La Grazia
La Grazia
Synopsis
Mariano De Santis is the President of the Italian Republic.
No connection to any real-life presidents; he is entirely a product of the author's imagination. A widower and a Catholic, he has a daughter, Dorotea, a legal scholar like himself. As his term draws to a close, amid uneventful days, two final duties arise: deciding on two delicate petitions for a presidential pardon. True moral dilemmas, which become tangled, in ways that seem impossible to unravel, with his private life. Driven by doubt, he will have to decide. And, with a deep sense of responsibility, that is exactly what this remarkable Italian President will do.
Director’s
Biography
Paolo Sorrentino was born in Naples in 1970. His first full-length feature film, One ManUp, dates back to 2001 and was selected for the Venice Film Festival. In 2004 he directed The Consequences of Love and in 2006 The Family Friend, both in competition at the Cannes Film Festival. In 2008, with Il Divo, he returned to Cannes winning the Jury Prize, and again in 2011 with This Must be the Place and two years later with The Great Beauty, which won, among others, the Academy Award® for best Foreign Language Film. In 2016 he directed Youth, and he created and directed the TV series The Young Pope. In 2018 he directed the movie Loro and in 2019 the series The New Pope. In 2021 he wrote and directed the The Hand of God, nominated at the 2022 Academy Award® for Best Foreign Film. In 2024 he wrote and directed Parthenope.
Selected Filmography
1994 Un paradiso (Short film)
1998 L’amore non ha confini (Short film)
2001 L’uomo in più (One Man Up)
2001 La notte lunga (Short film)
2004 Le conseguenze dell’amore (The Consequences of Love)
2006 L’amico di famiglia (The Family Friend)
2008 Il divo – La spettacolare vita di Giulio Andreotti (Il Divo)
2009 La partita lenta (Short film)
2009 L’Aquila
2009 – Cinque registi tra le macerie –
Episode: L’assegnazione delle tende (Short documentary)
2011 This Must Be the Place
2013 La grande bellezza (The Great Beauty)
2014 Rio, Eu Te Amo (Rio, I Love You) –
Episode: La fortuna
2014 Sabbia (Short film)
2014 The Dream (Short film)
2014 Le voci di dentro (TV)
2015 Youth (Youth – La giovinezza)
2016 The Young Pope (TV-Series)
2018 Loro; Loro 1; Loro 2
2019–2020 The New Pope (TV-Series)
2020 Homemade
Episode: Voyage au bout de la nuit (Short film)
2021 È stata la mano di Dio (The Hand of God)
2024 Parthenope
Comments of
the Director
La Grazia is a film about love.
That inexhaustible engine that gives rise to doubt, jealousy, tenderness, emotion, an understanding of the things of life and responsibility.
Love and all its intricate offshoots are seen and experienced through the eyes of Mariano De Santis, an entirely fictional but credible President of the Italian Republic.
Mariano De Santis loves his late wife, he loves his daughter and son and the generational gap that separates them from him. He loves criminal law, which he has studied all his life.
Behind his serious and austere demeanour, Mariano De Santis is a man of love.
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La Grazia is a film about doubt.
And the need to embrace it. This is especially true in politics and even more so today, in a world where politicians too often present a blunt package of certainties that only cause damage, friction and resentment. This undermines collective well-being, dialogue and general harmony.
Mariano De Santis is a man driven by doubt.
La Grazia is a film about responsibility.
Another quality that should belong to all of us, but which, above all, ought to define politicians, those who represent others and guide or shape decisions.
Responsibility too is something we feel the absence of; an almost willful evasion that today gives way to empty displays and muscular posturing: harmful, if not outright dangerous.
Mariano De Santis is a responsible man.
La Grazia is a film about fatherhood.
Politicians are worthy of the name only if they embody the noble and reassuring quality of parenthood, not if they slip into the role, so dear to certain politicians today, of the wayward child.
Mariano De Santis is a noble father. But, as an intelligent man guided by doubt, he knows when it is time to become a son once again.
As age advances and the present begins to feel incomprehensible, rather than despise it or lose himself in futile fits of nostalgia, he opens himself to the present through his children, who are better equipped to understand the world around them.
And he trusts them.
Mariano De Santis is a remarkable father.
La Grazia is a film about a moral dilemma.
Whether or not to grant clemency to two individuals who have committed murder, though perhaps in circumstances that might be forgiven.
Whether or not, as a Catholic, to sign a problematic bill on euthanasia.
As a young man I was profoundly struck by Kieslowski’s Decalogue. A masterpiece entirely focused on moral dilemmas; the plot of all plots, the only truly compelling narrative. More than any thriller.
I don’t believe I have even remotely approached the genius of Kieslowski, nor the depth with which he tackled moral themes, but I felt compelled to try anyway, in a historical moment when ethics sometimes seems optional, elusive, opaque, or all too often invoked only for instrumental reasons.
Ethics is a serious matter. It holds up the world.
And Mariano De Santis is a serious-minded man.
Main Cast
Biography
Toni Servillo
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Toni Servillo, born in Afragola in 1959, co-founded Teatro Studio di Caserta in 1977 and ten years later Teatri Uniti in Naples. He is internationally praiseded as stage actor and director. He made his screen debut in Morte di un matematico napoletano (1992), with his breakthrough in L’uomo in più (2001). In 2008, he starred in Gomorrah and Il Divo at Cannes, winning both the European Film Award and the David di Donatello for Best Actor. He won the European Film Award again in 2013 for The Great Beauty. In 2020, The New York Times named him one of the 25 Greatest Actors of the 21st Century.
Anna Ferzetti
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Anna Ferzetti was born in 1982 in Rome, Italy.
She is a cinema and theatre actress, known for Tomorrow’s a New Day (2019), for which she was nominated for the David di Donatello Award for Best Actress in a Supporting Role. More recently, she starred in Diamanti and Il Nibbio (2025), and two successful Italian series Avetrana - Qui non è Hollywood (2024) and Le Fate Ignoranti (2022) for which she won the Nastro D’Argento for Best Supporting Actress.
Main Cast
Toni Servillo as President of the Republic
Anna Ferzetti as Dorotea
Orlando Cinque as Colonel Massimo Labaro
Massimo Venturiello as Ugo Romani
Milvia Marigliano as Coco Valori
Giuseppe Gaiani as Lanfranco Mare
Giovanna Guida as Valeria Cafiero
Alessia Giuliani as Maria Gallo
Roberto Zibetti as Domenico Samaritano
Vasco Mirandola as Cristiano Arpa
Linda Messerklinger as Isa Rocca
Rufin Doh Zeyenouin as Pope
Main Crew
Writer and Director: Paolo Sorrentino
Cinematographer: Daria D’Antonio
Assistant Director: Edoardo Marini
Editing: Cristiano Travaglioli (A.M.C.)
Sound: Emanuele Cecere, Mirko Perri
Costumes: Carlo Poggioli
Set Design: Ludovica Ferrario
Set Decoration: Laura Casalini
Makeup: Paola Gattabrusi
Casting: Anna Maria Sambucco U.I.C.D Massimo Appolloni U.I.C.D
Line Producer: Cristina Tacchino
Production Supervisor: Priscilla Pacetti
A Fremantle film
Produced by Annamaria Morelli and Paolo Sorrentino
Produced by Andrea Scrosati for Fremantle
Produced by Massimilano Orfei, Luisa Borella and Davide Novelli for PiperFilm
Produced by The Apartment (a Fremantle Company)
in association with Numero 10
in association with PiperFilm