Laura Bispuri’s second feature-length film focuses on the fight for a child by two women: the adoptive mother, often too present, and the biological mother who lacks balance and stability.
These events could be set in any part of the world, but in this case are located in a very different Sardinia from the sought-after summer locations. The Sardinia of Daughter of Mine is wild, rural and poor, the sun-drenched and arid landscape a main character.
The main location is the village of Cabras, (province of Oristano), on the central-eastern coast of the island. Scenes were also shot in the areas of Riola Sardo, San Vero Milis and Oliena.
Laura Bispuri’s second feature-length film focuses on the fight for a child by two women: the adoptive mother, often too present, and the biological mother who lacks balance and stability.
These events could be set in any part of the world, but in this case are located in a very different Sardinia from the sought-after summer locations. The Sardinia of Daughter of Mine is wild, rural and poor, the sun-drenched and arid landscape a main character.
The main location is the village of Cabras, (province of Oristano), on the central-eastern coast of the island. Scenes were also shot in the areas of Riola Sardo, San Vero Milis and Oliena.
Vivo film, Colorado Film, Rai Cinema, Match Factory Productions, Bord Cadre films
The summer she turns ten, Vittoria finds out that she has two mothers: Tina, a loving mother who lives a symbiotic relationship with the little girl, and Angelica, a fragile and instinctive woman whose life is chaotic. The two women fight over the girl making Vittoria live through a summer of questions, discoveries and fears alongside adventures and important benchmarks in self-knowledge.