Monica Anna Maria Bellucci (Italian:[ˈmɔːnikabelˈluttʃi]; born 30 September 1964) is an Italian actress and model. She began her career as a fashion model before transitioning to Italian and later American and French films. She has played starring roles, supporting roles and guest appearances within an eclectic filmography spanning a range of genres and languages. Her accolades include the David di Donatello, Globo d'oro and Nastro d'Argento awards. In 2018, Forbes Italy named her one of the 100 most successful Italian women.
Monica Anna Maria Bellucci was born in Città di Castello, Umbria, on 30 September 1964.[2][3][4] Her father, Pasquale Bellucci, owned a trucking company. Her mother, Brunella Briganti, was a housewife and amateur painter. She is their only child, as her parents did not want another.[5][6] Bellucci grew up in Selci-Lama,[7] in the comune (municipality) of San Giustino, on the banks of the Tiber.[a][8]
Bellucci received a Catholic education.[9] She was known to be an "intelligent child".[10] Discreet and increasingly interested in fashion, she grew up "surrounded by love", her father said.[6] Bellucci was introduced to modelling at age 13 by posing for a photographer friend of the family in Città di Castello.[11] She was distant from other children her age, regularly making detours to get home after school[6] and not spending time with them in the comune's public spaces. Her father recalled that she complained that everyone stared at her.[6][12] Her father helped her to gain self-confidence.[6]
Bellucci was asked to do photographic sessions by her father's friend, the director of a fashion agency at the age of 16.[5][15] Having made her modelling debut at 16, she would travel periodically to Milan and Paris while continuing her studies at Città di Castello.[16] "I approached the adult universe very early", said Bellucci, because she worked with models ten years older than her.[17] "Modelling came to me naturally, and I loved pictures. I loved the world of image", she said.[5]
While hitchhiking, she met a hairdresser from Città di Castello named Piero Montanucci, who persuaded her to become his model. Bellucci, a student at the liceo classico, attracted attention wherever they went due to her striking appearance.[18] She was considered a local model when she was a teenager.[12] Bellucci studied philosophy, literature, Latin and Greek.[19] Dressed by Città di Castello-based fashion entrepreneur Pina Alberti, Bellucci enthralled the crowd at a fashion show in 1983 at the Teatro degli Illuminati (the city's municipal theatre) as part of the Momento Donna event hosted by Maria Giovanna Elmi. She was accompanied by Montanucci,[20] her mentor at the time.[6] While in high school, her father's friend allowed her to debut on the runway during a fashion show in Florence and a second in Milan.[5][15]
Bellucci studied law at the University of Perugia.[10][21] She financed her studies by working as a model[10] through her father's friend.[22] After a friend encouraged her to apply to modelling agencies during her studies,[10] Bellucci moved to Milan, one of Europe's fashion centres.[23][24] Modelling agent Piero Piazzi witnessed Bellucci's arrival at the Elite Model Management agency and considered that she could have been an actress.[24] Piazzi had been critical in his assessment when he first saw Bellucci in 1987, telling her she was "not ready".[25] Elite signed her to a contract from 1988 to 1989.[15][23] In 1988, she featured on the cover of Elle France, photographed by Oliviero Toscani,[26] and Vogue Spain.[27]
Her work as a model for Elite required her to travel, and she decided to leave university. Bellucci would say later that being a lawyer would not have suited her.[21] She appeared in numerous international advertising campaigns, and Dolce & Gabbana recruited her to become their muse.[15][28] Her physical attributes aligned with the image that the founders of Dolce & Gabbana desired to portray.[29] In 1989, Bellucci lived in New York, where she was already a dollar millionaire. She was the Italian model that the "fashion world" vied for.[30] As a model represented by Elite,[31] she worked in Milan, Paris, and New York.[5][32]
In 1990, Bellucci lent her image and name to the Haute Couture line of the French luxury house Dior.[33] Photographed by Richard Avedon, she became the "protagonist" of Dolce & Gabbana campaigns, "which elevated her to an icon of Mediterranean beauty".[23] She also walked the runway for the luxury fashion house Fendi.[34] In 1991, Bellucci was the brand ambassador for the cosmetics company, L'Oréal.[35] The same year, she appeared in the Sports Illustrated Swimsuit Issue, which featured photographs of her in the Caribbean.[36] She also advertised for Givenchy, Nina Ricci, Yves Saint Laurent, Versace and others.[37] In 1992, Bellucci combined her work as a model with her acting debut.[38] In 1993, she first met Giuseppe Tornatore when he directed her in a Dolce & Gabbana perfume television advertisement.[39]
Bellucci opted to follow her passion for cinema, and turned to acting and stopped modelling full-time,[39] although she remained active within the industry.[40] She was appointed a brand ambassador by the Italian luxury company Breil and starred in advertising campaigns.[41] In the 1990s, she regularly appeared in "sexy" calendar shoots, starting in 1997 at the age of 33 when Avedon photographed her for the Pirelli Calendar.[42] In 1997, Bellucci became the brand ambassador and muse of Cartier jewellery.[43][44] Nina Hald of Berlingske said, "Cartier chose for the first time to associate an actress closely with the house".[43] Cartier would accompany her throughout her acting career, notably on the red carpets, wearing haute joaillerie (high jewellery) collections, and she would work as a model for opulent creations.[45] Italian fashion photographer Fabrizio Ferri[46] photographed her for the Max magazine's calendar.[42]
2000s
Bellucci posed for the GQ calendar in 2000 and was photographed by Gian Paolo Barbieri.[42] In 2004, while pregnant with her first child, she posed nude for the Italian cover of Vanity Fair to protest the Italian laws against in vitro fertilisation.[47] In the same year, it was revealed that Bellucci was the only actress contractually bound to Cartier.[48] In 2006, she was named brand ambassador for Dior and the face of a range of products until 2010.[49] Cartier designed a collection of luxury diamond jewellery inspired by Bellucci, and bearing her name.[43][44] It was first presented at a Cartier event in Dubai in 2007. A jewellery collection named after an actress was unprecedented in Cartier's history.[43]
2010s and 2020s
Bellucci's appearances in television advertisements include Martini Gold, a collaboration between Martini and Dolce & Gabbana in 2010.[50] She again posed pregnant and semi-nude for the cover of the April 2010 issue of Vanity Fair Italy.[51]Cashmere goods manufacturer Éric Bompard chose her as the brand ambassador for his Winter 2011/2012 advertising campaigns.[52] In 2012, Bellucci was the face of a Dolce & Gabbana lipstick collection named after her.[53] She featured in other seasonal fashion campaigns for Dolce & Gabbana as well.[54][55] She was signed to Storm Management in London and D'Management Group in Milan.[56][57] She was chosen as the face of German Nivea personal care products for its 2018 and 2019 campaigns.[58] Bellucci walked the runway for Dolce & Gabbana in June 2018 when she opened the second day of Milan Fashion Week.[59] According to Stefano Gabbana, Bellucci returned to the catwalk for the house for the first time since 1992.[60] She also walked the Spring 2019 Milan Fashion Week runway for Dolce & Gabbana. Joining her included Helena Christensen, Eva Herzigová and Isabella Rossellini, continuing the influx of 1990s supermodels returning to the fashion spotlight.[61]
Bellucci remains the "muse" and ambassador of the Cartier brand in the 2020s.[62][63]
In 1990, Bellucci's photographic portrait was noticed by Italian director Carlo Vanzina, who recommended her to his peer Dino Risi, looking for a "new face" for his television miniseriesVita coi figli.[68] She had never envisioned an activity other than a model and was surprised to be chosen for a role.[d][37] Bellucci made her acting debut in Risi's Vita coi figli,[32] a two-part television film broadcast in Italy in May 1991, where she played Elda.[69][70] That same year, she made her film debut in La Riffa, playing a role Italian director Francesco Laudadio offered her.[71] In 1992, Bellucci played one of the three brides of Dracula in the horror film Bram Stoker's Dracula.[72] Initially, Roman Coppola spotted her in the Italian magazine Zoom and then implored his father, Francis Ford, to offer her a role in his film.[39] Francis Ford Coppola then called her to arrange a meeting in Los Angeles while she was in New York for a photo shoot. Discussing with Coppola, she realised she would embark on an acting career.[73] Although she stayed in Los Angeles during filming at Coppola's request, she was apprehensive about the city and, by her own admission, believed that her English level needed improvement. She, therefore, decided that her subsequent work as an actress had to be undertaken in Italy.[21] Her role as a "sensual vampire" exposed her to the international audience for the first time.[74]
Considering her minor role in Bram Stoker's Dracula as an experience, Bellucci later returned to Italy, where she enrolled in acting classes to realise her ambitions.[21] "I craved it ... I needed to act", she said,[10] even though she recalled a challenging period while all her friends were leaving the faculty.[4] Bellucci had to overcome, not without difficulty, the prejudices related to modelling and her physical appearance and had to work to establish her credibility.[21] She starred in Italian films for the next four years and was ultimately dissatisfied due to the country's lack of opportunities as she aspired to an international acting career.[39] Bellucci nevertheless played in the Emmy-winning biblical television miniseries Joseph (1995).[75][76] She conceded that the Italian film industry needed to invest more money to promote a film internationally.[77] Bellucci eventually moved to France in anticipation of enhanced career prospects.[39] She settled in Paris in 1995.[78]
Her portrayal of Lisa in The Apartment (1996),[79] a "moody" French film noir, earned Bellucci a César Award nomination for Most Promising Actress,[5] which launched her towards stardom in France and strengthened her position as an actress.[39] It was her first French-language film.[80] Gavanndra Hodge of The Sunday Times stated that her "break-out role" was in the European arthouse film The Apartment.[57]BBC's Almar Haflidason used the terms "seductive" and "startling" when referring to the film, giving it a maximum rating of five stars.[81] Bellucci's second French release was Jan Kounen's Dobermann (1997), in which she portrayed a muteGypsy and had to learn sign language beforehand to embody her character. Recalling the filming process, she expressed an inclination for mise-en-scènes (placing on stage) "that pass more through bodies than through words".[73] At this point in her career, she made a significant impact on European audiences.[77]Pierce Brosnan performed a screen test with Bellucci for the James Bond film Tomorrow Never Dies (1997), then pressed that she be given the role of Paris [Carver], but the studio stated that only an American actress could be cast.[82] For her leading role as Giulia Giovannini in the Italian comedy-dramaL'ultimo capodanno (1998),[83] Bellucci received a Globo d'oro Award[e] for Best Actress.[85]The Apartment later won a British Academy Film Award for Best Film Not in the English Language,[86] prompting film director Stephen Hopkins to take a close interest in Bellucci.[73]
2000–2003: American films, Malèna, and Irréversible
In 2000, Bellucci caught the attention of American audiences with Hopkins' Under Suspicion, her first English-language lead role, in which she starred opposite Morgan Freeman and Gene Hackman.[77] Hopkins cast Bellucci after observing her perform in The Apartment and then retained her ideas for creating the character of Chantal [Hearst].[77] Journalist Garth Pearce commented in The Times on her improved spoken English.[87]Under Suspicion was selected as one of the 2000 Cannes Film Festival's closing films,[88] marking her red carpet debut at the annual event.[89] After the film's release, Freeman said, "It's all there in her eyes. She has this quality that reminds me of Jeanne Moreau. There is a sense of having been there, that she's had a life."[77]Variety listed Bellucci among "the ten young actresses to keep an eye on".[90]
Bellucci returned to Italian cinema portraying Malèna Scordia, an enigmatic, envied and coveted World War II widow whose life unfolded before the captivated eyes of a 13-year-old boy in the Tornatore-directed film Malèna (2000), which took place in Sicily.[77]Los Angeles Times film critic Kevin Thomas said the film emphasised the seductive appeal of the film's protagonist, Scordia, to whom Bellucci gave a "heroic" portrayal and delivered with a few lines of dialogue.[91] Writing for The Guardian, Mark Salisbury considered Bellucci's portrayal in the Oscar-nominated film as her "breakout performance".[21] She began to become known to global audiences thanks to Malèna.[87][92]Malèna was Bellucci's first international success and, in addition to her allure, caused her to be "besieged by offers" from Hollywood when Miramax secured the film for US distribution.[39] For the US release, ten minutes of explicit erotic scenes from the film were removed due to censorship in North America.[93]
Bellucci starred with Samuel Le Bihan and Vincent Cassel in Christophe Gans' Brotherhood of the Wolf, a 2001 French period drama film based on historical events involving the beast of Gévaudan that decimated the population of Lozère in 18th-century France.[77][94]The Washington Post film critic Stephen Hunter found the film's stylistic approach too dense, obscuring Bellucci's "fabulous natural asset", who played an "underused" role as a courtesan–papist spy.[94] The film elicited positive responses from other critics.[95]Brotherhood of the Wolf was a box-office success in France, where it attracted five million viewers to movie theatres and grossed US$70 million worldwide, including $11 million in the US, against a budget of about €32 million.[f][97] Afterwards, the film earned her a Best Supporting Actress nomination at the 2002 Saturn Awards in Los Angeles.[98] The filming of Asterix & Obelix: Mission Cleopatra (2002) was one of Bellucci's favourite cinematographic experiences, which took place in a laughing atmosphere where Jamel Debbouze's amusing pleasantries were heard.[99] She portrayed the "prickly" Cleopatra, the queen of Egypt, in the comedy film directed by Alain Chabat.[100]The Guardian film critic Peter Bradshaw wrote that she was "certainly talented enough ... to merit getting the role of Cleopatra in some serious treatment", but until then, she had to perform in a "funny mainstream commercial" French production.[101] The film was a great success, selling 14 million tickets in France at the time of its release and grossing more than $128 million worldwide.[100][102]
In 2002, Bellucci co-starred with Cassel in Gaspar Noé's "violent" arthouse thrillerIrréversible.[g][87][104] Shot on 16 mm with hand-held cameras, the revenge film depicted Bellucci playing Alex, where she was also seen graphically raped for nine minutes without a break in an underpass, a scene she had to shoot four times.[21] Bellucci's "indelible scene" was filmed in an underpass frequented by prostitutes on the outskirts of Paris. Bellucci and Cassel, a couple at the time, were some of "the country's biggest talents".[105] Audiences at the 2002 Cannes Film Festival were outraged during the midnight premiere of Irréversible,[h] with some characterising it as "unsustainable".[106][107] Lisa Nesselson of Variety thought Bellucci showed "responses to peril and joy particularly memorable".[108] Subsequently, the film has been studied in film schools.[89][109]Noé said he "has never seen an actress so charismatic ... with that much guts ... her performance is incredibly audacious".[110] K. Austin Collins of Rolling Stone called Irréversible "one of the most controversial movies ever".[107]
In 2003, Bellucci played Alessia in the Italian film Remember Me, My Love, directed by Gabriele Muccino, which earned her the Nastro d'Argento for Best Supporting Actress.[32][111] Bellucci co-starred with Bruce Willis in Antoine Fuqua's Tears of the Sun (2003), an action-adventure film set in a civil war in Nigeria. She played the role of doctor Lena Kendricks, working for a humanitarian organisation within a village threatened by rebels. Film critic David Denby of The New Yorker felt that some of Bellucci's scenes were exaggeratedly stylised but praised the film's visual prowess.[112]Los Angeles Times film critic Kenneth Turan lauded Bellucci's "fierce" portrayal of Kendricks, who also possessed a "stereotypically fiery temperament".[113]Tears of the Sun garnered mixed reviews from critics and was a box-office disappointment.[114]
Bellucci successively portrayed the character of Persephone in the two 2003 science fiction films, The Matrix Reloaded and The Matrix Revolutions.[115][116] She described her character as "dangerous, sensual with some sense of humor", recalling fond memories with Carrie-Anne Moss, Laurence Fishburne, and Keanu Reeves throughout the filming process in Australia.[117] Film critic Andrew Sarris of The New York Observer gave The Matrix Reloaded a positive review,[118] grossing $742.1 million worldwide against a budget of $150 million.[119][120] Alongside its release, she appeared on the Rolling Stone Spanish edition cover.[121] The character of the Merovingian, played by Lambert Wilson, once again accompanied Bellucci as her husband in The Matrix Revolutions. The film received mixed to average reviews from critics.[122][123] Nonetheless, it grossed $427 million against a production and marketing budget of $185 million.[124][125]
2004–2007: The Passion of the Christ and career progression
In Rome, before filming Tears of the Sun, Bellucci was notified that a Mel Gibson's film about Jesus Christ was in the works and asked to meet with him for the role of Mary Magdalene.[39] Her agent advised her against making this film due to its potential failure, as its distribution was undetermined at the time. However, Bellucci ignored his suggestion and turned down another film.[21] Gibson chose her because they "liked each other".[117] She aspired to create an interpretation of the character that would be "strong and deep", even though no one believed the film would succeed.[126] Eventually, Bellucci played an expressive Mary Magdalene in Gibson's dramaThe Passion of the Christ (2004), which depicted the final hours of the life of Jesus Christ.[127] The film feature dialogues in Aramaic and Latin languages that she had to learn expressly.[39][73]The New York Times film critic A. O. Scott said she was the only "exception" to the "absence of identifiable movie stars".[127] Expressing a similar opinion, Le Monde considered that in the film portraying a "fundamentalist" view of the Gospel, Bellucci stood out the most from the cast list.[128] Film critic Paul Clinton wrote that she "is excellent as Mary Magdalene".[129] Catholics, meanwhile, objected to Bellucci playing the Magdalene.[87] Film critic Roger Ebert described The Passion of the Christ as "the most violent film I have ever seen", adding he was "moved by the depth of feeling, by the skill of the actors" and gave a rating of four stars out of four. Overall, critics were divided in their response to the film.[130]The Passion of the Christ was a major commercial success, with a worldwide gross of over $611 million against a budget of $30 million.[131]
On 2 July 2005, Bellucci was awarded the European Golden Globe for cinema at Rome's 45th Globo d'oro ceremony.[132] She emphasised that she appreciated acting in both American and European films.[126] In Terry Gilliam's fantasyadventure film The Brothers Grimm (2005), Bellucci played the 500-year-old Mirror Queen, starring opposite Matt Damon and Heath Ledger.[133] Gilliam would later say, "[i]mmediately she comes on-screen, it seems to me the whole film lifts up into another realm, a realm of sex and sensuality and danger".[21]San Francisco Chronicle film critic Mick LaSalle opined that she convincingly portrayed her character whose centuries-old age appeared to him to be discordant with her "allure".[134] She also voiced Cappy for the French version of the 2005 animated film Robots.[135] Bellucci had a leading role in Bertrand Blier's French romantic comedyHow Much Do You Love Me?, a film which also starred Gérard Depardieu. She portrayed Daniela, the most beautiful prostitute in Pigalle, Paris, to whom a lottery-winning office worker offered to pay her to live with him. A journalist at Le Monde wrote that it was "a hymn to the beauty of Monica Bellucci" and that it was neither Blier's best film nor his most failed.[136] Nesselson commented that she was optimally used in the film as she stimulated the spectator's senses and intellect.[137]
In 2006, Bellucci starred alongside Daniel Auteuil in Paolo Virzì's period comedy-drama Napoleon and Me. She portrayed baroness Emilia, who had a turbulent relationship with the character named Martino, played by Elio Germano, in the film depicting Napoleon Bonaparte during his exile to Elba from 1814 to 1815. Author Mark Feeney remarked that she did not take "things too seriously" in the film.[138] Bellucci said she declined to play a role in the blockbuster300 and oriented herself towards the film d'auteur (auteur film) The Stone Council.[139] She was selected, after the initial announcement of Sophie Marceau, for the lead role in the thriller The Stone Council, adapted from the novel of the same name by Jean-Christophe Grangé. The film differed by character names as the book's heroine was Diane Thiberge, whereas Bellucci was Laura Siprien, a tormented adoptive mother confronted by killers who wanted her child. Sébastien Le Fol of Le Figaro wrote that she "delivers one of her best performances on the big screen" with a muted sex appeal.[140] Her hair was cut short for the film, a preference of French cinema hairstylist John Nollet, who had worked for her on the sets of Brotherhood of the Wolf and Asterix & Obelix: Mission Cleopatra.[141]
Bellucci starred opposite Paul Giamatti and Clive Owen in Michael Davis' action thriller Shoot 'Em Up, released in the US in September 2007. She portrayed Donna Quintano, who teamed up with Owen's character, Mr Smith, to protect a baby amid a bloody settling of scores.[142] Playing a prostitute again, albeit with a different approach than in How Much Do You Love Me?, Bellucci would say she felt empathy for female sex workers, who she believes retain "faith in humanity". She was fond of this sort of paradox and sought to highlight this virtue in her portrayals of characters of all types but noted that she could explore the opposite spectrum.[143] Richard James Havis of the South China Morning Post writes, "It's the latest in a slew of extreme roles".[92] She dubbed her own voice for the French and Italian releases of Shoot 'Em Up, saying it was a frequent practice for her to accomplish each film three times.[144]
Bellucci continued to work in French film productions and starred alongside Auteuil in Alain Corneau's The Second Wind, a remake of the critically acclaimed Jean-Pierre Melville's 1966 gangster film of the same title.[145][146] She portrayed Manouche, a tenacious character enamoured of a gangster who escaped prison. Bellucci had the idea of dyeing her hair blond to adhere to the style of film noir main characters played by French actresses of the 1950s and 1960s.[147]Thierry Jousse, a critic for Libération, wrote that Bellucci was alone in a "fatally virile" context, but she managed to get through it "to the point of becoming the spectator's compass and the flesh of a film that sometimes lacks it".[148] In November 2007, Le Monde reported on the commercial failures of The Second Wind and The Stone Council.[149]
2008–2017: Continued international work
Bellucci felt a "visceral" need to play regularly in films from her native country.[143] Thus, in 2008, she starred in Marco Tullio Giordana's Wild Blood and co-star Luca Zingaretti. The historical panorama examined the fate of Luisa Ferida and Osvaldo Valenti, a couple of leading actors during the Italian fascism period, portrayed respectively by Bellucci and Zingaretti. Author Barry Forshaw called Bellucci "charismatic",[150] and author Gino Moliterno praised her performance as "extremely powerful".[151] Next, Bellucci played Alba in the Italian film The Man Who Loves, where she was enamoured of Pierfrancesco Favino's character, Roberto, through a cinematic flashback.[152]
On 5 March 2009, she received the World Actress Award at the Women's World Award in Vienna.[153] That same year, Bellucci co-starred with Marceau in the thriller Don't Look Back, a sequel to In My Skin, both directed by Marina de Van. The film depicted Marceau's character seeing changes around her and noticing her body transform into Bellucci's.[154] J.B. Morain of Les Inrockuptibles said that Bellucci's physical attitude and "attention to others have never been so well filmed". Variety's Derek Elley described that she "looks elegant and mystified", although both film critics stressed the clumsily written dialogue.[155][156] She reunited with Reeves in Rebecca Miller's romantic comedy-drama The Private Lives of Pippa Lee (2009), featuring Winona Ryder and Robin Wright.[157] Bellucci portrayed Gigi Lee, the former wife of a successful publisher, Herb, played by Alan Arkin.[158] She next appeared in a cameo role in Tornatore's autobiographical film Baarìa, a family saga traversing several generations and shot in Bagheria, Sicily.[159]
In 2010, Bellucci portrayed Laura Leviani in Larysa Kondracki's biopic drama thriller The Whistleblower, primarily filmed in Romania and depicting a vast human trafficking network discovered in post-war Bosnia and Herzegovina in 1999.[160]Hélène Delye of Le Monde described Bellucci's character as a "grizzled, stubborn, insensitive civil servant".[161]The Whistleblower received a mixed critical reception.[162][163] Bellucci shot three films in seven months including, Giovanni Veronesi's The Ages of Love, Philippe Garrel's A Burning Hot Summer, and Bahman Ghobadi's Rhino Season.[164] In the third segment of the comedy The Ages of Love, an anthology film released in 2011, Bellucci starred opposite Robert De Niro, a divorced American art history professor living in Rome who fell in love with her character, Viola.[165] De Niro was delighted to collaborate with Bellucci, saying she had "worked her magic" on him and admitting that he had accepted the role because he wanted to play alongside her. It was filmed two months after the birth of Bellucci's second child. A scene based on improvisation showed De Niro doing a striptease in front of Bellucci, which echoed in reverse a sequence of the 1963 film Yesterday, Today and Tomorrow, where Sophia Loren performed it for Marcello Mastroianni.[164] For her role in Rhino Season (2012), she learned to speak Farsi (Persian),[73][109] the Iranian language.[166] Journalist Helen Barlow of SBS Australia said Bellucci "brought her natural poise and grace" to the character and "surprises with a stoic minimalist performance".[167]
In 2014, Alice Rohrwacher's The Wonders featured Bellucci as Milly Catena, host of the Countryside Wonders televised contest.[168] In the film, combining autobiographical aspects and fiction, her character is depicted in a pagan priestess style, wearing elaborate clothes with ancient figures surrounding her.[169] Critically acclaimed, The Wonders won the Grand Prix Award at the 2014 Cannes Film Festival.[168] In 2015, Bellucci had the leading role of Sophie Bernard in the Canadian drama film Ville-Marie directed by Guy Édoin. The film traces the journey of Bernard, a European actress visiting Montreal for a film shoot and trying to reconcile with her son.[170] Bellucci stated Édoin had offered her "one of the most beautiful roles" of her career and described a stimulating fear of embodying Bernard's character that had affected her emotionally.[171] The film garnered generally positive reviews, and Bellucci's performance was unanimously praised.[170][172] For her portrayal of Bernard, she received the Best Actress Award from the Dublin Film Critics' Circle at the Dublin International Film Festival.[173]
At 50, she became the oldest Bond girl ever in the James Bond film franchise, playing Lucia Sciarra in Sam Mendes' Spectre (2015). She was initially sceptical about Mendes' project, but he argued that a mature woman in a James Bond film would be innovative.[174] She felt gratified to have been the first to portray a role she defined as a "James Bond lady".[73]Spectre was released to mixed reviews from critics. The British press responded more positively.[175] The film grossed $880 million worldwide against a $250–300 million production budget.[176][177] Guy Lodge of Variety called Bellucci "One of the most restlessly globe-trotting stars in world cinema", who does not want national borders or age brackets to dictate her filmography.[178] In 2016, Bellucci had a guest role in the third season of the American comedy-drama streaming television series Mozart in the Jungle, an adaptation of the memoirBlair Tindall's Mozart in the Jungle: Sex, Drugs, and Classical Music, portraying Alessandra, an opera singer and latest collaborator of New York symphony orchestra conductor, Rodrigo, played by Gael García Bernal.[179]Variety's Nick Vivarelli labelled her the "Italian actress with international star power".[180]
Bellucci portrayed Nevesta in the film On the Milky Road (2016),[181] a romance set during the 1990s Bosnian War whose lead role was played by the film's director, Emir Kusturica.[182] Reflecting on the film and her other cinematic experiences, Bellucci says, "I decided to be an actress, not a politician, I recount political choices through my artistic choices."[181] Kusturica asked her to learn all her dialogue in the Serbian language to interpret her character.[183] She had to adapt to challenging production conditions in a "land of beauty and violence", with Kusturica suffering "great [mental] pain" during filming, which spanned four summers.[73]The Hollywood Reporter's Neil Young felt the Golden Lion-nominated film's approach lacked nuance, while Bellucci performed "admirably well" and kept her "dignity intact" in a physically demanding role.[184] Her performance in the film earned her the Nastro d'Argento europeo (European Silver Ribbon Award), held on 1 July 2017 at the ancient theatre of Taormina in Sicily.[185] In 2017, Bellucci appeared in the third season of Mark Frost and David Lynch's television series Twin Peaks.[186] The same year, Bellucci received the honorary Donostia Award at the San Sebastián International Film Festival.[187]
2018–present: Recent career
In 2018, Bellucci had one of the leading roles in the Australian comedy science-fiction horror film Nekrotronic, playing a necromancer and demonic soul-eater. In his appraisal of the film, Stephen Dalton of The Hollywood Reporter appreciated that she portrayed her "diva" character through an "operatic camp-vamp" performance but was less enthusiastic about the plot, believing her acting style would be best suited to films by Tim Burton and Guillermo del Toro.[188] Also in 2018, she appeared in the third season of the France 2 comedy television series Dix pour cent, playing herself with self-mockery,[189] a well-received show initially renamed Call My Agent! after its Netflix purchase.[190] In Claude Lelouch's The Best Years of a Life (2019), a film set in Normandy, Bellucci had a cameo role as Elena, the daughter of Jean-Louis Duroc, portrayed by Jean-Louis Trintignant.[191] The film garnered positive critical responses.[192]
Following his documentary filmMaria by Callas (2017), writer and director Tom Volf proposed to Bellucci his project based on his book, Maria Callas: Lettres & Mémoires, containing the writings of opera singer Maria Callas.[193] As a one-woman show directed by Volf, Maria Callas: Letters and Memoirs is a narrative form of letters recited by Bellucci alone on stage and wearing two dresses that had belonged to Callas, thus making her theatrical debut at the Marigny Theatre in Paris held from 27 November to 6 December 2019.[194] She would perform it intermittently over the years.[193] In 2020, Bellucci starred in the role of Soraya in the Oscar-nominated The Man Who Sold His Skin, directed by Kaouther Ben Hania. Time film critic Stephanie Zacharek ironically opined that Soraya was a "frosty, willowy blond" acted by "a deviously silky-smooth Monica Bellucci".[195]Maria Callas: Letters and Memoirs visited European theatres, including Venice's Teatro Goldoni and Athens's Odeon of Herodes Atticus, with an orchestra that attracted 4,000 people each night.[62]
In 2021, Bellucci received a David Special Award for her career achievements at the 66th David di Donatello ceremony.[196] She co-starred as part of an ensemble cast featuring Liam Neeson and Guy Pearce in Martin Campbell's action thriller Memory (2022), in which she played Davana Sealman, an unscrupulous real estate magnate.[197] She was initially interested in the duality of the antagonist's persona she would play and wanted to extricate herself from typecasting based on her physical appearance, which had been assigned to her recurrently in her life.[198]Entertainment Weekly critic Leah Greenblatt deemed Memory "wrapped in leaden dialogue and B-movie cliché" with Bellucci appearing "blasé".[199] In 2022, she brought Maria Callas: Letters and Memoirs to Her Majesty's Theatre in London,[200]Chatelet Theatre in Paris, and Istanbul and Los Angeles.[62]
In January 2023, at 58, Bellucci performed the play at the Beacon Theatre in New York City.[193] Recalling Irréversible, Bellucci told The New York Times in 2023 that her "days of acting in transgressive movies are behind her" as she is a mother.[105] In 2023, Bellucci entered talks to star in Beetlejuice Beetlejuice. She will play Beetlejuice's wife.[201] She won the Nastro d'Argento Award for Protagonist of the Year in Documentaries 2024 for her interpretation of Callas in Letters and Memoirs.[202]
In 2008, Bellucci supported a fundraising campaign in favour of a centre for children with cancer located in Prima Porta. It was initiated by the Associazione Genitori Oncologia Pediatrica (Association of Parents in Pediatric Oncology), also known as AGOP, created by parents of children with cancer and leukemia at the Agostino Gemelli Polyclinic in Rome.[212] In 2010, Bellucci became patron of Paroles de Femmes (Words of Women), an apolitical and secular French association promoting equality between men and women in society. In March 2010, she organised the Nuit des Femmes (Women's Night), bringing together female politicians, researchers, doctors, lawyers, writers, painters, and business leaders to assess the evolution of women's rights in France. The funds raised went to construct centres for accommodation, reintegration and support for single mothers in precarious situations.[213] In 2010, Rizzoli and La Martinière Groupe published a book prefaced by Tornatore retracing Bellucci's modelling and acting careers through photos taken by photographers such as Peter Lindbergh and Helmut Newton. All proceeds from the book's sales were donated to AGOP and Words of Women.[214][215] She donated €10,000 to the City of Cannes for a solidarity campaign to support recovery efforts caused by the deadly floods of October 2015 in the Alpes-Maritimes.[216] Bellucci is also a patron of the SOS Autism France association.[217][218]
In 2001, Bellucci was featured nude with caviar on her breasts on the cover of Esquire's Desire issue.[j][224] In their reviews of Malèna (2000), Thomas wrote in the Los Angeles Times that she "has the impact of the great Italian stars",[91] and Paul Tatara of CNN International called her a "world-class bombshell".[225] In 2002, AskMen named her number one on the "Top 99 Most Desirable Women".[226][227] She was featured in Empire's "Sexiest Women" list.[227] In 2003, Chris Campion of The Daily Telegraph stated, "'La Bellucci' is Italy's national sweetheart and an icon of European cinema".[39] On 23 November 2004, Bellucci pressed the button triggering the Christmas illuminations of the Champs-Élysées avenue consisting of 45 km (28 mi) of electricgarlands descending from the Place de l'Étoile towards Place de la Concorde, in the presence of the First Deputy MayorAnne Hidalgo. Bellucci was the first-ever foreign public figure invited by the City of Paris and the Champs-Élysées Committee[k] to inaugurate this annual celebration.[229][230] Bellucci was voted the "Most Beautiful Woman in the World"[231] in 2004 and 2007 based on an Ipsos survey of 1002 people in France commissioned by TF1.[232][233]
Paris' Grévin Museum unveiled a wax statue of her in April 2005.[234] In The Times, Pearce called Bellucci "arguably the world's most beautiful actress", suggesting that she has, by contrast, the propensity to specialise in playing "[u]gly scenes", exemplified by the rape scene of Irréversible (2002).[87] Salisbury wrote in The Guardian in 2005 that she represents an "international object of desire" and "[i]n person, as on screen, Bellucci radiates a rare, otherworldly beauty."[21] Based on the criteria of her projected image and her work for Cartier, Kommersant described her as the "type of diva whose fame depends little on her roles".[235] In the words of Blier, she is "completely relaxed with her image and with her own sense of modesty as well".[21] Blier compared her to "Ava Gardner, the stars of yesteryear".[236] On 9 May 2008, L'Obs reported on a survey of 1,003 people conducted by the Superior Audiovisual Council as part of Europe Day, where Bellucci was the second of the European personalities (excluding France) favourite of the French.[237]
In 2011, Bellucci was ranked fourth in Los Angeles Times Magazine's list of the "50 most beautiful women in film".[238] She was voted number one on NRJ 12's "100 sexiest stars of 2011", a nationwide survey conducted in France that featured American and French actresses, models, singers, women athletes and television presenters.[239] In 2012, Bellucci said she has never undergone cosmetic procedures: "I don't like the idea of having my face retouched and, frankly, I think it's quite dangerous for an actress. ... Compared to a plastic face, I prefer wrinkles."[240] On 10 April 2016, the Karin Models agency, representing Bellucci, opened an official Instagram account for her.[241] A photograph taken by Fred Meylan in 2016 showing Bellucci naked, swimming on her back in a pool, was censored by Instagram with body parts hidden in yellow.[242]
Christophe Narbonne of Première wrote: "Behind the advertising muse, the image of the (re)incarnated Italian diva and the globalised sexual icon, we sometimes forget Monica Bellucci the out-of-norm actress, collector of a pile of international cult auteurs".[73]De Morgen wrote that "most roles fit Bellucci like a glove",[243] while Christophe Carrière of L'Express said that others of "variable geometry" compose her filmography.[244] In 2018, she was named among Forbes Italy's "Successful women: the 100 winning Italian women", listed alphabetically.[245] Bellucci's physical characteristics have led her to be included on all-time beauties and sex symbols lists compiled by magazines such as Esquire Japan and Men's Health in the US and Australia.[246]
The press refers to her as a style "icon".[223][247] Associated with the wearing of high-value jewellery and an "unwavering commitment" to Cartier, but also to Boucheron and Chopard, Naomi Pike of British Vogue referred to her as "A Modern Day Liz Taylor". Dressed in diamonds, "few contemporary Hollywood stars can rival Italian actor Monica Bellucci", said Pike.[248] Federico Roberto Antonelli, director of the Italian Cultural Institute in China, said that "everyone dreams of Malèna's Monica Bellucci" in the country.[249] In 2021, Vogue France ranked her fourth of the "most beautiful Italian actresses of all time".[250] She is considered an Italian sex symbol by the media.[21][251]Rolling Stone Italy included Bellucci in its "10 greatest sex symbols of the 1990s" list, in no particular order.[42] She takes a "peaceful" attitude towards ageing and mainly believes in pasta, wine, and a little Pilates for her "beauty regime", not being addicted to exercise and dieting.[57] In 2023, Bellucci said it "didn't bother" her having been "objectified" during her film career and was aware that she had made the most of her body for specific roles.[252]Elisabeth Vincentelli wrote for The New York Times in 2023 that she has achieved a "reputation as a symbol of European glamour and sophistication" that is "firmly established".[193]
Personal life
Bellucci's first marriage was with Italian photographer Claudio Carlos Basso.[5][253] In a 2006 interview, Bellucci said she met Basso in 1987 when he recruited her for a photo shoot. She was 23, and he was five years older.[254] They married on 3 January 1990 in Monte-Carlo.[12][254][255] They divorced a year later.[4][254][255]
Bellucci was in a relationship with Italian actor Nicola Farron [it] for several years.[256][257] Farron said they met in 1990 on the set of Vita coi figli.[256][258] He described "an overwhelming passion".[258] Their relationship became unstable because other men increasingly lusted after Bellucci.[256][258] The couple separated in 1995.[256][259][260]
Bellucci and French actor Vincent Cassel met in 1995 on the set of their film The Apartment.[261][262] They married at the beginning of August 1999 in Monaco.[263][264] Bellucci and Cassel have two daughters, Deva (born 12 September 2004) and Léonie (born 21 May 2010). Their daughters were born in Rome.[265][266] Film critic Jason Solomons wrote that Bellucci and Cassel were "the golden couple of European cinema."[l][261] The couple acted in nine films together between 1996 and 2006.[261][267] In March 2013, Bellucci reflected on the evolution of their marriage when the two often lived separately in Italy, France, Brazil and England.[263] The couple's separation by "mutual agreement" was announced on 26 August 2013.[m][269][270] They later divorced.[n][272]
In October 2013, Bellucci said that she had almost always been in a relationship since her first boyfriend at the age of fourteen.[273]
Bellucci was in a relationship with French sculptor and former model Nicolas Lefebvre.[274] They had been dating since 2017.[275] Lefebvre, then aged 36, and Bellucci made it "official" in early March 2019 during a Chanel show at the Grand Palais in Paris.[276] She told Italian magazine F about the end of their relationship, which was reported by other media in early July 2019.[277]
In February 2023, Paris Match reported that Bellucci and American filmmaker Tim Burton were a couple, a relationship originating in October 2022.[o][279] In June 2023, she confirmed her relationship with Burton.[280] They made their first public appearance at the Rome Film Festival in October 2023.[281]
Besides the Italian language, Bellucci is fluent in French and English[227] and proficient in Portuguese and Spanish.[282] After her divorce from Cassel, Bellucci lived with her daughters in England, France and Italy. By 2015, she decided to reside in France. Bellucci said, however, that "I am entirely Italian. Everything about me is Italian" and acknowledged that "Paris is part of my history".[283] Bellucci said she votes in Italy, not France.[109] She does not have French nationality.[219] She owns houses in Rome and Lisbon,[5] and in 2023, she purchased a villa on the Greek island of Paros.[284]
Bellucci has emphasised that she has moved away from her religious roots: "I come from a Catholic religion, but I'm not Catholic".[285] She has called herself an agnostic.[p][9]
Bellucci faced a French tax authorities investigation in 2018 for non-declaration of a safe and bank accounts in Switzerland linked to an offshore company in the British Virgin Islands.[286] They attempted to recover French tax years 2011 to 2013 because they suspected tax evasion, although her lawyer stated she lived in the UK and not Paris.[286] In September 2021, Bellucci said being "up to date with my tax obligations both in France and abroad". The results of the investigation into her Swiss bank accounts remain undisclosed.[287] Consequently, she was named in the Pandora Papers, published in October 2021, a massive data leak from offshore entities of high-profile figures.[q][288]
In 2018, Forbes valued Bellucci's wealth at $45 million, ranking her as the third richest of Italian actors and actresses.[289][290]
Acting credits and accolades
Bellucci has developed her acting career by alternating low-budget arthouse and auteur films with big-budget blockbusters within the European and American industries.[92][244][291][292]
^In August 2015, Bellucci was featured on the cover of GQ Italy for the seventh time.[64]
^Bellucci first appeared on the cover of Paris Match in June 2001. She made her eighth cover in December 2012.[66]
^In a March 1991 interview for L'Officiel Paris, she stated: "It happened in an accidental way. I was not expecting that at all. I was noticed by the producers of the film as a model. They came across photos of me that appeared in a magazine." To the question of whether she "never dreamed of one day being an actress?", she responded: "No. Being a model, working a lot, being in demand... were enough for me. As a child, I already dreamed of this: posing for fashion photos."[37]
^The average exchange rate of the US dollar to the euro was 0.99 in late January 2000 (US$0.99 bought €1).[96]
^A confident Gaspar Noé had initially asked Vincent Cassel to star alongside Bellucci in a pornographic film.[19] After listening to Noé's offer, "we told him there was no way we could do that", said Cassel.[103] While discussing it with Noé, they diverted his intention in another direction, and Irréversible emerged. "[Noé] is also very free, he doubts nothing", said Bellucci.[19]
^At the screening of Irréversible at the Cannes Film Festival on 24 May 2002, "visceral reactions from the audience" were reported: faintings, nervous breakdowns, 200 hasty departures, and people passing out in the lobby. Opinions differed; comments such as "an accomplished work" would burst forth from the crowd.[106]
^Many photographs of Bellucci taken by fashion photographer Fabrizio Ferri, notably where she was drizzled with honey, appeared regularly in the two direct competitor magazines, Esquire and GQ's Italian edition.[224]
^The association, founded in 1916, represents retailers on the Champs-Élysées avenue and unites 180 commercial companies.[228]
^Bellucci and Cassel's separation entered the top 10 trending topics on Twitter following the announcement.[268]
^In a December 2014 interview, Bellucci said of Cassel: "Love, especially when there are children, is always there." The two have remained close ever since.[271]
^Bellucci elaborated further: "I am an agnostic, even though I respect and am interested in all religions ... If there's something I believe in, it's a mysterious energy; the one that fills the oceans during tides, the one that unites nature and beings."[227]
^According to Alcogal, the British Virgin Islands offshore company that served to manage her image rights operated from 2011 to 2015 and was liquidated in 2016.[287]
References
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^ abcLévy-Frébault, Tiphaine (11 October 2013) [First published 11 April 2013]. "Monica Bellucci est célibataire" [Monica Bellucci is single]. L'Express (in French). Archived from the original on 19 February 2023. Retrieved 26 February 2023.
^ abCarnovalini, Riccardo (19 January 2013). "In marcia alla scoperta" [On the march to discover]. La Stampa (in Italian). Archived from the original on 17 November 2023. Retrieved 17 November 2023.
^ abcHattersley, Giles (22 February 2015). "The spy who loved me | Not Shaken or Stirred". Interview. Style (The Sunday Times supplement). London, UK: Times Newspapers Ltd. p. 24. OCLC1368155993. Her father, Pasquale, said: One day, I asked her why she didn't want to be in the square with the others, and she said, 'When I go in the piazza, everyone looks at me. The men look at me. The women look at me. All the kids from school. I feel ashamed.' ... She had a starter marriage to a photographer in the early 1990s
^ abcdHélie, Mathilde (19 January 2018). "Monica Bellucci: ses photos quand elle était jeune" [Monica Bellucci: her photos when she was young]. Paris Match (in French). Archived from the original on 19 February 2023. Retrieved 24 November 2023. [Spotted by the Elite agency, she signed a contract in 1989.]
^ abcDouin, Jean-Luc (26 March 2004). "Monica Bellucci, 'Italienne à 100%?'" [Monica Bellucci, '100% Italian?']. Interview. Le Monde (in French). Archived from the original on 25 November 2023. Retrieved 26 November 2023. [She was born in Citta di Castello ... 'I am 100% Italian, I am proud of it; brunette, latin, I claim it']
^ abAiroldi, Simona (4 June 2017). "Piero Piazzi, l'uomo che sussurra alle top" [Piero Piazzi, the man who whispers to the tops]. Vanity Fair (in Italian). Archived from the original on 26 August 2018. Retrieved 18 November 2023.
Le Scouarnec, Jean-Marc (7 October 2017). "Oliviero Toscani: 'Je suis de retour avec Benetton et on va s'amuser'" [Oliviero Toscani: 'I'm back with Benetton and we're going to have fun']. Interview. La Dépêche du Midi (in French). Archived from the original on 25 November 2023. Retrieved 25 November 2023. [I discovered Monica in Milan. ... I saw this very awake girl, with a tremendous allure. 'Elle' immediately fell for her.]
^"Junio 1988" [June 1988]. Vogue (in Spanish). 3 January 209. Archived from the original on 16 May 2022. Retrieved 18 February 2023.
^de Chirée, Sylvie (2015) [First published 2 April 1990]. "Ma première interview dans Elle: Monica Bellucci en 1989" [My first interview in Elle: Monica Bellucci in 1989]. Elle (in French). No. 2308. pp. 148–153. Archived from the original on 6 December 2015. Retrieved 31 January 2024.
^"Le fondateur de l'agence de mannequins Elite est mort" [The founder of Elite modelling agency dies]. Le Monde (in French). 22 July 2013. Archived from the original on 1 January 2017. Retrieved 5 November 2023. [His agency, created in 1972 in Paris, launched the careers of Cindy Crawford, Claudia Schiffer, Monica Bellucci, as well as Naomi Campbell, Gisele Bündchen and Heidi Klum.]
^ abcBréhal, Nicolas (March 1991). "Cinéma − Monica Bellucci comédienne pour Dino Risi" [Cinema − Monica Bellucci actress for Dino Risi]. Interview. L'Officiel Paris (in French). No. 762, Haute Couture Special, cover: M. Bellucci. pp. 8, 198–207. ISSN0030-0403. Standfirst: Elle fait son entrée au cinéma dans le nouveau film de Dino Risi qui sort en mai: Vita coi figli. Efn: C'est arrivé d'une manière accidentelle. Je ne m'y attendais pas du tout. J'ai été remarquée par les producteurs du film comme mannequin. Ils sont tombés sur des photos de moi, parues dans une revue. ... De votre côté, vous n'aviez jamais rêvé d'être un jour comédienne? Non. Etre mannequin, travailler beaucoup, être demandée... me suffisaient. Enfant, je rêvais déjà de cela: poser pour des photos de mode. [Standfirst: She makes her cinema debut in Dino Risi's new film which is released in May: Vita coi figli.]
^ abcdefghijCampion, Chris (18 January 2003). "Fantasy made flesh". The Daily Telegraph. Archived from the original on 11 January 2022. Retrieved 16 June 2023.
^De Vecchi, Paolo (11 June 2012). "Binda, lo spot d'autore sbarca in Rete" [Binda, the signature advert lands on the Internet]. la Repubblica (in Italian). Archived from the original on 24 November 2023. Retrieved 24 November 2023.
^ abcdHald, Nina (29 April 2007). "Åh Monica, Monica, Monica..." [Oh Monica, Monica, Monica...]. Berlingske (in Danish). Archived from the original on 20 August 2023. Retrieved 2 September 2023. Overraskelsesmomentet var derfor stort, da Cartier i 1997 for første gang valgte at knytte en skuespillerinde tæt til huset. [The moment of surprise was therefore great when, in 1997, Cartier chose for the first time to associate an actress closely with the house.]
^ abMabrut, Claire (11 June 2007). "Monica Bellucci et Cartier: songe endiamanté" [Monica Bellucci and Cartier: a diamond dream]. Madame Figaro (in French). Archived from the original on 13 June 2021. Retrieved 12 February 2023. La piquante Italienne est l'égérie de Cartier depuis tout juste dix ans. [The spicy Italian has been the muse of Cartier for just ten years.]
"Mónica Bellucci tiñe de rojo la capital de España" [Monica Bellucci dyes the Spanish capital red]. ABC (in Spanish). 16 November 2006. Archived from the original on 12 December 2023. Retrieved 12 December 2023. ... la nueva musa de Dior [... Dior's new muse]
"Natalie Portman new face of Christian Dior". The Indian Express. 8 June 2010. Archived from the original on 12 December 2023. Retrieved 12 December 2023. other celebrities endorsing the fashion house in advertisements include Sharon Stone, Charlize Theron, Monica Bellucci, Jude Law and Alain Delon
Boquet-Vautor, Lorelei (6 May 2011). "Mélanie Laurent égérie pour Dior Parfums" [Mélanie Laurent muse for Dior Perfumes]. Vogue France (in French). Archived from the original on 12 December 2023. Retrieved 12 December 2023. Elle succédera à Monica Bellucci et Milla Jovovich [She will succeed Monica Bellucci and Milla Jovovich]
^"Monica Bellucci sfila per Dolce & Gabbana" [Monica Bellucci parades for Dolce & Gabbana]. Agenzia Nazionale Stampa Associata (in Italian). 17 June 2018. Archived from the original on 3 December 2023. Retrieved 31 January 2024.
For Elle, see "Sesenta años de complicidad con las lectoras" [Sixty years of complicity with readers]. El Mundo (in Spanish). 25 November 2005. Archived from the original on 24 November 2023. Retrieved 24 November 2023.
For GQ, see "Monica Belluci en une de GQ Italie" [Monica Belluci on the cover of GQ Italy]. Vanity Fair (in French). 24 July 2015. Archived from the original on 25 February 2024. Retrieved 25 February 2024.
For Marie Claire, see Wolff, Bérengère (2011). "Nouveau Marie Claire en kiosque" [New Marie Claire on newsstands]. Marie Claire (in French). Archived from the original on 16 March 2021. Retrieved 19 February 2023.
^"Monica Bellucci, bellissima pour Match" [Monica Bellucci, bellissima for Match]. Paris Match (in French). 30 September 2014. Archived from the original on 18 February 2023. Retrieved 19 February 2023.
For Paris Match, see "Monica Bellucci, c'è un uomo nella mia vita" [Monica Bellucci, there is a man in my life]. Agenzia Nazionale Stampa Associata (in Italian). 4 May 2017. Archived from the original on 24 November 2023. Retrieved 24 November 2023.
^O'Shea, Stephen (7 October 1996). "The Apartment". Variety. Archived from the original on 12 April 2023. Retrieved 7 October 2023.
^Bradfer, Fabienne (9 July 2003). "Fantasme sur voix avec Monica Bellucci. La belle Italienne double en français Marina, l'héroïne moderne de 'Sinbad', de DreamWorks" [Vocal fantasy with Monica Bellucci. The beautiful Italian is dubbing in French Marina, the modern heroine of 'Sinbad', by DreamWorks]. Interview. Le Soir (in French). Archived from the original on 16 April 2023. Retrieved 31 January 2024. Vita coi fligi, votre premier film ... votre premier film français, L'appartement [Vita coi fligi, your first film ... your first French film, The Apartment]
^Frini, Roberto (2006). Monica Bellucci (in Italian). Rome: Gremese. p. 54. ISBN978-8-8844-0441-1. Archived from the original on 7 February 2024. ... prestigiosa rivista americana 'Variety', che la colloca tra le dieci giovani attrici da tenere d'occhio.
^Farhi, Paul (5 July 2003). "Back in a Big Way". The Washington Post. Archived from the original on 23 March 2024. Retrieved 23 March 2024.
^"Un beso de dos días" [A two-day kiss]. El País (in Spanish). 30 May 2003. Archived from the original on 11 September 2023. Retrieved 11 September 2023.
^Le Fol, Sébastien (10 November 2006). "Le Thriller a la Française" [The French Thriller]. Le Figaro (in French). Archived from the original on 24 March 2023. Retrieved 7 November 2023.
^ abLussier, Marc-André (1 September 2007). "Monica Bellucci à l'américaine" [American-style Monica Bellucci]. Interview. La Presse (in Canadian French). Archived from the original on 25 March 2023. Retrieved 25 March 2023.
^Vulser, Nicole (14 November 2007). "'Sa Majesté Minor', flop majeur au cinéma" ['His Majesty Minor', major flop at the cinema]. Le Monde (in French). Archived from the original on 18 February 2024. Retrieved 18 February 2024.
^Senjanovic, Natasha (23 October 2008). "The Man Who Loves". The Hollywood Reporter. Archived from the original on 25 March 2023. Retrieved 25 March 2023.
^Senjanovic, Natasha (2 September 2009). "Baarìa − Film Review". The Hollywood Reporter. Archived from the original on 26 March 2023. Retrieved 21 October 2023.
^Delye, Hélène (12 November 2011). "Seule contre tous" [Alone against everyone]. Le Monde (in French). Archived from the original on 8 May 2023. Retrieved 8 May 2023.
^Senjanovic, Natasha (24 February 2011). "Manual of Love 3: Film Review". The Hollywood Reporter. Archived from the original on 31 March 2023. Retrieved 21 October 2023.
van Hoeij, Boyd (14 September 2015). "'Ville-Marie': TIFF Review". The Hollywood Reporter. Archived from the original on 1 April 2023. Retrieved 1 April 2023.
^ abBouttier, Louise-Camille (18 May 2017). "Emir Kusturica s'allie à la vestale Bellucci" [Emir Kusturica joins forces with the Vestal Bellucci]. Rolling Stone (in French). Archived from the original on 13 June 2023. Retrieved 16 June 2023.
^Dalton, Stephen (28 September 2018). "'Nekrotronic': Film Review". The Hollywood Reporter. Archived from the original on 24 March 2022. Retrieved 18 February 2024.
^Busnel, François (9 November 2010). "Monica Bellucci". France Inter (Podcast). The great Busnel interview (transcriptions) (in French). Archived from the original on 19 May 2023. Retrieved 27 August 2023.
^ abMontefiori, Stefano (29 September 2022). "Monica Bellucci: 'Io diva? Faccio la spesa e porto i figli a scuola. È vero, gli uomini francesi sono più freddini degli italiani'" [Monica Bellucci: 'Me diva? I do grocery shopping and take my children to school. It's true, the French are colder than Italians']. Corriere della Sera (in Italian). Archived from the original on 15 August 2023. Retrieved 16 February 2024. Qui è considerata un'ambasciatrice del nostro Paese ... L'amore per Parigi non significa per forza prendere la nazionalità francese—'No, ho ancora il passaporto italiano' [Here she is considered an ambassador of our country ... Love for Paris does not necessarily mean taking French nationality—'No, I still have an Italian passport']
^Jacob, Etienne; Le Cain, Blandine; Boudisseau, Julien (25 March 2019). "Le dîner d'État à l'Elysée, un moment convoité et symbolique" [The State dinner at the Elysée, a coveted and symbolic moment]. Le Figaro (in French). Archived from the original on 11 September 2022. Retrieved 18 February 2023.
^"La plus belle, c'est Monica" [The most beautiful, is Monica]. Le Parisien (in French). 10 November 2004. Archived from the original on 24 March 2024. Retrieved 24 March 2024.
^Deslandes, Mathieu (25 April 2005). "Monica Bellucci fait son entrée au musée Grévin" [Monica Bellucci makes her entry to the Grévin museum]. Interview with Grévin Museum's artisans. Le Parisien (in French). Archived from the original on 3 March 2024. Retrieved 3 March 2024.
^Каждому свой час [To each his own hour]. Kommersant (in Russian). No. 93. 31 May 2007. p. 42. Archived from the original on 9 February 2024. Retrieved 22 February 2024.
^Audiffredi, Giovanni (24 April 2012). "Monica Bellucci: 'Io non mi rifaccio'" [Monica Bellucci: 'I don't change myself']. Vanity Fair (in Italian). Archived from the original on 23 August 2023. Retrieved 23 August 2023.
^"Cocoonen met Monica" [Cocooning with Monica]. De Morgen (in Dutch). 12 November 2005. Archived from the original on 28 November 2023. Retrieved 3 February 2024.
Esquire が選ぶ「史上もっとも美しい女性28人」 [Esquire's '28 Most Beautiful Women of All Time']. Esquire (in Japanese). 28 February 2018. Archived from the original on 2 December 2023. Retrieved 2 December 2023.
Нажать на культ [Click on the cult]. Kommersant (in Russian). 23 March 2021. p. 28. Archived from the original on 23 February 2024. Retrieved 23 February 2024. Моника Беллуччи стала амбассадором бренда Cartier четверть века назад. ... в очередной раз подтвердила свой статус иконы стиля [Monica Bellucci became a Cartier brand ambassador a quarter century ago. ... once again confirmed her status style icon]
Barlow, Helen (25 September 2011). "Bella donna won't be tamed". The Sydney Morning Herald. Archived from the original on 31 January 2024. Retrieved 31 January 2024.
"Bellucci: con Scamarcio la scena più erotica" [Bellucci: with Scamarcio the most erotic scene]. Corriere della Sera (in Italian). 4 December 2006. Archived from the original on 31 January 2024. Retrieved 31 January 2024.
^ abc"Bellucci, il primo e austero 'sì'" [Bellucci, the first and austere 'yes']. Chi (in Italian). 20 December 2006. Archived from the original on 21 November 2023. Retrieved 22 November 2023 – via TgCom24. [the one who said her first 'yes' on 3 January 1990 in Monte Carlo ... 'I met Claudio in 1987, when I was working as a model to pay for my studies']
^ abBoschi, Silvana (27 November 2009). "Siamo unna coppia di Zingari" [We are a Gypsy couple]. Interview. Grand Hotel (in Italian). No. 48, cover: Barbara D'Urso). Edizioni Del Duca. p. 25. Infatti, dopo essersi sposati in gran segreto nel 1999 con ritto civile nelprincipato di Monaco (proprio dove Monica il 3 gennaio del 1990 sposò in prime nozze il fotografo Claudio Basso da cui divorziò un anno dopo) [In fact, after getting married in great secrecy in 1999 in a civil ceremony in the principality of Monaco (precisely where Monica married the photographer Claudio Basso for her first wedding on 3 January 1990, from whom she divorced a year later)]
^ abcdAscione, Arianna (1 September 2019). "Bellucci-Cassel-Kunakey, dal grande amore alle frecciate (e al gelo)" [Bellucci-Cassel-Kunakey, from great love to the barbs (and frost)]. Corriere della Sera (in Italian). Archived from the original on 3 September 2023. Retrieved 3 September 2023. I due, che si erano conosciuti sul set di 'Vita coi figli' di Dino Risi ... la storia finì definitivamente quando lei conobbe Vincent Cassel, il suo futuro marito [The two, who had met on the set of Dino Risi's 'Vita coi figli' ... Nicola Farron said in 2012: 'the story ended definitively when she met Vincent Cassel, her future husband'.]
^Biondani, Paolo; Malagutti, Vittorio; Sisti, Leo (8 October 2021). "Pandora Papers, ecco i nomi dei vip italiani con i soldi offshore" [Pandora Papers, here are the names of Italian VIPs with offshore money]. L'Espresso (in Italian). Archived from the original on 4 February 2024. Retrieved 4 February 2024.