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Il posto

  • 1961
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 33min
CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
7.9/10
7.3 k
TU CALIFICACIÓN
Sandro Panseri in Il posto (1961)
A very young college graduate attempts to obtain a position with a large corporation.
Reproducir trailer3:06
1 video
21 fotos
Drama

Rebosante de grandes sueños y planes, un adolescente italiano se marcha a Milán para trabajar en una gran oficina corporativa impersonal, donde se desilusiona y se despoja de todo su individ... Leer todoRebosante de grandes sueños y planes, un adolescente italiano se marcha a Milán para trabajar en una gran oficina corporativa impersonal, donde se desilusiona y se despoja de todo su individualismo.Rebosante de grandes sueños y planes, un adolescente italiano se marcha a Milán para trabajar en una gran oficina corporativa impersonal, donde se desilusiona y se despoja de todo su individualismo.

  • Dirección
    • Ermanno Olmi
  • Guionistas
    • Ettore Lombardo
    • Ermanno Olmi
  • Elenco
    • Sandro Panseri
    • Loredana Detto
    • Corrado Aprile
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
    7.9/10
    7.3 k
    TU CALIFICACIÓN
    • Dirección
      • Ermanno Olmi
    • Guionistas
      • Ettore Lombardo
      • Ermanno Olmi
    • Elenco
      • Sandro Panseri
      • Loredana Detto
      • Corrado Aprile
    • 44Opiniones de los usuarios
    • 42Opiniones de los críticos
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
    • Premios
      • 6 premios ganados y 4 nominaciones en total

    Videos1

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 3:06
    Official Trailer

    Fotos21

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    Elenco principal8

    Editar
    Sandro Panseri
    • Domenico Cantoni
    Loredana Detto
    • Antonietta Masetti
    Corrado Aprile
    • Bit Part
    • (sin créditos)
    Guido Chiti
    • Bit Part
    • (sin créditos)
    Tullio Kezich
    Tullio Kezich
    • Psychologist
    • (sin créditos)
    Bice Melegari
    • Bit Part
    • (sin créditos)
    Mara Revel
    • Domenico's Senior Fellow Colleague
    • (sin créditos)
    Guido Spadea
    • Portioli
    • (sin créditos)
    • Dirección
      • Ermanno Olmi
    • Guionistas
      • Ettore Lombardo
      • Ermanno Olmi
    • Todo el elenco y el equipo
    • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

    Opiniones de usuarios44

    7.97.2K
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    Opiniones destacadas

    10robert-temple-1

    A late Italian Neo-realist masterpiece, of exquisite sensitivity

    This is a marvel of film-making, Director Ermanno Olmi, following in the Neo-realist mode of his predecessor Roberto Rossellini, made this as only his second feature film (his first, TIME STOOD STILL, of 1959, is little known, though apparently excellent; it appears to be unavailable with English subtitles). This film has no frills. It is a brilliantly evocative 'fly on the wall' observation of what it was like at that time in Milan to try to find and retain employment. The sadness, the disappointments, the heartache, the bullying, the exploitation are all observed without comment. The two central performances are by Sandro Panseri as the boy Domenico and Loredana Detto as the girl Anotnietta, both seeking their first jobs, and both ending up at the same huge company where they work in separate buildings and essentially never see each other again, despite having bonded and formed the beginnings of a romance. Panseri's innocent and naked performance is positively inspired, but after appearing in two further films over the subsequent four years, he retired from acting, and today apparently manages a supermarket in Milan. Loredana Detto never acted again, but she married Olmi in 1963, and they have three children. The script for this film was jointly written by Olmi and someone named Ettore Lombardo, who never wrote anything for the cinema again. (One might make a mystery film about what happened to the people involved with Olmi in this film, and call it THE CASE OF THE DISAPPEARING TALENT.) The delicacy of Olmi's handling of this film is miraculous. He realizes the Neo-realist ideal to its full. He gets as 'close to life' as one can reasonably get without being personally involved, and he observes what is happening as if he were an invisible angel monitoring human activity with a helpless sense of melancholy (remember Wim Wenders's WINGS OF DESIRE, 1987, which may have been partially inspired by this earlier style of film-making by the Italians, as Wenders is such a knowledgeable film historian). This film is infinitely sad, but then so is Life.
    TheVid

    A precise, highly-personal and thoroughly engaging film with a natural, humanistic sensitivity very rare in movies.

    Olmi delivers a involving study of one young man's initiation into the corporate structure. The lifelike ambiance and natural tone of the picture are remarkable, and the emotions it generates universal. It's hard watching the final images and not hoping for the protagonist's escape from the reality of his situation. A Criterion DVD edition excellently revives this important work from renowned Italian director, Ermanno Olmi. Simply stunning!
    10mireille

    A magical tale about a young man's initiation into adulthood.

    This is one of those rare moments in cinema when the picture really is worth a thousand words and the director has the confidence and wisdom to let the film and his actors "speak" for themselves.

    We join the film with young Domenico preparing to take the big exam to get on with a firm in the city. If he can pass the test and be hired, he will be set for life--a great thing according to his father.

    The film has a way of showing us the range of emotions and doubts that race through the young Domenico's mind as he experiences the city, working life, and even a hint of romance with a beautiful young woman at the firm. The actor is such a natural and we are captured by his sense of wonder that is so effectively conveyed through subtle looks and gestures. And the film is certainly not without its moments of humor--there are wonderful moments throughout that allow us to laugh at the ridiculous nature of the working world and the folly of ordinary people.

    This is a true masterpiece of Italian neo-realism and I strongly encourage taking the time to watch it and savor every little nuance. You will be charmed.
    9Asa_Nisi_Masa2

    Timid youthful hope, followed by a lifetime of quiet desperation

    This is a shimmeringly beautiful, subtle and very powerful movie about all-too-ordinary people aspiring for "a job for life", and falling into an existence which will kill off any inkling of vitality, individuality and creativity in them, day in, day out. Olmi isn't a filmmaker I often see discussed on this website's boards, not even in a context about Italian filmmakers. Along with Mauro Bolognini, another wonderful but seldom-mentioned fellow countryman of Olmi's, he is occasionally mentioned for The Tree of Wooden Clogs, but not much else. I'll confess I'm not overly familiar with Olmi's oeuvre myself - however, since watching his 1961 gem Il Posto about a month ago, I have barely been able to contain myself and have tirelessly recommended it right, left and centre.

    The dehumanising effect of the large corporation, with its ant-like clerks and bureaucrats becoming tiny clog in a faceless machine, is a universal and timeless theme, starting probably with Fritz Lang's Metropolis all the way down to Naomi Klein's No Logo. I never cared for Terry Gillam's Brazil, nor did I consider Sam Lowry an adequate embodiment of the "insignificant" clerk. There was something over-styled about him, something which made him ultimately hip and cool, and something gratingly farcical and rhetorical about Brazil and all its characters generally. On the other hand, Il Posto and its protagonist, the ultimate sympathetic wet rag of a clerk, is achingly real, yet at the same time a sublimely beautiful artistic creation that could probably not have been summarised as successfully by a less accomplished filmmaker. The measured, yet powerful visual satire in Il Posto is probably what I'd wished to see in Gillam's movie, and didn't.

    The New Year's Eve office party scene is pure genius and should be studied in film school as a cinematic sequence close to technical, thematical, aesthetic and atmospheric perfection. It conveys so much at once: humour, pathos, social satire and extreme loneliness, besides being beautiful to behold and incredibly original cinematography-wise. It is at once highly artistic and entertaining, accessible. Quiet desperation: there's no better way to describe these characters' condition. Though Olmi doesn't spare us their selfishness and pettiness, he never fails to depict them with humanity and respect, thus showing his eye is a disillusioned, but not misanthropic or cynical one.

    One of the final scenes in the movie, in which a gaggle of clerks fight for the privilege of sitting at a recently defunct colleague's front desk, is one of the most depressing sights I've set eyes on. And yet, you can't help but feel deeply sorry for these hyenas in cheap suits and neon-pale faces, rather than feel angry or scornful against them. You just want to scream to Domenico to "Get out while you can!!!" The poor, gormless, meek, dork-boy, bumbling through his first taste of a mediocre adulthood, a boy you fear might probably never grow enough of an awareness or backbone to react against such a dehumanising system. Antonietta, also know as Magali, the pretty girl he meets during the company's selection process of the applicants and fast develops an attraction for, seems to have more individuality, more resources to survive the dehumanisation process. But then, you think for a moment about the fact that from a very early age, Domenico had been designated as the one who'd drop out of school early so that he could go out and contribute to the family's meagre income. Meanwhile, his younger brother had been chosen between the two to continue studying, perhaps even get a high school diploma or degree, thus fulfilling himself and improving his lot. One would assume that from childhood, the milder Domenico had been treated as the "dim" one, the one who'd rightfully sacrifice himself to allow his more promising brother to emerge out of their family's working-class, suburban obscurity. The scary part is that this isn't simply a dramatic plot device to increase the pathos - it's so plausible and depressingly true to life for its time and context!

    I was also deeply moved and touched by the fleeting appearance of the character of the older, married man who miserably fails the first written test (the one that the corporation's applicants take in an empty, grand old palace, so at odds with the suburban squallor and Northern Italian, typical 1960s industrial modernity). He embodies, epitomises and belongs to pre-economic miracle Italy, back when illiteracy and a rural existence was the norm. Probably either almost illiterate, or unable to apply even the most basic principles of arithmetic, he's a throwback to another era, which had ended roughly around the 1950s. He desperately tries to fit into the city, the burgeoning industrial North, the new Italy, but miserably fails before even getting anywhere. How will he and all those like him survive in this dehumanising shift into a brand new, industrial era? It's heart-breaking. Though Il Posto is also so much about Italy and its staggeringly fast move throughout the 50s and 60s from backward rural country to world industrial power, it remains first and foremost a universal, timeless movie. Very highly recommended.
    ItalianGerry

    A new job.

    If you summarize the plot of this remarkable movie, it gives you absolutely no idea of how good it is. A shy young man applies for a job, his first ever, with a large corporation in Milan. If he gets it he will be "sistemato" (all set) for life. He takes the entrance test, observes the other applicants, meets a friendly girl also seeking employment. We see in flashback some of the desperate lives of the other employees. The boy gets the job, begins working, finito!

    IL POSTO (THE JOB) is more than that, however. It is a sensitive look at what people are and what impersonalized modern industrial society is capable of doing to their humanity. There is a fine Christmas party scene in which people's loneliness outweighs their frolic. In the movie's understated but unforgettable final image, our young hero looks oh so content working in his secure new job in his little back row desk, but the sounds of the mimeograph machines (remember those?) getting louder tell us that he too someday will become lost and crushed as others have been before him.

    The film was renamed "The Sound of Trumpets" upon its initial U.S. release, a title which makes no sense for this gentle yet incisive work from the director who would later give us THE TREE OF WOODEN CLOGS and CAMMINA CAMMINA.

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    Argumento

    Editar

    ¿Sabías que…?

    Editar
    • Trivia
      Like Domenico, Ermanno Olmi clerked in a Milanese company for over ten years.
    • Citas

      Old Man on the Street: What's going on?

      Domenico Cantoni: Tests.

      Old Man on the Street: Tests? What for?

      Domenico Cantoni: If we pass the test, we get a job.

      Old Man on the Street: What will they think of next?

    • Versiones alternativas
      Cinemateca Portuguesa (Lisbon) in two sessions «In Memoriam Ermanno Olmi», September 2018, has shown the film with an extra scene which edited out of the film's "last cut" in 1961.
    • Conexiones
      Referenced in Siskel & Ebert & the Movies: Deja Vu/Tenacious D in the Pick of Destiny/Deck the Halls/The Fountain/The History Boys (2006)

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    Preguntas Frecuentes19

    • How long is The Sound of Trumpets?Con tecnología de Alexa

    Detalles

    Editar
    • Fecha de lanzamiento
      • 12 de julio de 1962 (Portugal)
    • País de origen
      • Italia
    • Idioma
      • Italiano
    • También se conoce como
      • The Sound of Trumpets
    • Locaciones de filmación
      • Meda, Milan, Lombardia, Italia
    • Productoras
      • 24 Horses
      • Titanus
    • Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro

    Taquilla

    Editar
    • Presupuesto
      • USD 55,000 (estimado)
    • Total en EE. UU. y Canadá
      • USD 9,080
    • Fin de semana de estreno en EE. UU. y Canadá
      • USD 2,581
      • 22 dic 2002
    • Total a nivel mundial
      • USD 9,080
    Ver la información detallada de la taquilla en IMDbPro

    Especificaciones técnicas

    Editar
    • Tiempo de ejecución
      1 hora 33 minutos
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Mezcla de sonido
      • Mono
    • Relación de aspecto
      • 1.37 : 1

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