Io so che tu sai che io so (1982) Poster

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7/10
Quite a duo!
Brit_Conchord16 September 2019
First I gotta say how great Alberto and Monica are as a duo. I already knew that, but this movie proves that once again. This movie should be more known definitely. The story itself is really original and there are a couple of twists that make the story really interesting. There's a lot of good comedy, but also some pretty dramatic moments. The shift was kinda very sudden and unexpected. But all in all, it is a really good movie that doesn't deserve to be forgotten. Would recommend!
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8/10
It is actually a deep drama!
RodrigAndrisan5 August 2022
The film has some imperfections, such as the fact that only an absolutely idiotic private detective can follow someone only by the license plate of a car, the first important thing being the person's identity, name, surname and, absolutely mandatory, a photo of the person being followed. Then, all we see in the films filmed by the private detective, which Fabio (Alberto Sordi) watches in the country house, are scenes that are too intimate down to the smallest detail, in terms of image and sound, which would could be almost impossible for a private detective to obtain. Overcoming these flaws, the film is captivating. Certainly, everything is due to Monica Vitti and Alberto Sordi, the greatest comedic and dramatic actors of all time. If there were two other actors, the film would not be as good.
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8/10
Romantic and profound movie, of the old Italian style.
Chinesevil22 April 2022
Warning: Spoilers
The two main actors are among the best ever and the plot is always interesting and wise. The movie is teaching something about life, and never boring.
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Overlooked warm-hearted comedy
kolchinsky127 December 2003
For some reasons, this movie seems to be totally forgotten, though it deserves better. Alberto Sordi is a great comic actor, and here he is at his best. By sheer accident, private investigators begin surveillance of his wife, and he comes to know many surprising things about her and himself, sometimes upsetting, sometimes moving, and mostly very funny. It is a very Italian movie, and at the same time very universal in its view of everyday life.
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9/10
Well directed and interpreted bittersweet comedy
gabrielemorra5 November 2022
It is surprising to me how little is this movie known, even in Italy. I watched it when I was a child and then again as an adult, and I always found it simple and impressive.

Sure, the idea that the private inspector might follow the wrong person is silly, but the personal path of the couple played by Alberto Sordi and Monica Vitti is realistic and convincing.

Many of the movies made by Alberto Sordi had simple messages, and this one as well, something that based on popular wisdom, not on intellectual sophistication, and I think that this coherence with his believes gives the movie its strength.
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5/10
I Know that You Know that I Know
BandSAboutMovies19 January 2024
Warning: Spoilers
I Know That You Know That I Know stars its director, Alberto Sordi, as Fabio Bonetti, a banker who has been married to his wife Livia (Monica Vitti) for more than twenty years. All he cares about these days are football and watching TV. And then they meet a private detective (Giuseppe Mannajuolo) who has been filming them for two weeks, as he has been hired by the rich Vitali to watch his wife Elena (Micaela Pignatelli), but accidentally filmed them.

That's when he shares what he has learned: their teenage daughter Veronica (Isabella De Bernardi) is on drugs, Livia is cheating on Fabio and, well, Fabio has days to live thanks to a mystery disease. That's when Fabio decides to change his life. He's never shown love to his daughter, who dresses in his clothes to shock him. He chose football matches over his wife and pushed her into another man's bed. So he decides that before he dies, he's going to fix his family.

Written by Sordi with Augusto Caminito (The Designated Victim) and Rodolfo Sonego (Vacanze di Natale '91), this raises the same question I always have for American sitcoms. How could Monica Vitti - she was Modesty Blaise! - end up with Alberto Sordi? Some guys have all the luck.
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Overlooked warm-hearted comedy
kolchinsky127 December 2003
For some reasons, this movie seems to be totally forgotten, though it deserves better. Alberto Sordi is a great comic actor, and here he is at his best. By sheer accident, private investigators begin surveillance of his wife, and he comes to know many surprising things about her and himself, sometimes upsetting, sometimes moving, and mostly very funny. It is a very Italian movie, and at the same time very universal in its view of everyday life. I just wished it would be somehow available in the US.
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