[It's] so perfectly written and paced.
I'm Not Scared (2004)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:96
Fresh:87
Rotten:9
Average Rating:7.5/10
Consensus: A well-acted and thrilling coming-of-age tale that captures a child awakening to the frightening world of adults.
Runtime: 1 hr 50 mins
Genre: Television
Synopsis: Italian director Gabriele Salvatores (MEDITERRANEO) masterfully directs this eerie and engrossing suspense thriller involving a 10-year-old boy who lives in rural southern Italy. It is summertime... Italian director Gabriele Salvatores (MEDITERRANEO) masterfully directs this eerie and engrossing suspense thriller involving a 10-year-old boy who lives in rural southern Italy. It is summertime and Michele (Guiseppe Cristiano) is free to spend the long sunny days riding his bike and running through the wheat fields. In fact, the wheat could be considered Michele's costar, as it often consumes the entire scope of the screen, showing how Michele plays, hides, and ponders life in the vast expanses of flowing yellow stalks. Because there are only a few other children in the village, Michele often plays alone, and one day he discovers a hole in the ground, obscured by wheat, where a boy his age is chained and imprisoned. The boy has clearly been starved and mistreated, yet Michele approaches him fearlessly and attempts to make friends with him. With the dreaminess that is a 10-year-old's truest treasure, Michele doesn't ask too many questions, nor does he draw conclusions about why the boy is in the hole, or who put him there. Through the expressions on young Michele's face, viewers can read his light questioning of human existence, human morality, and human rights. However, as the film draws on, subtly revealing shocking secrets about the adults in Michele's village, the beauty of this utterly simple yet deadly powerful plot come clear. I'M NOT SCARED is a moving film built on crystal-clear images of the Italian sun, sky, and wheat fields; strangely offset by its startling loss-of-innocence story. [More]
Starring: Giuseppe Cristiano, Aitana Sanchez-Gijon, Dino Abbrescia, Giorgio Careccia
Starring: Giuseppe Cristiano, Aitana Sanchez-Gijon, Dino Abbrescia, Giorgio Careccia, Mattia Di Pierro, Diego Abatantuono
Director: Gabriele Salvatores
Director: Gabriele Salvatores
Screenwriter: Francesa Marciano, Niccolo Ammaniti
Producer: Maurizio Totti, Riccardo Tozzi, Giovanni Stabilini, Marco Chimenz
Studio: Miramax Films
Reviews for I'm Not Scared
Few movies purporting to chronicle loss of innocence convey its jolt and sadness as effectively.
At the bottom of it all lies nothing more than a by-the-numbers Hollywood thriller.
Salvatores draws strikingly unsentimental performances from his young actors, all making their film debuts, and juxtaposes the petty meanness of children with the calculated cruelty of desperate adults to haunting effect.
This satisfying adaptation of a popular novel is mostly an artistic reflection on youthful loss of innocence.
Io non ho paura reveals the reasons children can't help but be afraid, despite the efforts of most adults to protect them.
...Salvatores has made a film reminiscent of Spanish masterpiece, The Spirit of the Beehive.
Powerfully and palpably capturing the isolation, confusion and unnameable fears of childhood.
Although this visually dazzling movie from Italy takes on many of the characteristics of a conventional thriller, it refuses to go for cheap, vicious shocks.
With a graceful confidence Salvatores has made a movie in which good and evil flow into each other as easily as day and night.
An engaging Italian film about a pint-sized hero in a poor small village where the adults are acting very strange and hiding something.
With a taste for dark lyricism, the director delicately emphasizes the contrast between surface innocence and subterranean danger, and between grown-up secrets and boyhood bravery.
Acted in one flavor of broadly sliced prosciutto, and marred with familiar digital punctuation, I'm Not Scared needn't be prepped for Hollywood recycling -- it is its own homogenized remake.
With its unique perspective on both the coming-of-age and thriller genres, the movie deserves to be seen by a wider audience than the one that normally frequents subtitled movies.
an eloquent coming-of-age tale about a young boy with uncommon courage
Offers a startling mix of genres: a memory piece drenched in nostalgia for a lost childhood, clothed in the form of a thriller that grabs you by the throat.
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