1. Suburra review – brash and brutal Italian crime thriller - The Guardian
Jun 23, 2016 · Stefano Sollima's brash and brutal movie is a melodrama of political corruption and gangster turf wars in Rome – set satirically at the fraught moment of ...
Gomorrah TV series director Stefano Sollima delivers a terrific mob drama set among Rome’s political and criminal elite

2. Suburra: Blood on Rome ~ Spoiler Review
Apr 27, 2021 · “Inspired by a real-life political scandal, “Suburra: Blood on Rome” features a fight over development land in a coastal town near Rome. The ...
Suburra: Blood on Rome is an Italian Netflix series with 3 seasons. Read Reel 2 Reel Talk’s in-depth analysis and review here:

3. Season 1 – Suburra: Blood on Rome - Rotten Tomatoes
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Inspired by a real-life political scandal, "Suburra: Blood on Rome" features a fight over development land in a coastal town near Rome. The church, political figures, members of organized crime, local gangs and real estate developers all collide in the battle, with the lines between the legal and the illicit being blurred. The various entities involved are all on a quest for power, but not everyone can achieve that goal. The series is based on a book of the same name.

4. Suburra - FILM REVIEW
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A typical Mafia tale set in Rome but one carried out with some panache.

5. Suburra TV Review | Common Sense Media
Feb 18, 2023 · Suburra is an exceedingly graphic Italian criminal thriller series that's not appropriate for teens. There's a lot of street violence like fistfights and ...
Violence, sex, language dominate fascinating crime thriller. Read Common Sense Media's Suburra review, age rating, and parents guide.

6. Review of the Movie Suburra - Rick's Rome
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The movie Suburra reveals that corruption in Rome is nothing new. The suburbs are just a little farther away.

7. The Eternal Rome in Mobster Show 'Suburra: Blood on Rome'
Mar 17, 2022 · Suburra, inspired by a real-life scandal, revolves around plans to sell a portion of land in Ostia, a seaside neighbourhood of Rome, and build a ...
Italian mobster series Suburra exploits its Roman setting, using carefully composed shots and symbolically charged locations to suggest that nothing has changed in Rome since antiquity.

8. Suburra: Blood on Rome Reviews - Metacritic
Summary The Italian series is a prequel to the 2015 film Suburra (based on the book of the same name) and introduces Aureliano Adami (Alessandro Borghi), ...
The Italian series is a prequel to the 2015 film Suburra (based on the book of the same name) and introduces Aureliano Adami (Alessandro Borghi), Gabriele "Lele" Marchilli (Eduardo Valdarnini) and Alberto "Spadino" Anacleti (Giacomo Ferrara) navigate life in Rome.

9. Suburra | DETECt Portal
Suburra – La serie (Eng. transl. Suburra: Blood on Rome) is an Italian web television series. The first season was released on Netflix on October 6, 2017. The ...
Main characters: Aureliano Adami, Alberto “Spadino” Anacleti, Amedeo Cinaglia, Sara Monaschi, Samurai, others. Country of origin: Italy Main location: Rome
10. Suburra - Cineuropa
A gangster known as the “Samurai” wants to turn the waterfront of a small town close to Rome into a new Atlantic City.
Cineuropa - the best of european cinema

11. Suburra (2015) directed by Stefano Sollima • Reviews, film + cast
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A gangster known as "Samurai" wants to turn the waterfront of Rome into a new Las Vegas. All the local mob bosses have agreed to work for this common goal. But peace is not to last long.

12. Love, It's What Makes 'Suburra' | Christopher Carroll
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Suburra: Blood on Rome, an excellent new crime series from Netflix and RAI, manages to combine the pacing of a thriller with an almost sociological diorama of Roman society, a slicker, abbreviated version of The Wire’s portrait of Baltimore. Even amidst Rome’s gaudy beauty, the staccato bursts of violence, and the elaborately choreographed sex scenes—particularly the show’s opening orgy, which resembles a tangle of deviant, writhing Bernini sculptures—the surprising and ultimately tragic intimacy that develops between Aureliano and Spadino stands out as one of Suburra’s great pleasures, setting it apart from the plodding, grisly portentousness of contemporary prestige crime dramas such as Narcos.
