Baciami ancora (Kiss Me Again) is a 2010 film written and directed by Gabriele Muccino.
The film, a sequel to The Last Kiss, was released in theaters on January 29, 2010. In its opening weekend the film grossed €3,119,351. In total it grossed over €9 million.
The story takes place in Rome, ten years after the first episode, and chronicles the development of the story told in The Last Kiss: Carlo and Giulia are about to conclude their divorce, and she, having the custody of their child, and she has been living with a man named Simon for three years while Charles has an affair with the twenty-five year old Anna. Paul, depressed and addicted to tranquillizers, began a relationship with Livia the wife of Hadrian, returning after serving a long sentence for attempting to import a shipment of cocaine from Colombia. Marco, apparently happily married to Veronica, actually conceals a deep crisis aggravated by the expectation of a child. Alberto, who returned from the collegiate trip with friends at the end of the first film, still wanted to get away from all that is crushing them. This situation is likely to explode for all. Charles, despite the constant mutual betrayal, never forgot Giulia.
Kiss Me Again may refer to the following films:
Kiss Me Again was a 1925 American silent film comedy-romance directed by Ernst Lubitsch. It stars Marie Prevost, Monte Blue and Clara Bow. The film was based on the French play Divorçons! (1880), by Victorien Sardou and Émile de Najac, and the adapted version of the play Cyprienne.
The film is now considered lost. Warner Bros. records of the film's negative have a notation, "Junked 12/27/48" (i.e., December 27, 1948). Warner Bros. destroyed many of its negatives in the late 1940s and 1950s due to nitrate film pre-1933 decomposition. No copies of Kiss Me Again are known to exist.
Kiss Me Again is a 1931 American Pre-Code musical operetta film filmed entirely in Technicolor. It was originally released in the United States as Toast of the Legion late in 1930, but was quickly withdrawn when Warner Bros. realized that the public had grown weary of musicals. The Warner Bros. believed that this attitude would only last for a few months, but, when the public proved obstinate, they reluctantly re-released the film early in 1931 after making a few cuts to the film.
Like the 1926 silent First National film Mademoiselle Modiste, Kiss Me Again is based on a novel by Henry Martyn Blossom, which became a popular 1905 Victor Herbert operetta on Broadway, Mlle. Modiste.
When the film was re-released in 1931, most of Walter Pidgeon's songs were cut from the film. Only a small abbreviated version of one of his songs is heard on the existing print.