Luigi Comencini Movies
Postwar Italian helmer Luigi Comencini is one of a number of European directors whose career can be described, most intuitively, as bittersweet. Like Alberto Lattuada (one of his close friends through their ninth decades), Comencini achieved considerable acclaim in his native Italy, but never saw that infamy cross the ocean -- thriving, as he did, in the shadow of an earlier generation deemed to have broader transatlantic appeal: one comprised of Vittorio De Sica, Roberto Rossellini, and other international giants. Comencini's stature was further diminished by his critical perception as something of an odd duck -- he could not, and cannot, be classified as a neorealist by any stretch of the imagination. Like Lattuada, the director often turned out comedies, placing him at odds with the gravity of neorealism, and the inconsistent commercial reception of his films (repetitive alternation between flops and hits) did not help. Yet, in retrospect, Comencini's finest work ironically gains a universal resonance on par with that of his better-known predecessors, thanks to one marked gift: his oft-praised ability to capture onscreen the behavioral and emotional nuances of children. Born on June 8, 1916, in the Italian town of Salo, on Lake Garda, Comencini studied architecture in Milan and gained infamy for his staunch opposition to fascism; during his education, he acquired and honed a keen interest in the cinematic arts. After graduation, he accepted a job at a newspaper as a film critic, then helmed a 1946 film very much in the neorealist vein: the documentary Bambini in Città, about Milanese street children. The craftsmanship of this work caught the attention of the Lux studios in Rome (the Cinecittà of the day), who hired Comencini to co-author the script for Mario Soldati's 1947 Daniele Cortis and to direct the feature Proibito Rubare, pitched by the studio as an Italianized Boys' Town. Unfortunately, the picture flopped, forcing Comencini to become a director-for-hire, and he signed on to helm the über-commercial Italian comedy L'Imperatore di Capri, starring the diminutive screen comic Totò, in 1949.For better or worse, Comencini did not break through to the public until his classic romantic comedy Bread, Love and Dreams (aka Pane, Amore e Fantasia, 1953), an erotic, droll roundelay with Vittorio de Sica as a carabinier, and Gina Lollobrigida (in one of her first screen roles) as the feisty young woman who can never quite return his affections. The picture became a massive hit (one of the most formidable of Comencini's career), spawned global celebrity for Lollobrigida, and led to an equally popular sequel, Bread, Love and Jealousy (aka Pane, Amore e Gelosia), the following year.
Comencini's ensuing sequence of films waxed inconsistent, with the director (again) turning out occasional hits and occasional disappointments; most, regardless of the reception at hand, were comedies. During the 1960s, however, the director broke from his comic predilection and surprised everyone with two extraordinary dramas: Tutti a Casa (Everybody Go Home!, 1960), with Alberto Sordi as a WWII-era soldier forced to choose between collaboration and resistance, and Infanzia, Vocazione e Prime Esperienze di Giacomo Casanova, Veneziano, (1969), a vivid and finely-nuanced portrait of childhood life. The triumph of the latter project yielded two more on the same subject, both commissioned by RAI: the documentary series Bambini e Noi (aka Children and Us, 1970) and a massive, startlingly ambitious, four-and-a-half-hour miniseries adaptation of Carlo Collodi's Pinnochio, also done for Italian television. Although significant interference at the editing table purportedly damaged that project, Comencini later described its production as one of the most joyous experiences of his life.
Comencini achieved two minor (continental) hits in the late '70s and early '80s: the romantic post-noir drama La Donna Della Domenica (aka The Sunday Woman, 1976), with Marcello Mastroianni as a police chief emotionally intertwined with society woman Jacqueline Bisset, and the gentle coming-of-ager Voltati Eugenio (1980), which filters a messy divorce through a 14-year-old's perspective. However, Eugenio represented the last of Comencini's high points; he continued to turn out features and miniseries through the '80s and '90s, but most are now regarded as somewhat dull. After Marcellino (1991), a disappointing remake of a Spanish classic, Comencini abandoned the director's chair. In April 2007, after 16 years of retirement, he died in Rome at age 90 of natural causes. Comencini also fathered a veritable European directing dynasty -- his daughters Cristina and Francesca are both world-renowned filmmakers in their own right, with a vast array of awards between them. ~ Nathan Southern, All Movie Guide
A young boy abandoned at a monastery attempts to come to reconcile his faith with the violence and unpredictability of the outside world in this drama from director Luigi Comencini. In the 16th century, war is raging and a young mother abandons her baby at the door of a crumbling monastery. Named Marcellino by the caring months and raised until he is six years old, the young boy is adopted by a wealthy count and offered a life of luxury beyond his wildest dreams. Though his new home offers all of the amenities one could want in life, it lacks the heart of his former home, and Marcellino longs to return to his humble but loving monastery. When Marcellino's new father takes the young boy on his first hunt, the trauma suffered upon experiencing such violence forces Marcellino to flee to his former home in the midst of a raging storm. Discovered by the friars the following morning and placed in a loft with an enormous crucifix, the young boy finds comfort in the man on the cross during his convalescence. ~ Jason Buchanan, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Fernando Fernán Gómez, Alberto Cracco, (more)
In this romantic story, a couple (Michel Serrault and Virna Lisi) who have been married for over forty years are forced to separate, one to each of their two children's families, when they can no longer pay the rent on their longtime apartment. Absence, in this case, refreshes their memory of the love they have shared, and they take to meeting one another furtively in hotel rooms for sex and affection. One summer, as each of their daughters families takes them on separate vacations, they have had enough, and elope, finding contentment as lighthouse keepers off the coast of Sicily. ~ Clarke Fountain, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Michel Serrault, Virna Lisi, (more)
- Starring:
- Virna Lisi, Michel Serrault, (more)
Director Luigi Comencini resists all efforts to make his filmization of the classic Puccini opera La Boheme self-consciously cinematic. As a result, his version of the opera may find itself out of favor with some film fans, but much treasured by Puccini purists. The principal roles of the tragic Mimi and headstrong aspiring artist Rodolfo are sung by Barbara Hendricks and Luca Canonici. Hendricks seems a tad too healthy for the frail Mimi, but this is a common shortcoming with singers who play this part: if one is too sickly, one can't attain those crystal-clear high notes. James Conlon conducts the National Orchestra of France on the La Boheme soundtrack. As in most other adaptations of this piece, the 1989 La Boheme draws its inspiration as much from the Henri Muger novel Scenes of Bohemian Life as it does from the Puccini opera. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Barbara Hendricks, Luca Canonici, (more)
Like many uninsightful fathers, Nicola is very ambitious and hardworking and perceives himself to be a failure. He has persuaded himself that the only good thing his thirteen-year-old son can possibly do is to work harder and smarter than he himself did, so that he, at least, can fulfill his father's dreams. This end justifies any number of beatings and scoldings, along with constant admonitions to study hard and work hard. As might be expected, this abuse has no effect whatsoever, as it is not based on the boy's own ambitions, which include becoming a championship runner. Despite his mother's attempts to protect him from his aggressively insensitive and stupid father, he gets shipped off to work with some rope manufacturers, who can be counted on to work him like a dog. ~ Clarke Fountain, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Diego Abatantuono, Gian Maria Volontè, (more)
In this Italian drama, based upon the epic novel by Morante, a half-Jewish mother endeavors to conceal her identity during the Mussolini years, 1941-1947. The story is set in Rome where the mother has worked as a school teacher. It begins when the mother, who has a teenage son, is raped and impregnated by a German soldier. She later bears an epileptic son. She and her sons suffer greatly during the war. The mother too, must suffer through an internal war as her fear of persecution conflicts with the guilt of concealing her religion. More trouble ensues when her oldest son gets involved with the partisans. ~ Sandra Brennan, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Claudia Cardinale, Lambert Wilson, (more)
Originally a six-hour mini-series, Cuore lost four hours after being cut down to this sentimental feature-length film on life before the turn of the 20th century. Four soldiers meet in the army and reminisce about their childhoods in a bygone era, and these are the scenes that unfold for the majority of the next two hours. The men have been privileged to have had good teachers in school, and while their home lives differed and in some cases were difficult, nothing really stopped them from going on to a well-adjusted adult life. As 19th-century attitudes are painted in clear strokes, viewers may still wonder if life was quite as ideal as these vignettes would indicate. ~ Eleanor Mannikka, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Johnny Dorelli, Bernard Blier, (more)
Giovanni (Beppe Grillo) is a mysterious hitchhiker of unknown origins, oddly out of place in the modern world since he is quite humble in his attitude, equally compassionate to everyone, and unselfish. Giovanni is given a lift by a priest (Fernando Rey) who looks like he deals cards under the table but has the noble project of publishing the life of Jesus Christ as a novel, and he needs to find some appropriate-looking young man to pose for book illustrations as the Christian Savior himself. Giovanni, it seems, fits the bill just perfectly. As Giovanni encounters the darker side of human failings, his abilities to apparently work miracles and to convince a hardcore terrorist to change her ways, set him apart -- as does his unique, non-violent philosophy. The less-than-ideal priests cannot identify with Giovanni's viewpoints, on the contrary, they begin to conclude that he is not playing with a full deck and they have some definite plans for how to take care of this aberrant loner. ~ Eleanor Mannikka, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Beppe Grillo, Maria Schneider, (more)
The time is the 1930s and Caterina (Anna Melato) is a rather plain woman living in a small village with very little prospects for ever finding a husband -- she is already 30 and still single. Her parents worry about her future, and with the best of intentions the father decides to "buy" her a husband, a rather loutish, egocentric male with his eyes focused on the nubile maid of the household rather than the shy Caterina. Although Caterina begins to like her prospective mate, her father does not hold many illusions about the man's roving eye -- and when he finds the man in quite a compromising position with the maid, Caterina's chances for early matrimony are more or less booted out the door. ~ Eleanor Mannikka, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Stefano Madia
Adept at dissecting marriage as an essentially no-win institution, Luigi Comencini applies his directorial scalpel here through the viewpoints of ten-year-old Eugenio (Francesco Bonelli) and his parents. Giancarlo (Saverio Marconi) is a father who loves his wife, Fernanda (Dalila Di Lazzaro), and his son, but what he wants out of life is not necessarily compatible with the responsibilities of marriage and fatherhood. Likewise, Fernanda is torn between a more liberated existence and what she understands to be social restrictions. After Eugenio is abandoned on a road in the middle of nowhere by an irritated friend, a sequence of events is set in motion that highlights the underlying problems in his family. ~ Eleanor Mannikka, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Saverio Marconi, Dalila di Lazzaro, (more)
A large international cast takes part in this comedy in which the stories of numerous individuals whose cars are stalled in a massive Roman traffic jam are told. ~ Clarke Fountain, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Alberto Sordi, Orazio Orlando, (more)
Amedeo and Ofelia (Ugo Tognazzi and Mariangela Melato) own an old, fairly unprofitable apartment house in Rome. Someone has offered to buy the property for redevelopment for a lot of money, but only if the building has no tenants. Since six of its apartments are currently in use, Amedio and Ofelia decide to find ways to get every one of them emptied. In this antic comedy, they manage to blackmail a priest-tenant and have almost half the remainder arrested for crimes ranging from drug-trafficking to prostitution. ~ Clarke Fountain, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Ugo Tognazzi, Mariangela Melato, (more)
In this episodic anthology, written and directed by assorted Italian filmmakers, the political and social aspects of Italian life are chronicled. In one satirical episode, The Bomb, a bogus bomb threat at a police headquarters gradually balloons into a real terrorist plot culminating with the bombing of the police commissioner. Other episodes satirize the CIA, Christmas in Naples and pompous public officials. ~ Sandra Brennan, All Movie Guide
In this Italian mystery, a detective journeys into the rarified world of the idle rich to look into a puzzling murder. ~ Sandra Brennan, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Marcello Mastroianni, Jacqueline Bisset, (more)
Three films are gathered here under one title, and the general theme of sexual encounters unites them. In "Superman and Lady Godiva," a man working as a bouncer at an Amsterdam sex show is forced to bring his jealous wife to his workplace. She is hired as a performer and becomes a "star," much to his chagrin. The second episode (title not given) concerns a sexual encounter between an Italian father and his daughter's Swedish friend. In the final episode, "The Elevator," a high-ranking priest (a monsignor) gets stuck in an elevator with a ravishingly beautiful woman on a summer day which, in Italy, means that practically no one is in the city to rescue them. ~ Clarke Fountain, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Paolo Villaggio, Nino Manfredi, (more)
In this Italian film, part melodrama and part social/political commentary, two factory workers living in Northern Italy form a romantic connection. The woman, torn between the freedoms of the North and her traditional Sicilian values, slowly allows herself to love, then marry, her co-worker. Soon after her wedding, she dies as a result of industrial pollution from her job. ~ Clarke Fountain, All Movie Guide
Frustrated desire motivates the Sicilian newlyweds in this improbable sex comedy when they are discovered to be brother and sister just before their marriage can be consummated. They receive this news in a very unwelcome telegram, and spend much of the rest of the film trying to alleviate their frustration by various stratagems. Some of them are fairly innocent, such as novel-reading and pious works; others include seriously considering the option of incest. They have a number of embarrassing sexual encounters outside their relationship, but are saved from even more demeaning situations when a second telegram informs them that the first was definitely a mistake. ~ Clarke Fountain, All Movie Guide
In this drama, a wealthy US heiress and her partner embark upon their annual journey to Rome to play scopa, an Italian card game, with a financially struggling couple. ~ Sandra Brennan, All Movie Guide
Writer/director Luigi Comencini originally created Le Avventure di Pinocchio as a five-and-a-half-hour miniseries for Italian television. This 134-minute version, featuring various guest stars, was released theatrically. Pinocchio (Andrea Balestri) is a wooden puppet carved by Geppetto (Nino Manfredi), who is turned into a little boy by a magical fairy (Gina Lollobrigida). She insists that he be obedient and loving to his father Geppetto, but the rebellious Pinocchio tries to live independently -- and encounters many ordeals, from being turned into a donkey to getting swallowed by a whale. After he and Geppetto escape from the whale, Pinocchio is able to be the good son his father deserves. ~ Nicole Gagne, All Movie Guide
When Maria Mancuso dies suddenly before the expiration of her life-insurance policy, the insurance company sends lawyer Nanni Brà (Philippe Leroy) to investigate. He seduces Cinzia (Paola Pitagora), one of the late woman's daughters, in order to obtain more information. When he falls in love with the girl, he confesses to her his original intentions and she tries to take her own life. Nanni discovers that Maria Mancuso was murdered; Cinzia admits to the crime, then crashes the car with herself and Nanni into a truck, killing them both. ~ Nicole Gagne, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Paola Pitagora, Philippe Leroy, (more)
The famous Italian lover Casanova is portrayed by Claudio De Kunert as a child and by Leonardo Whiting as an adolescent on the verge of manhood. Planning to help the poor by going into religious law, he quickly is smitten by a bevy of beauties and by Millescudi (Senta Berger) in particular. After his first sermon as an aspiring abbot, the collection plate is flooded with love letters to the handsome young man. Casanova soon abandons his religious pursuits for more worldly pleasures. The gravely voiced Lionel Stander and Wilfred Brambell also appear in this 2 million dollar production. ~ Dan Pavlides, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Leonard Whiting, Maria Grazia Buccella, (more)
In this satire, former Italian Resistance hero Natalino (Nino Manfredi) finds himself a total failure as a civilian. He becomes a mercenary when U.S. agents hire him to assassinate a neo-Nazi spy attempting to sneak his soft-drink formula to the communists. The Americans are to pay him $100,000 for the hit. His wife Elvira (Francoise Prevost) finds someone willing to do the job for half the amount. What should have been one gunman turns into five, each one chasing the other and the former Nazi for a coveted secret formula. The comedy comes full circle when the ex-Nazi is hidden in Natalino's apartment and makes love to his wife. After all assassination attempts fail, the spy confesses and kills himself. ~ Sandra Brennan, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Nino Manfredi, Françoise Prevost, (more)
In this Italian romance, a young woman with a love for loving begins masquerading as her roommate so she can have more affairs. Her roomie is a stewardess and is seldom at home, so her ruse works well. One of her lovers is a high-ranking official at the Vatican and another works as a dentist. To keep from having an embarrassing overlap of lovers, she has created a special schedule in which she allots three days a week for each of the lovers. The final day she reserves for her college sweetheart. Mayhem ensues when the men discover the truth. Fortunately, the charming girl is able to convince each one that she loves him and him alone. ~ Sandra Brennan, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Catherine Spaak, Enrico Maria Salerno, (more)
A man learns that his lily-white son isn't quite so blameless when his other son admits that he has taken the blame for both of the siblings' wrongdoing. ~ John Bush, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Stefano Colagrande, Simone Gianozzi, (more)
Don Camillo (Fernandel) is a priest who travels to Moscow in this comedy culture clash. Don accompanies his archival communist mayor Peppone (Gino Cervi) and his wife (Leda Gloria) on a goodwill trip to the Soviet Union, and the priest is helped by the beautiful guide Nadia (Graziella Granata). Faithful fans of Fernandel and the Don Camillo series should not be disappointed. ~ Dan Pavlides, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Fernandel, Gino Cervi, (more)













