can never have enough compliments. In life we're subjected to so many insults and unkind attacks that a nice word, from time to time, can’t do any harm. What are the pros and cons of being so sublime? Oh la la! Sublime, really! The pros? Well in the words of Oscar Wilde, “Beauty lasts five minutes in life if you don’t have other qualities to maintain the interest.” And you know being pretty when you’re an actress is like a painful banality. Do you know many ugly actresses? If I was an astronaut it would be more original. With your daring choice of movies over the years have you made an active decision to escape the archetypal “woman-object”? No. Let’s just say there is always a slight complex with women who have an advantageous physique to prove themselves as credible actresses. For me it’s been doubly difficult because I started out as a model. A double death defying leap. It’s as if beauty creates a sort of mask that stops emotions from showing. This prejudice is still very widespread. Your question confirms it. As soon as a beautiful woman plays a prominent role, people will say “Ooh isn’t she daring,” but they don’t bother saying that she acts well. What role are you playing in the much anticipated Twin Peaks: The Return of David Lynch? I can’t tell you anything at all, you’ll have to wait watch the series yourself. What I do in the show, well it’s a true moment of cinematic love. It’s quite dreamy … Obviously. Voilà, and if I instantly accepted the role it was of course to be part of an experience led by David Lynch. My relationship with movies has always been like that: I can shoot with Rebecca Miller for five minutes, as much as I can film for four years with Emir Kusturica. I go from one extreme to the next. I just took part in a project by Niccolò Ammaniti, an Italian writer and it took a day of work. What he asked me to do was so out there I just couldn’t refuse. The most interesting projects are like mosaics where each piece is equally important. That’s how I perceive movie making. How come the filming of On the Milky Road by Emir Kusturica took four years? There are two reasons. On one hand we only shot during the summer, and on the other hand Emir very kindly let me do other parallel projects during the filming. I’ve always loved Kusturica’s films, I first discovered his work with The Time of Gypsies. When I saw that movie I said to myself this is an absolute masterpiece that will mark the history of cinema forever. I’ve always respected Kusturica’s work immensely, and when he called me about shooting with him, I was over the moon. He explained the thread of the film over the phone, but it was only when I was sent a script much later on, I realised I was going to be playing a Serbian woman. I was a bit worried about that at the beginning but I went for it head on and I think it’s been worth it. I didn’t understand everything in the film, but then I didn’t understand everything in Maxtrix Reloaded either. I’m probably just an idiot. No I don’t think so. On the Milky Road is a very particular film that plays out against the Balkan war, an era that means a lot to Kusturica. But there is also a very poetic side to this love that unites this mature couple, like we rarely see on the big screen. The two characters aren’t that young anymore, they’re expecting nothing from life, but in spite of that they rediscover love, sexuality and sensuality in the magical moments when they meet each other. How has the film industry changed over the years you’ve been working in it? Today it is all about TV series. That’s the big difference. Series have taken on an unbelievable importance. I’ve even done an American TV show, Mozart in the Jungle, which was a very lovely experience for me as an actress, I was really able to express myself. When I did the dubbing in French and in Italian, the director said to me, “What a shame this isn’t for the cinema!” But for me that’s not really a subject. When I see my daughter watching films on her mobile phone, I realise it really is another way of watching fiction. We’ve moved into another world. What did you think about all that business with Netflix at the Cannes Film Festival? What exactly was the problem? Netflix was accused of not making cinema in the true sense of the word. But Cannes is above all a festival about communication, and refusing to select a film simply because it isn’t diffused in actual movie theatres strikes me as a little reductive. It’s like hiding from the major changes that are currently shaking up the film industry, like cutting yourself off from the world by sticking your head in the sand. How do you get elected Mistress of Ceremonies at the Cannes Film Festival – twice! Thierry Frémaux [director of the Cannes Film Festival] just called me and said: “We thought about you, and would be delighted if you’d be part of the adventure.” And I said to him: “Jeanne Moreau has done it twice and so has Isabelle Huppert, so I don’t see how I could possibly refuse!” And what happens if four members of the jury vote for Ozon and the other four for Dolan, what do you do? Pull straws? When I was on the jury in 2006, there weren’t enough prizes for all the films that deserved one. To the extent that we had to call ex aequo. Sometimes I was sad to see certain film makers leave empty-handed when the quality of their film was so outstanding. But it also means the selection that year was excellent. Numerous actresses have denounced the increasingly rare number of good roles for actresses over the age of 50. Do you agree? I don’t think that's the case. When I look at Kusturica’s film for example, I can see clearly how my physique has completely changed from when I made Asterix and Obelix: Mission Cleopatra, Irréversible, Malèna andThe Passion of Christ. But with this new body I can tell other stories. I would have never been able to do On the Milky Road twenty years ago, because the women I play, Mlada, has such inner power, such passivity, and she is so attached to the land – even if she steals – I could never have brought her to life without the wrinkles around my eyes. It would have been fake and the film wouldn’t have been the same. Do you claim to be a feminist? Firstly, what does the word feminist actually mean? Often behind a badly behaved man is a mother who badly educated her son. You are very feminine, even if you’re not a feminist. We imagine you a little like Donatella Versace, spending your days in a bath of essential oils sprinkled with rose petals and floating candles. If only! Unfortunately, I don’t have that much time for myself, I have to take care of my kids and I have a politician’s schedule. I occasionally have a face massage, I have acupuncture and I do Pilates, but that’s pretty much it. So you’re not a narcissist? I probably am a little bit, otherwise I wouldn’t be doing this job. Production: Irina Marie, A. Production : Fernando Damasceno. Haircut: John Nollet, Suite 101, hôtel Park Hyatt, Paris-Vendôme. Make-up : Letizia Carnevale at B Agency. Numeric : Dope Paris. Production : Iconoclast Image Source: Numero
MOVIESMonica Bellucci Should Return To The 'James Bond'
According to The List, Daniel Craig has expressed a desire for Monica Bellucci to reprise her role as Lucia Sciarra, for his upcoming and final appearance as James Bond. This is unprecedented, for several reasons. Giving any former lover, especially one over the age of 25, even a second glance would be shockingly out of character for the aging rapscallion. Not to mention, Bellucci is 53 years old, and despite being almost supernaturally attractive, she is the oldest Bond girl in the history of the franchise, by a wide margin. In fact, she’s (gasp) even older than Craig himself. Whether the rumor is true or not, it’s an interesting idea that the producers should seriously consider. I’m pretty sure James Bond would find a woman his age terribly intimidating, but perhaps Craig understands that the character needs a new challenge. The world is changing, and Bond is an elderly character, with old-fashioned values. The recent films have even started acknowledging that Bond’s fast-paced lifestyle, steadied by a diet of hard liquor and casual sex, is something to be pitied rather than aspired to. The character’s life remains an escapist fantasy, but the polish has worn away, revealing a sad, lonely alcoholic. The face of Hollywood is changing too. Especially the ogrish face of Harvey Weinstein, whose totally secret (cough) and incredibly surprising (cough) assaults on women seem to have sparked a wave of sexual assault survivors to come forward and share their stories. Suddenly, every celebrity in Hollywood is “shocked and saddened” by the allegations against the sleazy producer who has been openly mocked for his predatory behavior for decades. Seems like it’s not okay to be a creep in the entertainment industry anymore. And as part of the attempt to scrub the filth off the glossy veneer of Hollywood, James Bond needs to clean up his act too. Because the image of a wealthy, powerful, middle-aged man constantly chasing vulnerable twenty-year-olds is starting to look a bit creepy. As one of the oldest and most consistent faces of cinema, it’s important that James Bond reflects the supposed values of the industry that spawned him. He’s always going to be the archetypical action man, but that doesn’t mean he has to maintain his misogynistic streak. Bringing Belucci back and expanding her role might lay the groundwork to transform the ultra-disposable Bond girl into a woman, with a more substantial part to play in Bond’s future adventures. Not to mention, it’s Craig’s last time in the tuxedo. No really, it’s the last time. If he’s forced to do another one, he really will slash his wrists. We all know the character will be modernized and rebooted with a fresh-faced actor the moment Daniel Craig leaves. Craig is undoubtedly thinking of the legacy he leaves behind him, which will soon be the longest-serving Bond in history, overtaking Roger Moore at 13 years. So it makes sense to not only go out with a bang, but with dignity. Craig’s story has touched on the “aging agent adrift in the modern world” theme several times; finally pairing with someone that shares his life experience and cynical outlook might be the happy ending his grizzled Bond deserves.
ARCHIVE2 photosDonostia Award at 65th San Sebastián Film Festival
Monica Bellucci is a vision in breathtaking pink gown as she receives prestigious Donostia Award at 65th San Sebastián Film Festival in Spain She complemented the pleated number, which featured sheer sleeves and was cinched at the waist with a high band, with an elegant gold necklace... She affectionately greeted actor Jon Malkovich as he presented her award to her
MOVIESAgeless Monica Bellucci at Cannes Film Festival
Monica Bellucci attends a photocall for her duty as Mistress of Ceremonies during the 70th annual Cannes Film Festival. We demand to know your secrets Monica Bellucci. The 52-year-old actress kicked off the Cannes Film Festival celebrations today as part of her Mistress of Ceremonies duties and stunned in an elegant all-black ensemble, accessorising with a statement diamond necklace (aren't they all?). The Italian actress, who is often described as one of the most beautiful women in the world, has been mesmerising audiences with her performances onscreen and fashion fans with her breathtaking red carpet choices for more than 20 years. Aside from a few self-deprecating quips about the necessity of airbrushing, Bellucci hasn't divulged the secrets to her age-defying appearance, which we're putting down to spectacular genetics. In 2015, she told the Telegraph, her day-to-day life isn't focused no maintaining her looks, but rather living each day to the fullest. "I'm not someone who wakes up at 6am and goes to the gym. The truth is I like cakes and pasta, the odd glass of wine and a very occasional cigarette. My advice is: eat well, drink well, have good sex and laugh a lot. The rest comes all on its own." That might just be a Monica Bellucci thing, but just in case - we're off to find a date and a nice bottle of Malbec.
MOVIESOldest Bond Girl in 'Spectre'
Italian actress Monica Bellucci is oldest bond girl in James Bond 007 Film "Spectre". Lucia Sciarra is the wife of SPECTRE agent Marco Sciarra who appears in the 2015 James Bond film, Spectre played by Italian actress Monica Bellucci. Official Trailer of Spectre Movie
VIDEORome Film Festival
At the Rome Film Festival, 2006