IMDb-BEWERTUNG
7,2/10
4611
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuThe son of a shepherd embarks in the quest of emancipating himself from a tough lifestyle that his condition and his father force on him.The son of a shepherd embarks in the quest of emancipating himself from a tough lifestyle that his condition and his father force on him.The son of a shepherd embarks in the quest of emancipating himself from a tough lifestyle that his condition and his father force on him.
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- Nominiert für 1 BAFTA Award
- 10 Gewinne & 1 Nominierung insgesamt
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Padre Pardone, the master piece of theTaviani brothers tells the story of the coming of age of a young illiterate shepherd who's confronted to the tyranny of his father and the inevitable rebellion that happens when the child becomes a man. This movie which tells the true story of the writer Gavino Ledda gives an universal vibe. The relation between father and son is based on love, authority and violence. More then just a family portrait, Padre Padrone is about society. Not just the modern italian society, but each society at each time. This story is about changes and conflict between generation and mentalities. The movie has some really powerful scene like the one when the fathers cry with his son in his arms. The score is composed mainly of sardinian musics, The sardinian score is heartbreaking, just like the movie is....
This film made in the late seventies in Italy describes a rural family in the island of Sardinia. One year later, another film on agrarian society, "L'albero degli Zoccoli", also made in Italy, was a smashing success. The success among the italian audiences was attributed to a nostalgic remembrance of agrarian societies and lifestyle, also seen in Bertolucci's "1900". This film had a profound effect in many third-world countries. People from Turkey and from Madascar that came from rural patriarcal families whose economy was based on sheep farming saw this movie as their life manifesto. The struggles of the young son as he grows in his father's sheep farm are depicted in Taviani's style of symbolism. Notable is the army buddy that is a medical school graduate played by Nanni Moretti, who eventually became one of Italy's current leading film directors. See this movie with "Banditi a Orgosolo" (1960) if you can find it.
The life of an Italian peasant who was forced out of school by his father so as to be a shepherd in the remote country side. The loneliness and the father's brutality has an effect on the boy who grows up to be a late learner in reading and writing. This new knowledge he uses as a weapon against the everlasting battle with his tyrant father. The first half drags on but the second half all comes together.
Despite the other good comments here, I was really shocked at the number of others who put in their two cents who hated this movie. I saw it in a theater shortly after its original release, then several times on video in the late eighties. I hadn't watched it again until a couple of nights ago, mainly as a reaction to seeing some of the imbecilic remarks here. It's scary because after seeing the film again I realize that Hollywood has alot to answer for in manufacturing twisted junkfood audience expectatations with their atrociously slick homogenization of already shallow stories, push button audience emotion manipulation... oh, well, you get the idea. People fed a constant diet of McDonalds don't recognize a good steak when they bite into one.
PADRE PADRONE integrates nearly documentary footage seamlessly with a very realistic, often funny, often poignant but never manipulative depiction of what it's like to grow up the first born son of a nearly impoverished Sardinian shepherd. The beatings the boy receives from his tyrannical father are convincingly shown but in such a way that, especially if you've ever been on a set or involved in filmmaking, you can see that the punches and slaps could be easily pulled without the audience knowing it. The boy's struggle as he grows into a man to express himself and learn how to read and write, no matter how fierce his father's opposition, is truly inspiring because it is so matter-of-fact, so intense but without a shred of the narrative tricks (such as treacly music cues) that Hollywood would pull to needlessly manipulate cheap audience emotion.
There's one scene right near the end just before the young man leaves home again for the final time where he has to go to retrieve the family suitcase from under his parents' bed. His angry, powerless dad sits on the edge as his son gropes under him for the suitcase. The two have already come to blows and life-threatening words. Suddenly the young man sinks his head against his father's leg in a brief second of weary contradictory affection. His father instinctively moves his hand to, at first, comfort the boy. But before his fingers can even touch his son's hair he is possessed by temper and raises his hand to strike him instead. However, we don't see if he strikes him or not because the Tavianis cut to black then we next see the son leaving town, going on to his destiny as a linguist and bestselling writer. This simple scene is one of the most unbearably moving in any film from the last thirty years and indicative of the general excellence of the entire movie. The Taviani brothers have made many other good films from ALLONSANFAN with Marcello Mastroianni, through this, through NIGHT OF SHOOTING STARS and the excellent, 3 hour long anthology of stories by Pirandello, KAOS.
PADRE PADRONE integrates nearly documentary footage seamlessly with a very realistic, often funny, often poignant but never manipulative depiction of what it's like to grow up the first born son of a nearly impoverished Sardinian shepherd. The beatings the boy receives from his tyrannical father are convincingly shown but in such a way that, especially if you've ever been on a set or involved in filmmaking, you can see that the punches and slaps could be easily pulled without the audience knowing it. The boy's struggle as he grows into a man to express himself and learn how to read and write, no matter how fierce his father's opposition, is truly inspiring because it is so matter-of-fact, so intense but without a shred of the narrative tricks (such as treacly music cues) that Hollywood would pull to needlessly manipulate cheap audience emotion.
There's one scene right near the end just before the young man leaves home again for the final time where he has to go to retrieve the family suitcase from under his parents' bed. His angry, powerless dad sits on the edge as his son gropes under him for the suitcase. The two have already come to blows and life-threatening words. Suddenly the young man sinks his head against his father's leg in a brief second of weary contradictory affection. His father instinctively moves his hand to, at first, comfort the boy. But before his fingers can even touch his son's hair he is possessed by temper and raises his hand to strike him instead. However, we don't see if he strikes him or not because the Tavianis cut to black then we next see the son leaving town, going on to his destiny as a linguist and bestselling writer. This simple scene is one of the most unbearably moving in any film from the last thirty years and indicative of the general excellence of the entire movie. The Taviani brothers have made many other good films from ALLONSANFAN with Marcello Mastroianni, through this, through NIGHT OF SHOOTING STARS and the excellent, 3 hour long anthology of stories by Pirandello, KAOS.
(1977) Padre Padrone
(In Italian with English subtitles)
AUTO BIOGRAPHICAL
Adapted from the book by Gavino Ledda written and directed by Paolo Taviani and Vittorio Taviani that has a father (Omero Antonutti) pulling his very young son, Gavino (Fabrizio Forte) out of class to get him to work as his sheepherder. He does though promises his son a proper education by the time he reaches the age of twenty years. As we see Gavino as a little boy with strict orders to the time the movie jumps to as soon as he turns twenty years old, Saverio Marconi how he obtained his first musical instrument, which is an accordion. And of course, when Gavino's father promised him an education, he only able to learn how read and write through the correspondence once he was enlisted in the military.
That although the father had other siblings, why is he the most hard on him when there are others who can work on the farming and the gardening as well. It states the father's abuses as well as his ways but without any explanation or clarity about his reasons why he does the things that he does which raises more questions than it answers, and instead expect viewers to accept the way it was.
At the opening of the movie, viewers see an adult man carving the twigs out of a thin tree limb before he hands it to the father who was pulling his son out of class at a very young age. At the time I didn't think much of it up until the very end where he is shown again and this time he tells viewers he is Gavino Ledda and is 35 years old. That the young man I saw at the opening is what "Gavino Ledda" looked like now the current time the movie was made back in 1977.
It was also interesting how, the we be able to hear what some of the characters are thinking and not just it's two main characters of Gavino and his father.
Adapted from the book by Gavino Ledda written and directed by Paolo Taviani and Vittorio Taviani that has a father (Omero Antonutti) pulling his very young son, Gavino (Fabrizio Forte) out of class to get him to work as his sheepherder. He does though promises his son a proper education by the time he reaches the age of twenty years. As we see Gavino as a little boy with strict orders to the time the movie jumps to as soon as he turns twenty years old, Saverio Marconi how he obtained his first musical instrument, which is an accordion. And of course, when Gavino's father promised him an education, he only able to learn how read and write through the correspondence once he was enlisted in the military.
That although the father had other siblings, why is he the most hard on him when there are others who can work on the farming and the gardening as well. It states the father's abuses as well as his ways but without any explanation or clarity about his reasons why he does the things that he does which raises more questions than it answers, and instead expect viewers to accept the way it was.
At the opening of the movie, viewers see an adult man carving the twigs out of a thin tree limb before he hands it to the father who was pulling his son out of class at a very young age. At the time I didn't think much of it up until the very end where he is shown again and this time he tells viewers he is Gavino Ledda and is 35 years old. That the young man I saw at the opening is what "Gavino Ledda" looked like now the current time the movie was made back in 1977.
It was also interesting how, the we be able to hear what some of the characters are thinking and not just it's two main characters of Gavino and his father.
Wusstest du schon
- WissenswertesAkira Kurosawa included this as one of his favorite movies in his book A Dream is a Genius.
- VerbindungenFeatured in La macchina cinema: Il travagliato sogno di una vita (1978)
- SoundtracksOverture from 'Die Fledermaus'
Composed by Johann Strauss
Top-Auswahl
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Details
- Laufzeit1 Stunde 53 Minuten
- Sound-Mix
- Seitenverhältnis
- 1.66 : 1
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By what name was Mein Vater, mein Herr (1977) officially released in India in English?
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