The Right to Happiness

The Right to Happiness

7.5 / Rating 6 votes 2023

The Right to Happiness centers on a small used book store in a small plaza in a small town with big vistas, somewhere in Italy. It sounds like a book lover's fantasy, and maybe it is. The bookseller, Libero, knows most of his rather eccentric customers and can barely bring himself to take their money (although fascists pay double). When a young boy, Essien (Didie Lorenz Tchumbu), an émigré from Burkina Faso, happens on the shop, Libero begins lending him books of increasing difficulty. From Pinocchio to Moby Dick, Essien can read as fast as Libero can lend, and the two form a bond over reading and meaning. "Books should be read twice," Libero says. "Once to understand them, and once to think." Life should probably be lived like that too, but the bookseller's name means "free," and freedom is what Libero bequeaths to Essien.

To download, you must be logged in and purchase a subscription. Login / Register Buy Subscription

1-Month Subscription

71 thousand Toman ۲۰٪ discount
59 thousand Toman
31 day

3-Month Subscription

215 thousand Toman ۲۰٪ discount
179 thousand Toman
90 day

1-Year Subscription

719 thousand Toman ۲۰٪ discount
599 thousand Toman
365 day

No trailer available.

Double Happiness is a 1994 Canadian drama film directed by Mina Shum, co-produced by the National Film Board of Canada. The film stars Sandra Oh as Jade Li, an actress struggling to assert her independence from the expectations of her Chinese Canadian family. Callum Keith Rennie also stars as Mark, Jade's love interest.

Recommended for You