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7/10
Fatherhood in Italy's 1950s
19 April 2020
Warning: Spoilers
Veteran director Mario Monicelli deals with the issues of several Italian (actual, future or probable) fathers in Italy's postwar years. The central plot revolves around the teenage romance of two high school students, Sandro and Marcella, and its effects once it becomes known to the respective fathers (Vittorio Bacci, a wealthy doctor with another spoiled and lazy adult son, and Vincenzo Corallo, a widowed tailor with a roving eye and a gambling addiction). The side shows are Guifo and Giulia, a driving school instructor (and anxious father-to-be) tormented by his demanding wife, and the zookeeper Amerigo and his wife Ines, a private nurse, blessed with five little children, one of which gets "parked" to his childless aunt Rita's house when one of his siblings goes down with measles, thus altering her family dynamics in an unexpected way.

Ruggero Marchi, as usual, excels at portraying the character of the grumpy and overbearing father, in this case a doctor whose teenage son falls in love with the tailor's daughter, while Academy Award winner Vittorio De Sica plays a character very alike to his real self (with reference to his own gambling habits), who at first dismisses his daughter's fling as "puppy love" but, once he realizes (by taking her measurements for her new dress) that his "daddy's little girl" has turned into a woman, becomes her undercover ally to help her boyfriend win over his stern father's objections, and the scene in the billiard parlor in which, while pretending to be a casual stranger, he dispenses his useful advice to the boy, is probably one of the best in the movie.

Franco Interlenghi and Antonella Lualdi play the newlyweds dealing with the upcoming birth of their first child (which provides an unexpected plot twist at the very end of the movie), while time-tested character actors Memmo Carotenuto and Marisa Merlini are unsurpassed in their comedic dealings with a bunch of unruly children.

Marcello Mastroianni, not yet propelled to stardom by Federico Fellini, plays Cesare, an aircraft mechanic whose marital relationship soured because of his wife's infertility. His chemistry with child actor Franco Di Trocchio, who plays his kid nephew, provides some of the movie's most endearing scenes. In the end Cesare and his wife Rita will decide to adopt a child.

The movie, although a comedy, has some moments of reflections about the hardship of being a father in an era where children seem to grow faster and less respectful of parental authority. This is summarized by Ruggero Marchi's character, called to the police station after his wayward older son Vezio (played by comedian Raffaele Pisu, whose voice in the movie is dubbed by Nino Manfredi) has been arrested for trying to scam a retired colonel. Confronted by his failure at raising his child to be a responsible adult, and resigning himself to see his own name soiled by his son's probable criminal prosecution, he rants about the difficulty of being a parent. "Children are born children, and it's up to their fathers to raise them into adulthood. But nobody teaches fathers about how to be fathers!".

Although the doctor's wayward son Vezio will be spared jail, thanks mostly to his father's impassioned speech which prompts the colonel to withdraw criminal charges, he won't be spared being drafted in the Army (for which his father had previously obtained a deferment on medical grounds) and be assigned to the brutal boot camp of "Bersaglieri" assault troops (presumably by intercession of his intended victim).

The final scene sees Vittorio and Vincenzo, once again called to meet their respective children's high school principal for disciplinary issues, walking from the school, with Vincenzo doing his best to convince his counterpart to let their children date each other - under condition of not neglecting their studies - and telling him: "Let them get engaged with each other, maybe even married with each other, and we'll see - once they will become parents themselves - if they will be able to do better than we did!".
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7/10
"Law & Order SVU" Italian Style
6 July 2019
Back in the time when the definition "special victims unit" had not leaped from courtroom papers to the silver screen, an enterprising group of TV producers in Italy came up with the idea of dramatizing some of the intriguing cases that the renowned attorney and politician Tina Lagostena Bassi, a champion of abused women's rights in the male-dominated Italian courtrooms wrote about in her books. The result is a gripping six episodes mini-series where a combative woman lawyer fights her good fight on behalf of women and children victims of abuses, trying to juggle her work and her personal life, fighting back her feelings for a charming prosecutor and trying to forget the ghosts haunting her from her childhood.
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A bad propaganda flick
22 July 2003
This movie was made by order of the Libyan dictator Col. Muhammad al-Qadhafi to glorify the figure of Omar al-Mukhtar, leader of the local tribes which opposed the Italian colonial rule in the 1930s through guerrilla actions. Of course, being this a propagandist flick, there is very little historical truth to be found in it. Italians are depicted as violent and ruthless imperialists, killing mercilessly the libyan "patriots", together with their women and children.

It looks funny to me that, to impersonate the lead character, an American actor like Anthony Quinn was chosen. Probably the choice was made to lure Western distributors to buy the movie, but this was obviously not enough to make palatable to European audiences such a bad movie.

I watched this movie on TV in 1982 during a trip to Japan, because obviously it was never shown in Italian movie theaters. It is strange that none of the reviewers thought about the fact that, while blaming the Italian colonization for all its evils, regardless of the fact that the British, the French and the Portuguese did much worse against the natives on their colonies in Africa and in the Middle East, Libya still relies today on the infrastructures built there by the Italians more than 60 years ago.

If you can, avoid this movie. It's not worth the time to watch it, let alone the money to rent it. Leave it to Col. Qadhafi's friends and supporters, because it shows history as what they like to believe to be true.
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Typical Italian western...but with some interesting actors
2 August 1999
This movie could be seen as one of the many "western" mushroomed out in Italy after the success of Sergio Leone's "A Fistful of Dollars". What makes it noteworthy is the presence of Bud Spencer, here at his debut with the heavy-handed character which will make him later famous with the "Trinità" series, and the casting in the role of "villain" Jess Elfego of one of the most outstanding Japanese actors, Tatsuya Nakadai, at the time almost unknown outside his country, well before arising to world fame with the leading role in Akira Kurosawa's "Kagemusha".
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8/10
Life is not a play, but sometimes it looks alike...
3 July 1999
This movie begins as the ordinary cop story, with officer Renard losing the use of his right ear after being shot in the head. A fragment of the bullet remains in his brain and cannot be removed, that makes his chief wary of him and reluctant to give him another assignment. He is appointed to follow the case of a very attractive girl who stole the wallets of several men. He finds her, but instead of arresting her he starts to follow her and finds out the reasons behind her financing the staging of Strindberg's "Miss Julie" with the money she stole. Very intriguing movie, although the end remains a bit too open...
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