Fireworks Logo

Latest Lesbian Additions...

  • How to Blow Up a Pipeline
  • Willem & Frieda
  • 1946: The Mistranslation That Shifted Culture
  • 5 Devils (The)
  • American Horror Story
  • Tom Daley: Illegal to Be Me
  • Passion
  • Big Proud Party Agency (The)
  • Law of Love (The)
  • Gateways Grind
  • It Runs in the Family
  • First Kill
  • Along Came Wanda
  • They/Them
  • Last Thing Mary Saw (The)
  • Beauty
  • Anaïs in Love
  • Joe Lycett's Big Pride Party
  • Motherland: Fort Salem
  • Please Baby Please
  • Secret Love (A)
  • Anonymous Club
  • Wet Sand
  • Nico
  • Ultraviolette and the Blood-Spitters Gang
  • Camila Comes Out Tonight
  • Invisible: Gay Women in Southern Music
  • Death and Bowling
  • Benedetta
  • Scary of Sixty-First (The)
  • Wheel of Fortune and Fantasy
  • Alone with You
  • Saint Maud
  • And Just Like That...
  • Ahead of the Curve
  • Novice (The)
  • Titane
  • Bird Flew In (A)
  • Compartment Number 6
  • Silent Night

Sea Purple (The)

Country: Italy, Language: Italian, 105 mins

Original Title

Viola di Mare
  • Director: Donatella Maiorca
  • Writer: Giacomo Pilati; Donatella Maiorca
  • Producer: Maria Grazia Cucinotta; Giovanna Emidi

CGiii Comment

This is what happens when the technical department just aren't good enough...spearheaded and let down by a director who compromised too much!

The camera is constantly moving, exacerbated by a bewildering amount of incompetent edits...totally and infuriatingly intrusive.

All the interior scenes are under-lit, the music is inappropriate and the script is pedestrian...yes, we know, all men are bastards....especially in a lesbian drama. Facile.

And...a haircut, bound breasts and a pair of trousers does not make for a convincing man! Ridiculous.

Forbidden lesbian love on a remote island in the 19th century deserves an injection of intelligence rather than this dumbfounding and infantile approach.

An unmitigated, time-wasting, disaster.


Trailer...

The(ir) Blurb...

Nothing - not her father, not the church - can stop unruly Angela from being with her childhood best friend turned great love, Sara. Based on a true story, Viola di mare, presents a uniquely engaging portrait of family, community and gender roles in a 19th century Italian village.

Cast & Characters

Valeria Solarino as Angela / Angelo;
Isabella Ragonese as Sara;
Ennio Fantastichini as Salvatore;
Giselda Volodi as Lucia;
Maria Grazia Cucinotta as Agnese;
Marco Foschi as Tommaso;
Lucrezia Lante della Rovere as Baronessa;
Corrado Fortuna as Ventura;
Alessio Vassallo as Nicolino;
Ester Cucinotti as Concetta