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IMDbPro

Tee mit Mussolini

Originaltitel: Un tè con Mussolini
  • 1999
  • 6
  • 1 Std. 57 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
6,9/10
14.768
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Cher, Judi Dench, Maggie Smith, Lily Tomlin, and Joan Plowright in Tee mit Mussolini (1999)
An orphaned Italian boy is raised amongst a circle of British and American women living in Mussolini's Italy before and during World War II.
trailer wiedergeben2:10
1 Video
46 Fotos
DramaKomödieKrieg

Ein verwaister italienischer Junge wächst in einem Kreis britischer und amerikanischer Frauen auf, die vor und während des Zweiten Weltkriegs in Mussolinis Italien leben.Ein verwaister italienischer Junge wächst in einem Kreis britischer und amerikanischer Frauen auf, die vor und während des Zweiten Weltkriegs in Mussolinis Italien leben.Ein verwaister italienischer Junge wächst in einem Kreis britischer und amerikanischer Frauen auf, die vor und während des Zweiten Weltkriegs in Mussolinis Italien leben.

  • Regie
    • Franco Zeffirelli
  • Drehbuch
    • John Mortimer
    • Franco Zeffirelli
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • Maggie Smith
    • Judi Dench
    • Joan Plowright
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    6,9/10
    14.768
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Regie
      • Franco Zeffirelli
    • Drehbuch
      • John Mortimer
      • Franco Zeffirelli
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • Maggie Smith
      • Judi Dench
      • Joan Plowright
    • 169Benutzerrezensionen
    • 59Kritische Rezensionen
    • 53Metascore
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
    • 1 BAFTA Award gewonnen
      • 5 Gewinne & 3 Nominierungen insgesamt

    Videos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 2:10
    Trailer

    Fotos46

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    Topbesetzung48

    Ändern
    Maggie Smith
    Maggie Smith
    • Lady Hester
    Judi Dench
    Judi Dench
    • Arabella
    Joan Plowright
    Joan Plowright
    • Mary
    Cher
    Cher
    • Elsa
    Lily Tomlin
    Lily Tomlin
    • Georgie
    Baird Wallace
    • Luca
    Charlie Lucas
    • Luca (child)
    Massimo Ghini
    Massimo Ghini
    • Paolo
    Paolo Seganti
    Paolo Seganti
    • Vittorio
    Claudio Spadaro
    Claudio Spadaro
    • Mussolini
    Mino Bellei
    • Cesare
    Paul Chequer
    Paul Chequer
    • Wilfred
    Tessa Pritchard
    • Connie
    Michael Williams
    Michael Williams
    • British Consul
    Paula Jacobs
    • Molly
    Bettine Milne
    • Edith
    Hazel Parsons
    • Hazel
    Helen Stirling
    • Ursula
    • Regie
      • Franco Zeffirelli
    • Drehbuch
      • John Mortimer
      • Franco Zeffirelli
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
    • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

    Benutzerrezensionen169

    6,914.7K
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    Empfohlene Bewertungen

    9WillieC3

    Un tè con mussolini é bello!

    This film could have been titled 'four crazy grannies' for the marvelous portrayal of little old ladies, each more eccentric than the next. Like the comedy team of Matthau and Lemon, Dench, Smith and Plowright have a chemistry that is explosive.

    Maggie Smith played a role that she has spent a lifetime perfecting. She captivates us as a snobbish dowager, tantalizes us with her improbable tea party and brings us to tears when she demonstrates her capacity to grow.

    Although she may not have wowed us with her Shakespeare, Joan Plowright's compassion for her sudden charge made me wish (that at age 32) she would adopt me. Her love of the classics, remind us that art, literature and friends can help us transcend life's constant miseries.

    Cher demonstrated that she could act in any time period. While Dame Judi Dench (not allowing herself to be typecast as a Queen) portrays a particularly pitiful creature as an aging artist with more passion than talent.

    This film sends a clear message to Hollywood: experience and talent win out over T&A.

    Applause at the end of this movie is to be expected.

    Brava!
    8marcin_kukuczka

    Tea with Charm, Elegance, Nostalgia, Affection and Decent Entertainment

    Tuscany, 1935, a group of ladies walk along the streets of the city deservedly considered one of the world's art pearls, Florence. We don't know the ladies at first but, in time, we find them intelligent women who perfectly understand English but hardly understand orders. These are Scorpioni, elderly English women who will play a decisive role in the story as well as in the life of a young boy, Luca, strikingly similar to the director himself in his youthful years, Franco Zeffirelli...

    Zeffirelli's autobiographical movie TEA WITH MUSSOLINI is a charming sentimental piece of work the action of which takes place in the Italy of the 1930s and 1940s: the hardest period not only in the lives of those many who were living then but for the entire 20th century history, when, as many readers will probably agree with me, humanity seemed to be conquered by infernal ideologies and bestial hatred. Yet, according to what Zeffirelli shows us in the movie, even in those darkest days, there was also room for beauty protection, care, art admiration and mutual help. As a Zeffirelli's fan, I consider TEA WITH MUSSOLINI one of the director's best films. But not because it only shows how bad war was. That is something most of us already know well. I love the film for other reasons. I like it because...

    ...there are moments when you will cry, when you will think and when you will genuinely laugh. A proper balance of emotions supplied by the director makes the movie a very decent entertainment filled with affection, sorrow, even nostalgia but also fun, charm and comfort. Who can possibly skip the scene of football match, for instance? I also laughed openly at the moment the ladies teach the soldiers saying "Good night". Isn't that a useful way to teach good manners and a foreign language at the same time? The moving moment in the orphanage will leave your eyes teary and the words of Ms Wallace about our contact with dead people may put you to nostalgia. But not for long. This fact of the film's "heart" goes in pairs with brilliant musical score Zeffirelli is famous for in his movies galore. What depth is there in this music and what supply of positive emotions!

    ...there are, except for variety of moments, beautiful Tuscan landscapes which make the movie a true postcard from Florence, San Gimignano and a true promotion of the Florentine art. This is also in accordance with the "soul" that Zeffirelli is so deeply attached to. The colorful hills around San Gimignano and the unique flowers under the Tuscany's sun leave hardly anyone indifferent. Consider, for instance, Luca's introduction of San Gimignano while he follows the bus with the ladies.

    ...there are foremost genuinely flawless performances that have to be linked to the deep development of characters. That is the aspect I'd like to pay more attention to in my comment. The ladies who occur to be at the focus are unforgettable. They supply the partly Italian movie with the truly English spirit. Maggie Smith does a wonderful job as Lady Hester: elegant, well mannered but also naive in her confidence in Mussolini and reluctant of Americans, the lady who drinks the spectacular but tragic tea with the duce. Judi Dench is memorable as Arabella who has drunk the wine of Florence, warmed her hands with the fire of Boticelli and Michelangelo and wants to share this inner experience with other people. Joan Plowright is, as usual, genuine and unforgettable. She fits to particular roles and although she has carried some other brilliant roles in latest Zeffirelli movies, Ms Mary Wallace seems to be the character for her. Joan portrays a warm hearted lady who is not only a good cook introducing Luca to bacon with eggs but also a great intellectual so much in love with Shakespeare. Cher representing the American side is also very appealing as Elsa - a luxurious woman with a flair for paintings, a Picasso connoisseur whose cup of tea is not only modern art but also good heart. She once helped Luca and the time will come for her to be helped in the spirit of Shakespeare "Love thyself less"... Through these different characters, Zeffirelli appears to present the wonder of diversity in human beings. The two seemingly contradictory characters, Elsa and Lady Hester, seem to be of totally opposite natures. Yet, even they turn out to have something in common... Finally a mention must be made of Baird Wallace who perfectly portrays Luca as a youngster and Charlie Lucas as Luca a little boy. Great young talents!

    There is, finally, a great message of the film: that war cannot ruin the world, that the power of spirit is endless, that real art is born in the deep of one's heart. The final scene when Arabella says at the remained fresco of Santa Fina Funeral "Let Her sleep" seems to symbolize an eternal human quest for the sublime and the mysterious presence. If the "presence" is there, we shouldn't have anything to worry about. The horror of war is ceased and the historic sounds of San Gimignano bells ringing out joyfully together with the director's message proclaim the reconciliation and peace. The twin towers stand as silent witnesses...

    Franco Zeffirelli, we should indeed appreciate art since it is the art that may bring out the genius of mankind.
    Philby-3

    Where were you in the war, maestro?

    This is a very European movie. Whereas Hollywood overstates, Europe understates. The story is based on the autobiography of Franco Zeffirelli, born in 1922, who became a prominent Italian stage director and achieved world fame as a director of filmed stage pieces such as "Romeo and Juliet," "Hamlet, and "La Traviata." The film deals with the years 1935-44. After the death of his mother Zeffirelli, or Luca in the film, an illegitimate child more or less rejected by his father, was looked after by a group of eccentric art-loving English ladies who had made Florence their home - on their terms. The locals call them the "Scorpioni" - a tribute to their acid tongues. When Mussolini declared war on Britain in 1940, the ladies were interned in a beautiful mountaintop village near Florence, guarded by a couple of long-suffering policeman, their lifestyle of sketching, painting, art appreciation and fine dining scarcely changing.

    The setting is the Florentine treasure troves of Tuscan art, the Uffizi, Il Duomo and the Academy. The English are led by three grand dames of the theatre, Joan Plowright as Arabella, Luca's chief protector, Maggie Smith, and Judy Dench (with her real life husband Michael Williams in a supporting role as the British consul.). Then there are two equally larger than life Americans, a retired but still glamorous movie star played by Cher, and a bike-riding lesbian archaeologist played by Lily Tomlin. Most of the Italian characters are overshadowed by all this Anglo ego. (Or maybe it's just poor dubbing, or John Mortimer's part in the scriptwriting). The two boys playing Luca at different ages are good looking but the older one in particular is a bit vacuous, and Cher's impossibly handsome Italian boyfriend puts in a wooden performance.

    There are a couple of plot-lines (will Cher escape the Jewish round-up, will the ladies make it through the war OK) and the occasional funny scene but the interest is really in the characters. Not that all of them are particularly attractive people. Maggie Smith's Lady Hester, widow of a former British Ambassador to Italy, is a dreadful old snob with hardly any brains who likes the fascists and has scarcely a good word for anybody else except her late husband. She engineers the tea party with Il Duce, fondly imagining that Mussolini himself will ensure the ladies' safety in Florence. A few days later the local fascists tip them out of the Uffizi gallery where they were accustomed to take tea while they sketched the old masters. Yet at the end she does show a little genuine good grace when she intervenes to help Cher.

    It's a curious piece, reminiscent of "Life is Beautiful" - a light comedy with a deadly serious titanic struggle between good and evil going on in the background, a background which seems altogether too gorgeous to accommodate such evil. Good, represented by a Scottish major, triumphs in the end, only to be put in his place by the Scorpioni. Zeffirelli here pays his artistic and personal debt to them. Wacky though they were, the Scorpioni did know the difference between good and evil, or at least the difference between good art and bad art, and they taught Zeffirelli well.
    FlorenceLawrence

    Entertaining, Educational and extremely well acted

    Another Judi Dench film that in no way disappoints.

    This film opens the mind even more to that important chapter in history and lets you look from various perspectives at events.

    I found it a really fascinating film, absolutely beautiful cinematography.

    Excellent story telling, narrative, really well paced and put across.

    And wonderfully acted across the board, from main characters to all the supporting cast, I did not realise Cher was such a good actress.

    Stories like this based on fact, are so wonderful.

    And the movie captures Florence, so pleasingly, you will long to visit.

    A welcome break from the mindless action flicks.
    Emaisie39

    Cher and an all-star cast make this wartime soaper memorable

    After nearly 20 years as a top pop and television star, Cher suddenly skyrocketed to film stardom in the mid-80's, walked off with an Academy Award, ranked among the top ten box-office stars and just as suddenly disappeared from the big screen in 1991 after one last hit "Mermaids"(1990) cleaned up at cinemas. In 1999 she made a tremendous comeback with a multimillion selling CD "Believe"(Warner Bros, 1998) and most impressively returned to the big screen with a luminous performance in Franco Zefferelli's "Tea With Mussolini"(MGM,1999). Reviews were mixed but after I saw this in the movie theater, I felt the film was rather good. Based on an autobiography by Zefferelli recounting his early years trying to survive the Nazi-Mussolini atrocities of WWII. During this dangerous time Zefferelli was protected by a coterie of socialite dowagers played splendidly by Maggie Smith, Judi Dench, Joan Plowright, Lily Tomlin and of course Cher who was perfectly cast as a gorgeous Jewish chanteuse. The story has some holes and the film was probably edited down too much for its US release that cause some continuity issues but this is overall a charming, thoughtful period piece highlighted by Cher at her latter day peak. Shame this success did not resuscitate her dormant film career. She has made nothing of note since.

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    Handlung

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    • Wissenswertes
      Cher has stated that the only reason she took the part of Elsa was because Writer and Director Franco Zeffirelli said he could only see her and no other actress in the role.
    • Patzer
      The tanks the Germans ride in are, in fact, U.S. Army M4 Shermans, not German-built Panzers.
    • Zitate

      Lady Hester: The Germans and the Italians couldn't get rid of us. There is absolutely no reason why we should surrender to the Scots.

    • Alternative Versionen
      The MGM DVD, ISBN 0-7928-4300-2, is missing least one shot: The original tea with Mussolini scene ends with Mussolini forcing himself upon the reporter, forcing her onto his desk (i.e., he rapes her.) This DVD omits that ending and leaves the reporter's change in behavior unexplained.
    • Verbindungen
      Featured in Siskel & Ebert & the Movies: Star Wars: Episode I - The Phantom Menace (1999)
    • Soundtracks
      Mattinata Fiorentina
      Written by Giovanni D'Anzi (as D'Anzi) and Michele Galdieri (as Galdieri)

      Performed by Alberto Rabagliati

    Top-Auswahl

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    Details

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    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • 6. Januar 2000 (Deutschland)
    • Herkunftsländer
      • Vereinigtes Königreich
      • Italien
    • Offizieller Standort
      • MGM
    • Sprachen
      • Englisch
      • Italienisch
    • Auch bekannt als
      • Tea with Mussolini
    • Drehorte
      • Florenz, Toskana, Italien
    • Produktionsfirmen
      • Medusa Film
      • Cattleya
      • Cineritmo
    • Weitere beteiligte Unternehmen bei IMDbPro anzeigen

    Box Office

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    • Budget
      • 12.000.000 $ (geschätzt)
    • Bruttoertrag in den USA und Kanada
      • 14.401.563 $
    • Eröffnungswochenende in den USA und in Kanada
      • 1.633.183 $
      • 16. Mai 1999
    • Weltweiter Bruttoertrag
      • 14.401.563 $
    Weitere Informationen zur Box Office finden Sie auf IMDbPro.

    Technische Daten

    Ändern
    • Laufzeit
      • 1 Std. 57 Min.(117 min)
    • Farbe
      • Color
    • Sound-Mix
      • DTS
      • Dolby Digital
    • Seitenverhältnis
      • 1.85 : 1

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