
Noris
Summary
Noris unfolds as a searing, visually arresting exposé of artistic spirit crushed beneath the weight of societal hypocrisy and patriarchal control. We are introduced to Noris (Pina Menichelli), a woman of incandescent talent and unyielding will, whose vibrant canvases dare to challenge the suffocating pieties of her provincial Italian milieu. Her existence is a gilded cage, meticulously constructed by Baron Valerio (Luigi Serventi), her ostensibly benevolent guardian, whose paternalistic grip masks a sinister, possessive desire. Amidst this opulent repression, Noris finds an unlikely kindred spirit in Marco (Nicola Pescatori), a sculptor whose hands, though calloused by poverty, shape raw emotion into form, mirroring her own nascent rebellion. Their clandestine bond, a fragile bloom in a barren landscape, becomes both her muse and her undoing. The narrative meticulously charts Noris’s perilous dance between artistic liberation and personal annihilation, culminating in a public exhibition that threatens to tear asunder the carefully woven fabric of decorum, exposing the venality beneath the veneer of respectability. Stefano Bissi's character, a quietly observant physician, bears witness to the unraveling, a silent chorus to the tragedy of a soul too grand for its confines, ultimately framing a poignant critique of an era’s unforgiving strictures against female autonomy and creative expression.
Synopsis
Director

Nicola Pescatori, Luigi Serventi, Stefano Bissi, Pina Menichelli










