The good mothers

Directed by Director's notes
  • Julian Jarrold, Elisa Amoruso
Directed by
  • Julian Jarrold, Elisa Amoruso
Year
  • 2023
Length
  • 6x50”
Year
  • 2023
Length
  • 6x50”
View Trailer
Cast
  • Gaia Girace
  • Valentina Bellè
  • Barbara Chichiarelli
  • Francesco Colella
  • Simona Distefano
  • Andrea Dodero
  • Micaela Ramazzotti

Synopsis

Based on a true story, Denise (daughter of Lea Garofalo), Maria Concetta Cacciola, and Giuseppina Pesce dare to stand up to the fearsome ‘Ndrangheta mafia. Helping them in their efforts is prosecutor Anna Colace, newly arrived in Calabria from Milan with a strategy to topple the ‘Ndrangheta clans; focus on the women.
It’s an approach that comes with risk—the ‘Ndrangheta are known and feared for their iron fist and insidious power. “The Good Mothers” is the gripping story of three women who turn against everything they know in order to fight for their lives and the future of their children and overcome a criminal empire.



Director's notes
  • JULIAN JARROLD
    This story of the women who dared to defy the N’drangheta – Italy’s richest and most ruthless crime syndicate – was so powerful and moving it completely drew me in. Based In Calabria, we closely follow the women who were prepared to break the code of silence, escape their misogynistic social and family bonds and bear witness against fathers, brothers, and husbands in the hope of a new life of freedom. It is a twisting, dangerous journey of betrayal and courage.

    ELISA AMORUSO
    The first thing that struck me about this project was the topic.
    After reading the script for the first episode, I immediately felt the urgency to stage the stories of these women, invisible heroines who’ve given a significant contribution to fighting organised crime. Lea Garofalo, Giuseppina Pesce, Concetta Cacciola, Denise Cosco had the courage to run those risks to achieve freedom, something that had never been granted to them.

    The series carries with it a message of great emancipation and freedom, not only for the characters it portrays, but for all women who have been victims of violence, whether physical or psychological, in their family and in sentimental relationships. And it is this sense, necessary and universal, that prompted me to tell this story, seeking, more than anything else, empathy and truth.