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  1. The House with Laughing Windows (Italian: La casa dalle finestre che ridono) is a 1976 Italian horror film co-written and directed by Pupi Avati.The film was shot in Lido degli Scacchi in the Ferrara province of the Emilia-Romagna region in northern Italy.

  2. Aug 20, 1976 · The House with Laughing Windows: Directed by Pupi Avati. With Lino Capolicchio, Francesca Marciano, Gianni Cavina, Giulio Pizzirani. Stefano, a young restorer, is commissioned to save a controversial mural located in the church of a small, isolated village.

    • (6.1K)
    • Horror, Mystery, Thriller
    • Pupi Avati
    • 1976-08-20
  3. The House with Laughing Windows. A young restorer's life turns into a nightmare when he fixes a painting. certainly a gripping giallo, but also an intelligent allegory of post-war Italy's ...

    • (76)
    • Pupi Avati
    • Horror, Mystery & Thriller, Drama
    • Lino Capolicchio
  4. Jun 8, 2024 · The House with Laughing Windows is 4472 on the JustWatch Daily Streaming Charts today. The movie has moved up the charts by 3021 places since yesterday. In the United Kingdom, it is currently more popular than For Love & Life: No Ordinary Campaign but less popular than The Artist's Wife. Rank. Title.

    • (116)
    • Pupi Avati
    • 18
    • Libero Grandi
  5. The House with Laughing Windows (originally La Casa Dalle Finestre che Ridono) is a 1976 thriller directed by Pupi Avati.It's about young Stefano (Lino Capolicchio), a young man who arrives in a sleepy little town in Emila Romagna to restore a mysterious fresco painted by a notorious local painter, Buono Legnani, a painting that apparently hides a secret so dark someone would kill to hide it ...

  6. The House with Laughing Windows. Stefano, a young artist, arrives in a tranquil Italian village to restore the local church's fresco of the St. Sebastian martyr - depicting the saint's bloody body slashed by arrows - painted some years earlier by a deranged local artist who, the villagers hint, created snuff paintings by torturing his models ...

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  8. So while The House With Laughing Windows is certainly a gripping murder mystery, it is also an intelligent allegory (set, pointedly, in the early Fifties) of post-war Italy's struggles to emerge from the Fascist outrages of its recent past. After all, great art has always had the power to reveal uncomfortable truths. Reviewed on: 24 Sep 2006

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