Ginger and Cinnamon
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Average customer review:Product Description
While vacationing on the Greek Isle of Love, a repressed 30 year old Stefania reluctantly plays chaperon to her precocious 14 year old niece, Meggy, who plans to lose her virginity before the summer is over. Unbeknownst to Stefania, Meggy's chosen man is Stefania's ex-boyfriend. Amidst a mélange of sun rash, broken diets, nervous girls, sleeping bags, orgasms, 80's music, and a little ginger and cinnamon, the two women discover themselves and their sexuality.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #67232 in DVD
- Published on: 2003
- Released on: 2005-01-01
- Rating: NR (Not Rated)
- Aspect ratio: 1.33:1
- Formats: Color, DVD-Video, NTSC, Subtitled
- Original language: Italian
- Subtitled in: English
- Number of discs: 1
- Running time: 82 minutes
Customer Reviews
Romance, like Ginger & Cinnamon, is the Spice of Life.
I recently saw this delightfully quirky, Italian "comedy-of-errors" on The Sundance Channel. Ginger and Cinnamon (Dillo con parole mie, which translates as, "Say it with my Words") tells the story of a 14-year-old girl, Megghy (Martina Merlino), determined to lose her virginity to her 30-year-old aunt Stefania's (Stefania Montorsi) ex-boyfriend, Andreas (Giampaolo Morelli), while vacationing on the Ios Island in Greece. Through their series of misadventures, whereas Megghy ultimately discovers what it means to be a woman, her aunt Stefania loses the inhibitions of that come with her maturity. There are five good reasons to experience this rare film:
1. The beautiful Mediterannean scenery;
2. The insightful relationship dialogue;
3. The eclectic soundtrack, which features songs by Culture Club, The Village People, Ali Farka Touré, and Real World artists like Pina, Temple of Sound, and Los de Abajo;
4. The fun musical sequence between Stefania Montorsi and Giampaolo Morelli on the bus; and
5. The unpredictable plot twists, scene changes, and misadventures that make up the film.
G. Merritt
harmless fluff, only mildly entertaining
Meggy, a silly Italian 14-year-old intent on losing her virginity, takes a trip to a Greek island -- "the Island of Love" -- with her 30-year-old aunt, Stephania, who has just broken off an eight-year relationship. The island seems to be populated solely by young people intent on partying, drinking, sun-bathing, getting high and making love.
Various trivial complications ensue, the ex-boyfriend shows up and proves to be just as moody and immature as everyone else -- and there is also a weird Bollywood interlude where the principals lip-sync and dance to a song hailing the positive attributes of smoking.
The main attraction here is Meggy's strange misconceptions of what it means to be an adult -- but all the characters are terminally childish, shallow and uninteresting.
Sorry, can't really recommend this much. It's pretty harmless like eating cotton candy, but not very nutritious.
Hard to shake off the overwhelmingly annoying character of Megghy
Ginger and Cinnamon has some funny moments. We thought it was cute and enjoyable fluff and - as others have noted here - it's interesting to get a slice-of-life look at party island life in Greece, literally and no doubt accurately depicted as swarmed by young singles from around the world. One of director Daniele Luchetti's interesting touches is to intersperse eight or so moments where real-life revelers introduce themselves to the camera. No doubt this movie sent the tourist travel to Ios Island through the roof...as if it needed it.
Not much to say about the movie itself. It was pretty hard for me to shake off the overwhelmingly annoying character of Megghy (Martina Merlino) as a self-centered 14-year-old ham-handedly attempting to lose her virginity. We needed less of Merlino and more of the winsome Stefania Montorsi - naturally beautiful and likable in the Giovanna Mezzogiorno mold.





