
Directing
Born August 19, 1961 in Roma, Italy
Born in Rome in 1961, she is a director and screenwriter who studied philosophy at La Sapienza University before interrupting her studies to move to Paris, where she lived for eighteen years and where her three children were born. Her debut film, Pianoforte (1984), won the De Sica Award at the Venice International Film Festival. Since then, she has worked tirelessly across documentary and fiction, tackling themes that continually question reality and its conflicts, including Carlo Giuliani, Boy (2002), I Like to Work (Mobbing) (2004), In fabbrica (2007), and The White Space (2009). In the following years, he directed several episodes of TV series such as Gomorrah and Django. In 2024, he released The Time It Takes, an autobiographical film dedicated to his father, Luigi Comencini, which premiered at the Venice Film Festival and won the Nastri d’Argento awards for Best Film and Best Screenplay.

The Time It Takes

Django

Cinecittà, de Mussolini à la Dolce Vita
Self

Luna Nera

Stories of Love That Cannot Belong to This World

Women Directors
Francesca Comencini

Gomorrah

A Special Day

What Do You Know About Me
Self

The White Space

L'Aquila 2009: Five Directors in the Rubble

Our Country

Le Cercle

Visions of Europe

I Like to Work – Mobbing

Carlo Giuliani, a Boy

The Words of My Father

Filming Desire: A Journey Through Women’s Cinema
Self

Shakespeare a Palermo

Miracle of Marcellino

Annabelle partagée

La lumière du lac

Pilgrimage to Agen
Herself

The French as Seen by…
Self (Segment "Pèlerinage à Agen")

A Boy from Calabria

Pianoforte