This is an object of an unidentified movie, but it deserves to give you success. If black and white, go, go, don’t regret it, it is currently available on Prime Video.
A foreigner finds a chain to work

Foreign SurPorms on a work plan
Discover Omicron – There is no connection with the variant Kodda – a satirical comedy published in 1963 and Renato Salvatore performs extroverting. The latter is sent to earth to make a spy for us to understand human society, knowing whether our planet can greet its people. For us for spying, Omicron, this is his name, takes Angelo’s body, an Italian worker, and lives in the same life as it. Lifestyle that is absurd.
Here is our foreigner who turns out to be doing the chain to build cars. It also discovers different human feelings, including perhaps those who most relate to most of them: love.
“Brilliant dialogue, excellent interpretation”

Omicron saw them!
Omicron was produced by Hugo Gregoretti, who, after he released the first long, L’Italie Unusual (1962), signed a satirical comedy segment with Jean-Luc Godard and Pierre Pasolini. It was this year that he signed Omicron again in a satirical vein. In 1964, he set up Ah! Beautiful families with the representatives of Annie Girardot, Sandra Milo and Jean Rushefort, who have been investigating comic book lives in Italy in the 1960s.
Movie critic Universe Jean de Baronchel wrote about Omikron in 1963: “His relationship with his comrades allows Gregorette to raise the tone and get involved with live social criticism (…). A style that sometimes does not mention René Clair d’A, freedom, Gregory is perfectly derived from its subject, accumulated gags and wild situations.
The film is available on Prime Video.
Source: Allocine

Rose James is a Gossipify movie and series reviewer known for her in-depth analysis and unique perspective on the latest releases. With a background in film studies, she provides engaging and informative reviews, and keeps readers up to date with industry trends and emerging talents.