
The Hand of God
In 1980s Naples, Italy, an awkward Italian teen struggling to find his place experiences heartbreak and liberation after he's inadvertently saved from a freak accident by football legend Diego Maradona.
- 7.5
- 2021
- Released
- 2h 10m

Filippo Scotti
Fabietto Schisa
Toni Servillo
Saverio Schisa
Teresa Saponangelo
Maria Schisa
Luisa Ranieri
Patrizia
Marlon Joubert
Marchino Schisa
Massimiliano Gallo
Franco
Betti Pedrazzi
Baronessa Focale
Renato Carpentieri
Alfredo
Enzo De Caro
San Gennaro
Sofya Gershevich
Yulia
Lino Musella
Marriettiello
Biagio Manna
Armando
Ciro Capano
Antonio Capuano
Alessandro Bressanello
Aldo Cavallo
Birte Berg
Graziella
Dora Romano
Signora Gentile
Monica Nappo
Silvana
Cristiana Dell'Anna
Sorella Armando
Marina Viro
Dottoressa
Daniele Vicorito
Diego Maradona
Celeste Dalla Porta
Bit role (uncredited)
Alfonso Perugini
Dante Ferretti (uncredited)

Released
it
$13,049,974.00
$167,909.00
- #italy
- #naples, italy
- #loss of virginity
- #family relationships
- #coming of age
- #poverty
- #teenage boy
- #football (soccer) fan
- #semi autobiographical
- #1980s
Reviews

Told largely from the perspective of the young "Fabietto" (Filippo Scotti), this is a charming tale of this youth who lives with elder brother "Marchino" (Marlon Joubert) and his parents "Saverio" (Toni Servillo) and "Maria" (Teresa Saponangelo). Both teenagers are frequently tempted by their somewhat exhibitionist aunt "Patricia" (Luisa Ranieri) a temptation only matched by their (and the entire
Calling this a "coming-of-age" film is like calling Bud Lite a beer. They're not in the same class. I compare this film to my other favorite re-telling of a seminal childhood memory - Joanna Hogg's Souvenir. The great Austrian poet, Rainer Maria Rilke, once wrote "For it is not yet the memories themselves. Not till they have turned to blood within us, to glance and gesture, nameless and no long











