Daily Archives: February 21, 2017

Two Women (1960)

Two Women (La Ciociara)
Directed by Vittorio De Sica
Written by Cesare Zavattini and Vittorio De Sica from a novel Alberto Moravia
1960/Italy/France
Compagnia Cinematographica Champion, Cocinor, etc.
Repeat viewing/Cinefest Free Trial on Amazon

[box] Cesira: I’d like to see you living like I did, sleeping in a shed! And we ate once a day, that’s all. So, I went with the first one that said “I will bring you to Rome.” I married Rome, not him.[/box]

The story is set in the days and weeks following the Allied invasion of Italy in WWII.  Cesira (Sophia Loren) hasn’t done too badly during the war.  She married an older man, moved to Rome, and had her beloved daughter Rosetta.  Now a widow, she runs the grocery store her husband left her.  When the bombs start falling too close to home in the city, Cesira decides to flee with Rosetta to her home village.

At first things go relatively well.  Cesira has an ample supply of lira to purchase food with and takes things easy.  She and Rosetta become friendly with Michele (Jean-Paul Belmondo), an idealistic ex-seminary student who hates the war and facism.  Cesira is apolitical and just wants the war over with.  Life in the countryside goes downhill as the roads fill with Allied and German tanks and food supplies dwindle.

When the fighting gets close to home, Cesira attempts to flee again with Rosetta back to Rome.  Tragedy besets them on the way.  With Raf Vallone as Rosetta’s sometime married Roman lover.

Loren is the principal reason to see this finely crafted neo-realist drama.  She is very good but somehow her movie star good looks get in the way for me at times. I keep wondering what Anna Magnani would have done with the part.  The film is well worth seeking out.

For an Academy Award-winning film, this was surprisingly hard to get my hands on.  The version that was available was dubbed.  I’m pretty sure that Loren dubbed her own lines, less so for the other actors.  I think the only other time I saw this it was dubbed as well.  I’ll be sure to try it again if I can find the subtitled original Italian version

Sophia Loren won the Oscar for Best Actress for her performance in Two Women, making her the first actor to have done so for a foreign language film.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6Z-QbNBLRlo

Fan trailer

Concrete Jungle (1960)

Concrete Jungle (AKA The Criminal)
Directed by Joseph Losey
Written by Alun Owen
1960/UK
Merton Park Studios
First viewing/FilmStruk

[box] I don’t think there is any business in the world which is self-styled an ‘industry’ – because it is only the producers and directors who insist on calling the film a ‘business’ or ‘industry’ – where people so cavalierly hire specialists at vast prices only to devote themselves to hampering the work of the specialist they’ve hired. — Joseph Losey[/box]

This well-made crime drama was lacking a certain something in the excitement department.

Johnny Bannion (Stanley Baker) is a career criminal with a lot of like-minded friends both inside and outside prison walls. One of his first moves when released is to organize and execute a race track robbery.

He is captured and returned to prison but the money is never found.  Neither the police or his co-conspirators will rest until he gives up the location of the loot.

I generally like Joseph Losey’s movies a lot but this one just never grabbed me.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r_H03uoVU8w

Trailer