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I Don't Understand You (film)

2024 horror comedy film From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

I Don't Understand You (film)
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I Don't Understand You is a 2024 comedy horror film written and directed by David Joseph Craig and Brian Crano. It stars Nick Kroll, Andrew Rannells, Morgan Spector, Eleonora Romandini and Amanda Seyfried. The film is about a gay couple vacationing in Italy, planning to adopt a baby without any knowledge of Italian language or transportation.

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Plot

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Dom and Cole are a wealthy gay couple living in Los Angeles. They are celebrating their 10th anniversary with a trip to Italy. There, they receive a much-anticipated call from Candace, who is expecting a child that Dom and Cole are considering adopting for some reason.

They visit Daniele, an old friend of Dom's father, who arranges a dinner for their anniversary at a farm restaurant in Orvieto that has been closed for several months. The directions are not very precise, however, and they get lost in the middle of rural nowhere on the way there. Their rental car gets stuck in the mud during a heavy rainstorm. A grumpy farmer with a shotgun shows up, and gives them a ride. When they get to the restaurant, they are warmly welcomed by the owner, Zia Luciana, an old woman with vision and hearing problems who helps them setting the table and charging Dom's phone.

While eating pizza and drinking some wine, Luciana tells the couple about her desire of re-opening the restaurant after her son, Giovanni, died some time ago. After biting eating some pizza, Cole starts feeling sick and, on a detour to the toilet, finds Gianni, Luciana's husband who's being kept in a respirator, recovering from a coma. The lights go out, and in the frenzy, Luciana stands in a stool, seemingly trying to restart the power generator, while Cole, looking for Dom in the dark, accidentally pushes Luciana down the basement's stairs. After failing to resucitate her, they carry her upstairs and hide her under the table, since they don't want to go to jail.

At this moment, Massimo, Luciana's other son, comes to tell the couple that he managed to get their rental car out of the mud. Dom and Cole also meet Francesca, Massimo's fiancée. After Cole goes out with her, Massimo approaches the dinner table with a wine bottle and a knife, telling Dom he's going to be "dead". Dom and Cole react quickly and stab and "accidentally" kill him with their knives, which were gifted to them by Daniele's wife. They start looking for Dom's phone and find out Candace's water broke and Massimo was actually telling them tey were going to be "dads". Francesca comes into the restaurant again and flees after witnessing the scene.

Cole chases her to a close shed, dropping his knife. Francesca manages to avoid him and gets out through the back, where Dom hits her with the car while trying to go after them. With three bodies on their hands and a baby on the way, jail is not a favorable destination. The couple notices that the pizza oven is still on. They throw the bodies in and clean all fingerprints and stains off the house. Distracted while driving to the airport, they hit the farmer from earlier, yet manage to return to the United States to welcome their son, Giovanni.

The next morning, police get to the scene. They discover the remains and find Cole's knife after Gianni passes away. Some time later, the "family" is shown to live happily with a dark undertone to what might actually be happening.

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Cast

  • Nick Kroll as Dom
  • Andrew Rannells as Cole
  • Morgan Spector as Massimo
  • Eleonora Romandini as Francesca
  • Amanda Seyfried as Candice
  • Nunzia Schiano as Zia Luciana
  • Paolo Romano as Daniele
  • Nicola Acunzo as Carabineiri Officer
  • Giuseppe Attanasio as Rimaldo
  • Jessamine Burgum as Young Mother
  • Valerio Da Silva as Waiter
  • Cecilia Dazzi as Ilaria
  • Arcangelo Iannace as Farmer
  • Fabio Salerno as Detective
  • Leonardo Verni as Jacopo
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Production

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Direction and screenplay

The film was directed by David Joseph Craig and Brian Crano, who also co-wrote the screenplay.[3] Crano is known for his work on television series such as Simply Plimpton . Craig has previously worked primarily as an actor. He has appeared in films such as All These Small Moments and The Prodigal Son in smaller roles. Like their protagonists, Craig and Crano are married. Crano has already cast his husband in a leading role in his second feature film Permission.[4]

Cast and filming

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Nick Kroll (top) and Andrew Rannells (bottom) star as Cole and Dom

Nick Kroll and Andrew Rannells play Dom and Cole in the lead roles. Paolo Romano plays Daniele, an old friend of Dom's father, whom they visit in Italy. Arcangelo Iannace plays the farmer who helps them. Nunzia Schiano plays the role of restaurant owner Zia Luciana. Morgan Spector plays her son Massimo and Eleanora Romandini plays his fiancée Francesca. Amanda Seyfried plays Candace, the woman whose child Dom and Cole want to adopt, in a supporting role. Other roles were cast with Giuseppe Attanasio and Cecilia Dazzi.[5]

Cinematographer Lowell A. Meyer has most recently worked on films such as The Chaos Cop by Jim Cummings, Greener Grass by Jocelyn DeBoer and Dawn Luebbe and, together with Jarin Blaschke, on the thriller Knock at the Cabin by M. Night Shyamalan.

Music

The film music was composed by Danny Bensi and Saunder Jurriaans, who have worked together on a number of films in the past, including The Gift, The Prodigal Son, The Discovery, Wolfpack, Edison and God's Creatures.[6]

Release

The film premiered at South by Southwest (SXSW) on March 8, 2024,[7] Overlook Film Festival on April 4, 2024,[8] and Frameline Film Festival on June 22, 2024.[9] In August 2024, Vertical acquired distribution rights to the film in North America, the United Kingdom and Ireland, planning to theatrically release it in early 2025.[10] The film was released in the United States on June 6, 2025.[11]

Reception

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On the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, 56% of 43 critics' reviews are positive.[12] Metacritic, which uses a weighted average, assigned the film a score of 57 out of 100, based on 11 critics, indicating "mixed or average" reviews.[13]

Alison Foreman of IndieWire gave the film a rating of A- and she wrote, "Outrageously snappy and unapologetically fun, I Don't Understand You is a must-see for anyone who likes queer romance, horror-comedy, and/or hot Italians."[14]

Rocco T. Thompson of Daily Dead gave the film a movie score of 3.5/5 and wrote, "I Don't Understand You is lighter fare for horror fans, but has bloody surprises in store for those willing to take this very bad, very funny trip. See it with your nearest and dearest and plenty of Grappa. Salute!"[15]

David Rooney of The Hollywood Reporter gave a positive feedback to the film and he said, "A gay adoption comedy that veers off into travel porn before taking a hard left into dark fish-out-of-water farce, I Don't Understand You is a lot fresher and more enjoyable than its generic title might suggest."[16]

However, Brian Tallerico of RogerEbert.com had a negative reaction to the film and he said, "Making a movie in which Americans basically carve a path of destruction in another country requires a truly deft tonal hand, and this one just doesn't make sense."[17]

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References

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