HD · HDR
Parthenope
Overlook Pick

Parthenope

Is she a siren or a myth?
67
User Score761 ratings
TMDB 6.716+20242h 17mIT
Drama

Synopsis

Parthenope, born in the sea near Naples in 1950, is beautiful, enigmatic, and intelligent. She is shamelessly courted by many. However, beauty comes at a cost.

Director
Paolo SorrentinoFrom TMDB credits
Studio
The Apartment Pictures7 production companies
Release
October 24, 2024Released
Box Office
$10MBudget $32M

Top Cast

8 of 60
Celeste Dalla Porta
Celeste Dalla Porta
Parthenope
Stefania Sandrelli
Stefania Sandrelli
Parthenope (old)
Gary Oldman
Gary Oldman
John Cheever
Silvio Orlando
Silvio Orlando
Devoto Marotta
Luisa Ranieri
Luisa Ranieri
Greta Cool
Peppe Lanzetta
Peppe Lanzetta
Bishop
Isabella Ferrari
Isabella Ferrari
Flora Malva
Silvia Degrandi
Silvia Degrandi
Maggie

Trailers & Photos

Reviews

From TMDB users
CinemaSerf
May 25, 2025

Along the lines of the legendary beauty Aphrodite, “Parthenope” (Celeste Dalla Porta) was born in the sea and grew to become a great temptress to both of her male contemporaries. The first being her obsessed brother “Raimondo” (Daniele Rienzo) and the other her adoring childhood friend “Sandrino” (Dario Aita) whose unrequited love for her drove him to distraction. Not, however, to such distraction as that of her sibling, It’s when the trio decide to head for an unfunded trip from their home in Naples to the nearby island of Capri that she meets elderly American writer/dipso “Cheever” (Gary Oldman) who finds her intriguing but appears to have a certain immunity to her charms and she’s not used to that. Whilst on this carefree trip there befalls a tragic realisation that causes all of them to appreciate the stark realities and fickle shallowness of their lives and brings into focus senses of grief, rejection and emptiness. It’s a beautifully photographed piece of cinema, this film, with sparing dialogue and a sexually, but not explicitly so, charged chemistry abundant throughout this rather visually extravagant but disappointingly soulless drama. It is a bit like a postcard upon which is a beautiful picture but just too few words to develop the characters or to quite put enough meat on their perfectly formed bones. Indeed as the second hour starts to drag, the whole thing begins to look more like a repetitively self-indulgent vanity exercise that might be rooted in mythology but that struggles to engage beyond the superficial. It’s classy and stylish and well worth a look - but look appears to be all Paolo Sorrentino wants us to do.

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