Asia Argento is opening up about the emotions she felt following the death of her boyfriend Anthony Bourdain.
In an interview with DailyMailTV, which will be broadcast in full on Monday and Tuesday, Argento tearfully explained that she initially felt angry after learning Bourdain had been found dead of suicide.
“I was angry [at him], yes, for abandoning me, my kids,” the Italian actress, 42, tearfully remarked. “But now it’s been replaced just by this loss, this hole, that cannot be filled by anything.”
She also shared that “the anger kept me alive, because otherwise this desperation has no end.”
Bourdain and...
In an interview with DailyMailTV, which will be broadcast in full on Monday and Tuesday, Argento tearfully explained that she initially felt angry after learning Bourdain had been found dead of suicide.
“I was angry [at him], yes, for abandoning me, my kids,” the Italian actress, 42, tearfully remarked. “But now it’s been replaced just by this loss, this hole, that cannot be filled by anything.”
She also shared that “the anger kept me alive, because otherwise this desperation has no end.”
Bourdain and...
- 9/24/2018
- by Maria Pasquini
- PEOPLE.com
Image Source: Getty / Jason Laveris On Oct. 5, The New York Times published a disturbing report detailing multiple sexual harassment complaints against Harvey Weinstein. After the story broke, The New Yorker published its own investigation, in which multiple women accused the Hollywood producer of rape. One of the women in question is Italian actress Asia Argento, who says she was sexually assaulted by Weinstein 20 years ago. Here's what you need to know about Argento and her allegations against Weinstein. RelatedHow Jennifer Lawrence and More Stars Are Speaking Out Against Harvey Weinstein Who Is Asia Argento Argento is an Italian actress and director and the daughter of Italian film director Dario Argento. She is also the author of the 1999 novel I Love You, Kirk. Argento is currently dating chef Anthony Bourdain and was previously married to filmmaker Michele Civetta. She and Michele are parents to a 9-year-old son, and Argento also has...
- 10/11/2017
- by Monica Sisavat
- Popsugar.com
Anthony Bourdain was recently spotted out and about with a new lady on his arm: 41-year-old Asia Argento. Italian magazine Chi ran pics of the pair hand-in-hand in Rome; Bourdain wrote in December that the Parts Unknown he filmed in Rome “would not have been possible — or be anything like it is, without the truly magnificent Asia Argento.” Here’s a quick primer on Ms. Argento.
1. She’s Italian cinema royalty
Argento’s dad is Dario Argento, who’s responsible for (among dozens of other films) the 1977 horror classic Suspiria, widely hailed as one of the most influential and visually striking shockers ever made.
1. She’s Italian cinema royalty
Argento’s dad is Dario Argento, who’s responsible for (among dozens of other films) the 1977 horror classic Suspiria, widely hailed as one of the most influential and visually striking shockers ever made.
- 2/21/2017
- by Alex Heigl
- PEOPLE.com
It’s Monday, so we all know what that means! Yes, it’s time for another rundown of DVDs and Blu-ray’s hitting stores online and offline this week. It’s a very light week this week, so let us breakdown the new releases and highlight what you should – and shouldn’t – be buying from today, February 11th 2013.
Pick Of The Week
Sinister (DVD/Blu-ray)
Desperately in need of a best seller to revive his struggling career, true crime writer Ellison (Ethan Hawke), moves his family to the scene of his most recent story; the unsolved, gruesome murder of a loving, happy suburban family. Shunned by the local community and strained by his obligations to his family, the discovery of a batch of home movies in the attic offers Ellison shocking proof to the crime he is investigating and the terrifying realisation that his investigation may be putting his family in mortal danger.
Pick Of The Week
Sinister (DVD/Blu-ray)
Desperately in need of a best seller to revive his struggling career, true crime writer Ellison (Ethan Hawke), moves his family to the scene of his most recent story; the unsolved, gruesome murder of a loving, happy suburban family. Shunned by the local community and strained by his obligations to his family, the discovery of a batch of home movies in the attic offers Ellison shocking proof to the crime he is investigating and the terrifying realisation that his investigation may be putting his family in mortal danger.
- 2/11/2013
- by Phil
- Nerdly
Asia Argento is off the single market. The Italian TV and film actress has married her film director boyfriend Michele Civetta in Tuscany, Italy on Wednesday, August 27. The pair exchanged vows in a civil ceremony held at the city hall in Arezzo.
Details of the wedding are not available. The newlyweds also have yet commented on their official union. Word on the block is that Asia and Michele are expecting their first child together.
Asia is the daughter of Dario Argento, an Italian film director, producer and screenwriter who's claimed to be known for his work in the Italian giallo genre, and for his influence on modern horror and slasher movies. She herself is best known for her starring role as Yelena in "XXX" (2002).
Prior to marrying Michele, she's been romantically linked to Sergio Rubini, Michael Pitt and Jonathan Rhys-Meyers among others. She has one daughter, Anna Lou who was...
Details of the wedding are not available. The newlyweds also have yet commented on their official union. Word on the block is that Asia and Michele are expecting their first child together.
Asia is the daughter of Dario Argento, an Italian film director, producer and screenwriter who's claimed to be known for his work in the Italian giallo genre, and for his influence on modern horror and slasher movies. She herself is best known for her starring role as Yelena in "XXX" (2002).
Prior to marrying Michele, she's been romantically linked to Sergio Rubini, Michael Pitt and Jonathan Rhys-Meyers among others. She has one daughter, Anna Lou who was...
- 8/28/2008
- by AceShowbiz.com
- Aceshowbiz
XXX star Asia Argento has wed in Tuscany, Italy.
The actress married director Michele Civetta on Wednesday in a civil ceremony at the city hall in Arezzo.
The 32-year-old daughter of Italian moviemaker Dario Argento was previously engaged to actors Michael Pitt and Vincent Gallo but she never married.
She has a daughter, Anna Lou, from her relationship with actor/composer Marco Castoldi.
The newlyweds are reportedly expecting a child together.
The actress married director Michele Civetta on Wednesday in a civil ceremony at the city hall in Arezzo.
The 32-year-old daughter of Italian moviemaker Dario Argento was previously engaged to actors Michael Pitt and Vincent Gallo but she never married.
She has a daughter, Anna Lou, from her relationship with actor/composer Marco Castoldi.
The newlyweds are reportedly expecting a child together.
- 8/27/2008
- WENN
Opened Wednesday, Oct. 4 (France)
PARIS -- Transylvania, Tony Gatlif's latest excursion into Europe's ethnic byways, was chosen to close May's Festival de Cannes this year, and it is easy to understand why: It's a love story involving rough-diamond protagonists, raucous gypsy music, majestic landscapes and an upbeat ending, deftly blended by one of the unsung heroes of art house cinema.
Gatlif has been here before -- Gadjo Dilo (1997), his biggest commercial success to date, also was shot in Romania -- but with a bigger budget and two up-and-coming actors in the lead roles, his latest movie could mark a breakthrough into mainstream markets.
When the feisty Zingarina (Asia Argento, also featured in Sofia Coppola's Marie Antoinette), travels to Transylvania with her bosom friend Marie (Amira Casar) in tow to rejoin the father of the child she is carrying, she is in for a rude shock. Piano-player Milan (Marco Castoldi), who she thought had been expelled from France, tells her that he had in fact walked out on her, that he does not love her and that he wants nothing more to do with her.
Three months pregnant, Zingarina becomes hysterical, gives Marie the slip and, disguising herself as a gypsy, wanders around the countryside nursing her grief. She links up with Tchingalo (Birol Unel), a petty trader who travels the region buying up gold and silver trinkets for resale in the West. Sure enough, little by little, love blossoms.
It's tough love, of course. Zingarina still is too angry to give herself completely, and Tchangalo is by nature a loner. But by now we're in road-movie mode. As the incidents pile up -- notably, an exorcism for Zingarina, a beating up for Tchangalo by five brothers who believe he swindled their mother -- and the pregnancy approaches its term, they have plenty of time to smooth things over.
Zingarina finally gives birth on a snowbound hillside, Tchangalo's Mercedes having sunk axle-deep into the mud. Local midwives arrive by horse-drawn sleigh to help out, and villagers offer her shelter to rest and succor the child. Gatlif's narrative rather runs out of steam at this point: Zingarina vanishes, Tchangalo searches for her in vain, he inflicts violence on himself, she returns, he finds her, she smiles at him, fade to black and the closing credits. But there have been many pleasures along the way.
The Carpathian mountains form a magnificent backdrop to the story. Celine Bozon's cinematography captures perfectly the fading of autumn's browns and golds into the yellows and grays and, finally, the blinding whites of winter. The frequent mists and the timeless east European structures of Romania's wild north provide a fairy-tale quality to the settings.
With Zingarina speaking French with Marie and English with Tchangalo, not to mention the frequent snatches of Romanian, Romani, Hungarian, Russian and Italian, the movie presents a linguistic melting pot. The dialogue can best be described as functional, but then Gatlif's appeal always has been as much to the heart as to the head.
Music is central to this director's work. The action of Transylvania is punctuated from beginning to end by songs and dancing. Much of the music was composed by Gatlif, in collaboration with Delphine Mantoulet.
The movie is well served by Argento, who does the business as the hot-blooded abandoned mistress, but Unel (star of last year's European movie of the year Head-On), as the outsider about to come in from the cold, ultimately steals the picture from under her nose.
TRANSYLVANIA
Princes Films, Pyramide Prods.
Credits: Screenwriter-director: Tony Gatlif; Producers: Christian Paumier, Doru Mitran; Director of photography: Celine Bozon; Production designer: Brigitte Brassart; Music: Tony Gatlif, Delphine Mantoulet; Costume designer: Rose-Marie Melka; Editor: Monique Dartonne. Cast: Zingarina: Asia Argento; Tchangalo: Birol Unel; Marie: Amira Casar; Luminitsa: Alexandra Beaujard; Milan: Marco Castoldi; Cabaret singer: Beata Palya.
No MPAA rating, running time 103 minutes.
PARIS -- Transylvania, Tony Gatlif's latest excursion into Europe's ethnic byways, was chosen to close May's Festival de Cannes this year, and it is easy to understand why: It's a love story involving rough-diamond protagonists, raucous gypsy music, majestic landscapes and an upbeat ending, deftly blended by one of the unsung heroes of art house cinema.
Gatlif has been here before -- Gadjo Dilo (1997), his biggest commercial success to date, also was shot in Romania -- but with a bigger budget and two up-and-coming actors in the lead roles, his latest movie could mark a breakthrough into mainstream markets.
When the feisty Zingarina (Asia Argento, also featured in Sofia Coppola's Marie Antoinette), travels to Transylvania with her bosom friend Marie (Amira Casar) in tow to rejoin the father of the child she is carrying, she is in for a rude shock. Piano-player Milan (Marco Castoldi), who she thought had been expelled from France, tells her that he had in fact walked out on her, that he does not love her and that he wants nothing more to do with her.
Three months pregnant, Zingarina becomes hysterical, gives Marie the slip and, disguising herself as a gypsy, wanders around the countryside nursing her grief. She links up with Tchingalo (Birol Unel), a petty trader who travels the region buying up gold and silver trinkets for resale in the West. Sure enough, little by little, love blossoms.
It's tough love, of course. Zingarina still is too angry to give herself completely, and Tchangalo is by nature a loner. But by now we're in road-movie mode. As the incidents pile up -- notably, an exorcism for Zingarina, a beating up for Tchangalo by five brothers who believe he swindled their mother -- and the pregnancy approaches its term, they have plenty of time to smooth things over.
Zingarina finally gives birth on a snowbound hillside, Tchangalo's Mercedes having sunk axle-deep into the mud. Local midwives arrive by horse-drawn sleigh to help out, and villagers offer her shelter to rest and succor the child. Gatlif's narrative rather runs out of steam at this point: Zingarina vanishes, Tchangalo searches for her in vain, he inflicts violence on himself, she returns, he finds her, she smiles at him, fade to black and the closing credits. But there have been many pleasures along the way.
The Carpathian mountains form a magnificent backdrop to the story. Celine Bozon's cinematography captures perfectly the fading of autumn's browns and golds into the yellows and grays and, finally, the blinding whites of winter. The frequent mists and the timeless east European structures of Romania's wild north provide a fairy-tale quality to the settings.
With Zingarina speaking French with Marie and English with Tchangalo, not to mention the frequent snatches of Romanian, Romani, Hungarian, Russian and Italian, the movie presents a linguistic melting pot. The dialogue can best be described as functional, but then Gatlif's appeal always has been as much to the heart as to the head.
Music is central to this director's work. The action of Transylvania is punctuated from beginning to end by songs and dancing. Much of the music was composed by Gatlif, in collaboration with Delphine Mantoulet.
The movie is well served by Argento, who does the business as the hot-blooded abandoned mistress, but Unel (star of last year's European movie of the year Head-On), as the outsider about to come in from the cold, ultimately steals the picture from under her nose.
TRANSYLVANIA
Princes Films, Pyramide Prods.
Credits: Screenwriter-director: Tony Gatlif; Producers: Christian Paumier, Doru Mitran; Director of photography: Celine Bozon; Production designer: Brigitte Brassart; Music: Tony Gatlif, Delphine Mantoulet; Costume designer: Rose-Marie Melka; Editor: Monique Dartonne. Cast: Zingarina: Asia Argento; Tchangalo: Birol Unel; Marie: Amira Casar; Luminitsa: Alexandra Beaujard; Milan: Marco Castoldi; Cabaret singer: Beata Palya.
No MPAA rating, running time 103 minutes.
- 10/10/2006
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
PARIS -- "Transylvania", Tony Gatlif's latest excursion into Europe's ethnic byways, was chosen to close the Festival de Cannes this year, and it is easy to understand why: It's a love story involving rough-diamond protagonists, raucous gypsy music, majestic landscapes and an upbeat ending, deftly blended by one of the unsung heroes of art house cinema.
Gatlif has been here before -- "Gadjo Dilo" (1997), his biggest commercial success to date, also was shot in Romania -- but with a bigger budget and two up-and-coming actors in the lead roles, his latest movie could mark a breakthrough into mainstream markets.
When the feisty Zingarina (Asia Argento, also featured in Sofia Coppola's "Marie Antoinette"), travels to Transylvania with her bosom friend Marie (Amira Casar) in tow to rejoin the father of the child she is carrying, she is in for a rude shock. Piano-player Milan (Marco Castoldi), who she thought had been expelled from France, tells her that he had in fact walked out on her, that he does not love her and that he wants nothing more to do with her.
Three months pregnant, Zingarina becomes hysterical, gives Marie the slip and, disguising herself as a gypsy, wanders around the countryside nursing her grief. She links up with Tchingalo (Birol Unel), a petty trader who travels the region buying up gold and silver trinkets for resale in the West. Sure enough, little by little, love blossoms.
It's tough love, of course. Zingarina still is too angry to give herself completely, and Tchangalo is by nature a loner. But by now we're in road-movie mode. As the incidents pile up -- notably, an exorcism for Zingarina, a beating up for Tchangalo by five brothers who believe he swindled their mother -- and the pregnancy approaches its term, they have plenty of time to smooth things over.
Zingarina finally gives birth on a snowbound hillside, Tchangalo's Mercedes having sunk axle-deep into the mud. Local midwives arrive by horse-drawn sleigh to help out, and villagers offer her shelter to rest and succor the child. Gatlif's narrative rather runs out of steam at this point: Zingarina vanishes, Tchangalo searches for her in vain, he inflicts violence on himself, she returns, he finds her, she smiles at him, fade to black and the closing credits. But there have been many pleasures along the way.
The Carpathian mountains form a magnificent backdrop to the story. Celine Bozon's cinematography captures perfectly the fading of autumn's browns and golds into the yellows and grays and, finally, the blinding whites of winter. The frequent mists and the timeless east European structures of Romania's wild north provide a fairy-tale quality to the settings.
With Zingarina speaking French with Marie and English with Tchangalo, not to mention the frequent snatches of Romanian, Romani, Hungarian, Russian and Italian, the movie presents a linguistic melting pot. The dialogue can best be described as functional, but then Gatlif's appeal always has been as much to the heart as to the head.
Music is central to this director's work. The action of Transylvania is punctuated from beginning to end by songs and dancing. Much of the music was composed by Gatlif, in collaboration with Delphine Mantoulet.
The movie is well served by Argento, who does the business as the hot-blooded abandoned mistress, but Unel (star of last year's European movie of the year "Head-On"), as the outsider about to come in from the cold, ultimately steals the picture from under her nose.
TRANSYLVANIA
Princes Films, Pyramide Prods.
Credits:
Screenwriter-director: Tony Gatlif
Producers: Christian Paumier, Doru Mitran
Director of photography: Celine Bozon
Production designer: Brigitte Brassart
Music: Tony Gatlif, Delphine Mantoulet
Costume designer: Rose-Marie Melka
Editor: Monique Dartonne
Cast:
Zingarina: Asia Argento
Tchangalo: Birol Unel
Marie: Amira Casar
Luminitsa: Alexandra Beaujard
Milan: Marco Castoldi
Cabaret singer: Beata Palya
Running time -- 103 minutes
No MPAA rating...
Gatlif has been here before -- "Gadjo Dilo" (1997), his biggest commercial success to date, also was shot in Romania -- but with a bigger budget and two up-and-coming actors in the lead roles, his latest movie could mark a breakthrough into mainstream markets.
When the feisty Zingarina (Asia Argento, also featured in Sofia Coppola's "Marie Antoinette"), travels to Transylvania with her bosom friend Marie (Amira Casar) in tow to rejoin the father of the child she is carrying, she is in for a rude shock. Piano-player Milan (Marco Castoldi), who she thought had been expelled from France, tells her that he had in fact walked out on her, that he does not love her and that he wants nothing more to do with her.
Three months pregnant, Zingarina becomes hysterical, gives Marie the slip and, disguising herself as a gypsy, wanders around the countryside nursing her grief. She links up with Tchingalo (Birol Unel), a petty trader who travels the region buying up gold and silver trinkets for resale in the West. Sure enough, little by little, love blossoms.
It's tough love, of course. Zingarina still is too angry to give herself completely, and Tchangalo is by nature a loner. But by now we're in road-movie mode. As the incidents pile up -- notably, an exorcism for Zingarina, a beating up for Tchangalo by five brothers who believe he swindled their mother -- and the pregnancy approaches its term, they have plenty of time to smooth things over.
Zingarina finally gives birth on a snowbound hillside, Tchangalo's Mercedes having sunk axle-deep into the mud. Local midwives arrive by horse-drawn sleigh to help out, and villagers offer her shelter to rest and succor the child. Gatlif's narrative rather runs out of steam at this point: Zingarina vanishes, Tchangalo searches for her in vain, he inflicts violence on himself, she returns, he finds her, she smiles at him, fade to black and the closing credits. But there have been many pleasures along the way.
The Carpathian mountains form a magnificent backdrop to the story. Celine Bozon's cinematography captures perfectly the fading of autumn's browns and golds into the yellows and grays and, finally, the blinding whites of winter. The frequent mists and the timeless east European structures of Romania's wild north provide a fairy-tale quality to the settings.
With Zingarina speaking French with Marie and English with Tchangalo, not to mention the frequent snatches of Romanian, Romani, Hungarian, Russian and Italian, the movie presents a linguistic melting pot. The dialogue can best be described as functional, but then Gatlif's appeal always has been as much to the heart as to the head.
Music is central to this director's work. The action of Transylvania is punctuated from beginning to end by songs and dancing. Much of the music was composed by Gatlif, in collaboration with Delphine Mantoulet.
The movie is well served by Argento, who does the business as the hot-blooded abandoned mistress, but Unel (star of last year's European movie of the year "Head-On"), as the outsider about to come in from the cold, ultimately steals the picture from under her nose.
TRANSYLVANIA
Princes Films, Pyramide Prods.
Credits:
Screenwriter-director: Tony Gatlif
Producers: Christian Paumier, Doru Mitran
Director of photography: Celine Bozon
Production designer: Brigitte Brassart
Music: Tony Gatlif, Delphine Mantoulet
Costume designer: Rose-Marie Melka
Editor: Monique Dartonne
Cast:
Zingarina: Asia Argento
Tchangalo: Birol Unel
Marie: Amira Casar
Luminitsa: Alexandra Beaujard
Milan: Marco Castoldi
Cabaret singer: Beata Palya
Running time -- 103 minutes
No MPAA rating...
- 10/4/2006
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
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