Credited cast: | |||
Gaetano Bruno | ... | Diego Spadafora | |
Jerzy Skolimowski | ... | Jerzy Kunze | |
Laura Morante | ... | Amalia Roberti | |
Alessandro Gassmann | ... | Alessandro Pes (as Alessandro Gassman) | |
Micaela Ramazzotti | ... | Valeria Tramonti | |
![]() |
Silvia Calderoni | ... | Romeo Agate |
Renato Carpentieri | ... | Alberto Rak | |
Renato Scarpa | ... | Arturo Onofri - Ministro della Cultura | |
Paolo Graziosi | ... | Nemi - Ministro Economia | |
![]() |
Antonio Catania | ... | Massimo Vitelli |
![]() |
Marco Foschi | ... | Riccardo |
![]() |
Michele Di Mauro | ... | Augusto Trezzi |
![]() |
Martina Pensa | ... | Irene |
![]() |
Allan Caister Pearce | ... | John Morris |
Filippo Luna | ... | Seminerio |
Valeria is a ghostwriter for a screenwriter lacking inspiration. When she gets a plot of a new film by a mysterious character, an exciting intrigue starts.
You can spot a made-for-TV production right away. The story-line is straightforward, little nuances that make you think days later, the takes are frontal and simple, the dialogue is simple and obvious, the facial expressions are stereotyped. Or maybe the Big Cinema budgets in today's Italy are YesterYear. Fact is, I almost fell asleep on this one. A modern day Nancy Drew figures out plot and counter-plot. Yeah, it's a comedy. But make sure you pay less than five bucks for your time watching this.