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» » Cronache di poveri amanti (1954)

Short summary

In 1925 the young florentine typographer Mario moves to via del Corno to be near his girl-friend Bianca. Here he becomes friends with Maciste, his landlord, and Ugo, anti-fascists both of them. When Campolmi is beaten by the fascists, Mario meets Milena, Campolmi's wife, at the hospital and falls in love with her leaving Bianca. Then Maciste is killed, again by the fascists, Ugo is wounded and he seeks shelter in ^ÓSignora^Ô's house. Here he falls in love with Gesuina and the two marry. Campolmi dies, but Mario and Milena part themselves. Later Mario too is arrested by the police.

The film met with vehement opposition from the Italian government and was banned from export after it received the Special Jury Award at Cannes.

In the book by Vasco Pratolini, 'La Signora' is clearly a lesbian figure entertaining very ambiguous relationship with her young female servants. This fact was omitted from the film because the Italian censorship would not allow homosexuals to be portrayed on screen at the time.

Apart from the fact that dubbing was common practice in Italian cinema at the time, most actors were dubbed as the film makers wanted to retain the regional Florentine accent so important in the book.

User reviews


  • comment
    • Author: Legionstatic
    This movie could probably have been a successful production, if it was realized in a different way, but the emphasis in which nearly all characters are over-stating themselves throughout its length makes it somewhat slow and uninteresting.

    As it often happens with adaptation of literary works for the silver screen, the style of this movie is rather different from that of the novel from which is taken, but the atmosphere of the working-class neighborhood in the Florence of mid-1920s is quite well rendered.

    The cast too is full of very good players, both famous or soon-to-be famous, like Mastroianni, Ferrero, Lualdi and Greco, and remarkable features by some lesser known but noteworthy presences such as Giuliano Montaldo (which later will acquire his own fame as movie director), and Wanda Capodaglio, unrivaled queen of the Italian stage for nearly 50 years, who plays the unnamed "Lady Loanshark".

    Adolfo Consolini, a famous Italian athlete, twice world record holder and 1948 Olympic champion of discus throw, very appropriately lends his well-built body to the character of Maciste.

    The only action sequence of this movie, with Ugo and Maciste trying to reach the houses of some anti-fascists and warn them before the violent mob gets there first, is very nailing and well made. Too bad the rest of the movie is not as entertaining as it could have been.

    If you are interested in the history of Italian movies and contemporary literature, try watching this one, but only after reading the novel.
  • comment
    • Author: Celen
    Portrait of a working class community in Florence in the 1920s as the Fascists tighten their grip on society. It's set in a narrow street populated by market traders, cobblers, gossips, unfaithful wives, gangsters, with an old matriarch overseeing things from her window and the local Fascist on patrol down below. Mainly it follows the fortunes of three marriagable young women and their lovers, with, at the centre of the film, a brutal night of assassinations which changes the community forever.

    It's quite dialogue-heavy - there's barely a moment without subtitles on the screen - and there's little humour, but it's well made and is suffused with a non-judgemental humanism that prevents things getting too morose. Mastroianni stands out among the cast, which includes an Olympic gold medalist discus thrower as a blacksmith. Particularly interesting to see a non-touristic side of Florence, when the place had a real lived-in feel.
  • Cast overview, first billed only:
    Anna Maria Ferrero Anna Maria Ferrero - Gesuina
    Cosetta Greco Cosetta Greco - Elisa
    Antonella Lualdi Antonella Lualdi - Milena
    Marcello Mastroianni Marcello Mastroianni - Ugo
    Bruno Berellini Bruno Berellini - Carlino Bencini
    Irene Cefaro Irene Cefaro - Clara
    Adolfo Consolini Adolfo Consolini - Corrado aka Maciste
    Giuliano Montaldo Giuliano Montaldo - Alfredo Campolmi
    Gabriele Tinti Gabriele Tinti - Mario Parigi
    Eva Vanicek Eva Vanicek - Bianca Quagliotti
    Wanda Capodaglio Wanda Capodaglio - La Signora
    Domenico Maggio Domenico Maggio - (as Mimmo Maggio)
    Andrea Petricca Andrea Petricca - Nanni
    Garibaldo Lucii Garibaldo Lucii - Staderini
    Mario Piloni Mario Piloni - Osvaldo Liverani
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