After international remakes and musicals, the Italian series produced by Rai Fiction and Pico Media, conquers the United States, where in October it will be available for streaming in its original language.
Yesterday, in the first episode of CBS News Sunday Morning, the historic talk show among the most followed in America, the phenomenon “Mare Fuori” was discussed with images from the set and interventions by Maria Pia Ammirati, director of Rai Fiction, Roberto Sessa, producer and CEO of Picomedia, and the cast.
The service, made on set in Naples, is part of the reportage “Tv Around the World” dedicated to successful international television series.
The first two episodes of the new season of “Mare Fuori” will be presented as a world premiere at the 2023 Rome Film Fest and at Alice nella Città.
It might interest you
Manfredi: "Municipalities are at the limit: without educators and traffic police, Italy risks paralysis."
Turetta's life sentence is final. Now he's aiming for restorative justice.
Acerra businessman killed on the street in Colombia
Tragedy on the Calabrian railway tracks: one person hit, trains delayed up to eight hours
The TV series will arrive on Raiplay only next February but it will be possible to admire the first two episodes of the fourth season in advance.
The record-breaking Italian series, now in its fourth season, will premiere in February 2024, first on RaiPlay and then on free-to-air Rai 2. It has been announced that the first two episodes will premiere at the Rome Film Fest, which will be held in October (from the 18th to the 29th). The series' director, Ivan Silvestrini, and several of the cast will be in attendance.
Mare Fuori 4: the plot
In the fourth season, the protagonists of the series find themselves metaphorically sailing on the open sea. Rosa, Carmine, Mimmo, Kubra, Dobermann, Cucciolo and Micciarella all live with the awareness of no longer being attached to the life-saving anchor of family. Contrasting this story are Pino, Edoardo, Cardiotrap, Giulia and Silvia who, for better or for worse, still live with the weight of family ties capable of conditioning their lives.







Leave a comment