Andrea Iervolino

In 2013, Iervolino, along with Monika Gomez del Campo Bacardi, launched AMBI Media Group, an international consortium of companies encompassing all areas of filmmaking from development to distribution.

[1] At thirteen, Iervolino and his friends launched a small tech business selling websites to local entrepreneurs in Cassino, where it was unusual to use the Internet for advertising.

Following this success, Iervolino left home at the age of fifteen to work as a producer's assistant on Broadway-style shows in the resort town of Bibione, Italy.

[1] In September of that year, he returned to his hometown to produce his first film, The Cavalier of Love, financed through crowd-funding from local investors willing to sponsor his project.

[2] In 2014, he made his film-producing debut in the United States[3] as a co-producer of The Humbling, which premiered at the 71st Venice International Film Festival.

For this purpose, Iervolino put together a library of existing films with strong social themes and proposed them to schools, complete with information brochures and ideas for how the students could debate.

The initiative gained enough traction that former Italian Prime Minister and Senator for life Giulio Andreotti attended as spokesperson in 2011 and 2012.

[16] In 2015, Iervolino's company acquired 85% of the Exclusive Media Group (EMG) film library[17] in partnership with New York-based private equity firm Raven Capital Management, granting licensing, sequel and remake rights to over 400 features including Begin Again, Cruel Intentions, Donnie Darko, End of Watch, Ides of March, Rush, The Skulls, Snitch, Undefeated, and Memento.

[25] TaTaTu has co-financed and co-produced movies such as Lamborghini: The Man Behind the Legend[26] and Waiting for the Barbarians, which premiered at the 76th Venice International Film Festival.

[27][28] The company also publishes the vodcast Giving Back Generation hosted by Raquelle Stevens and directed by Chiara Tilesi.