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Searching For Everything Italian on Netflix

Netflix is currently offering subscribers over 40 Italian language and Italy-related movies, documentaries, tv shows and docuseries. From soapy romances and thrillers to gritty true crime documentaries and comedies, there’s something for everyone. 

Below is a list of 8 Italian Movies we recommend you check out on Netflix right now.  We have indicated what language the content is filmed in and included a brief description, as written by Netflix. Buona visione!

Robbing Mussolini (2022)

Italian

At the end of WWII, a ragtag group of resistance fighters plans an impossible heist: to steal Mussolini’s treasure from Milan’s fascist headquarters. 

The Life Ahead (2020)

Italian

A Holocaust survivor running a daycare business forms an unlikely friendship with a bitter street kid when she takes him in after he robs her. Starring Sophia Loren. 

The Last Paradiso (2020)

Italian

In 1950s Italy, a passionate free spirit dreams of love, justice and better life till a forbidden affair threatens everything. Based on real events.

Security (2021)

Italian

After the assault of a young woman in their seaside town, a security expert and his family get caught in a powerful riptide of secrets and lies. 

Yara (2021)

Italian

A determined prosecutor becomes consumed with the case of a missing 13-year-old and goes to extreme lengths to get to the truth. Based on a real case. 

7 Women and a Murder (2022)

Italian

When their family patriarch is stabbed, seven women, each with ulterior motives, become trapped together in a mansion to solve the puzzle of his murder. 

Coffee For All (2017)

Italian

In Naples, Buenos Aires and New York, people reflect on the Neapolitan tradition of “suspended coffee” and how it changed their lives. 

Four to Dinner (2021)

Italian

In this rom-com challenging the concept of soulmates, parallel storylines portray four single friends as they pair up in different couple combinations.

Asia London Palomba

Asia London Palomba is a trilingual freelance journalist from Rome, Italy. In the past, her work on culture, travel, and history has been published in The Boston Globe, Atlas Obscura,The Christian Science Monitor and Grub Street, New York Magazine's food section. In her free time, Asia enjoys traveling home to Italy to spend time with family and friends, drinking Hugo Spritzes, and making her nonna's homemade cavatelli.

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