ÉVALUATION IMDb
7,3/10
2,2 k
MA NOTE
Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueA portrait of the people, the defects, and the peculiarities of Naples in six different vignettes.A portrait of the people, the defects, and the peculiarities of Naples in six different vignettes.A portrait of the people, the defects, and the peculiarities of Naples in six different vignettes.
- Prix
- 3 victoires et 2 nominations au total
Pasquale Cennamo
- Don Carmine Savarone (segment "Il guappo")
- (as Pasquale Gennano)
Lars Borgström
- Federico - the Doorkeeper (segment "I giocatori")
- (as L. Borgoström)
Avis en vedette
10zkasher
"L'oro di Napoli" is the kind of movie which has everything in it. Human emotions, good and evil in Humankind, great sceneries of Napoli and its Golf, great music, great actors and most of all a genius director, Vittorio De Sica.
This is the kind of movie one may watch again and again without getting bored.
As for myself, I even took a trip to Napoli on August 2001, to find out the beautiful sites where the movie took place.
I found the beautiful "Castello Dell'Ovo" and the "Fontana Dell'Immacolatella", which are not mentioned by name in the movie. Amazingly both sites look the same as in 1954, as well as some neighboring buildings.
I managed finding a collection of the most beautiful Neapolitan Canzoni (Songs), including the song `A Marechiaro' which plays at the end of the movie, a song I cherished for long, before watching the movie.
To summarize, as far as I am concerned, `L'Oro Di Napoli' (The Gold of Napoli), constitutes a genuine treasure in the history of movies, which I'll always cherish deep in my heart.
Zeev Kasher
This is the kind of movie one may watch again and again without getting bored.
As for myself, I even took a trip to Napoli on August 2001, to find out the beautiful sites where the movie took place.
I found the beautiful "Castello Dell'Ovo" and the "Fontana Dell'Immacolatella", which are not mentioned by name in the movie. Amazingly both sites look the same as in 1954, as well as some neighboring buildings.
I managed finding a collection of the most beautiful Neapolitan Canzoni (Songs), including the song `A Marechiaro' which plays at the end of the movie, a song I cherished for long, before watching the movie.
To summarize, as far as I am concerned, `L'Oro Di Napoli' (The Gold of Napoli), constitutes a genuine treasure in the history of movies, which I'll always cherish deep in my heart.
Zeev Kasher
Vittorio De Sica's tribute to Napoli where he spent several years as a youth. It's a six part anthology linked only by the location (in the U. S. two of the segments were cut, but have now been restored). The portmanteau film blends comedy and drama and has themes of jealousy, sexuality, greed and vanity throughout - all aspects of Italian life as it were.
The most serious chapter, "Teresa", stars Silvanna Mangano as a tainted title character trapped into a marriage of convenience. The most famous is the comedic "Pizza on Credit" featuring Sophia Loren in her breakout role as the duplicitous wife of a humble sidewalk restaurant owner. The best is the briefest, "Funeralino" which is an almost dialog-less journey of a woman (Theresa De Vita) who leads a funeral procession through the streets of the city for her deceased young child. Simple, poignant. De Sica himself stars as "The Gambler" as a henpecked Count who has to sneak away from the Countess in order to place penny-ante bets. The other shorts star Toto (who got top billing) and Eduardo de Filippo.
As with most omnibus films, the quality varies made all the more noticeable in that the opening and closing ones are the weakest. The movie did make Loren a huge star and De Sica does manage to do more than merely make a picturesque travelogue. There is some real poetry in depicting a wide variety of Naples' inhabitants and Mangano is superb.
The most serious chapter, "Teresa", stars Silvanna Mangano as a tainted title character trapped into a marriage of convenience. The most famous is the comedic "Pizza on Credit" featuring Sophia Loren in her breakout role as the duplicitous wife of a humble sidewalk restaurant owner. The best is the briefest, "Funeralino" which is an almost dialog-less journey of a woman (Theresa De Vita) who leads a funeral procession through the streets of the city for her deceased young child. Simple, poignant. De Sica himself stars as "The Gambler" as a henpecked Count who has to sneak away from the Countess in order to place penny-ante bets. The other shorts star Toto (who got top billing) and Eduardo de Filippo.
As with most omnibus films, the quality varies made all the more noticeable in that the opening and closing ones are the weakest. The movie did make Loren a huge star and De Sica does manage to do more than merely make a picturesque travelogue. There is some real poetry in depicting a wide variety of Naples' inhabitants and Mangano is superb.
10clanciai
Vittorio de Sica knew his home town Naples by heart, as he, like his favourite actress Sofia Loren, practically had grown up there from the gutter. In these six episodes are reflected different insights and aspects of Napolitan life, reflecting both comedy, tragedy, drama and, as always in de Sica's films, deep humanity. One of the episodes is dedicated entirely to a funeral procession of a dead child. The most dramatic episode is the fifth with Silvana Mangano getting married to an unknown man, naturally she is shy and feels rather uncertain about the venture, and gradually the whole scheme of the situation unfolds, and she naturally reacts. Her performance is the most memorable in this film. Sophia Loren is still very young here and brilliant as a pizza hostess selling in the streets with her husband and extricating herself magnificently out of a scandal. Vittorio de Sica plays the lead himself in one of the episodes, actually making a satire out of himself, as he was a great gambler himself and needed some detachment and to handle the situation, which this sequence illustrates perfectly. The brilliant comedian Totó introduces the episodes in a very domestic situation of outrageous difficulties and awkwardness, and he manages it in a very Italian way. In brief, these six chapters of daily life in Naples in 1954 will go through to eternity with the rest of de Sica's films as timeless and ageless expressions of deep sympathy and keen warm-hearted observation.
I am Italian and I saw this movie on TV a few days ago. I had not seen it in the past. Totò is absolutely fantastic in his role. But the most astonishing episode is that of the 'funeralino', the funeral of a child: that is very 'neapolitan' to me. Sorrow and attention to manners are co-existent and you never know whether it is true sorrow or pure acting. Paolo Stoppa is also excellent in his role as a new widower. Of course, the movie is quoted because of Sofia Loren, who was helping her husband in his job of making pizzas. This is the movie where her nickname 'la pizzaiola' came from. While watching it, I did not realize that it had been made so many years ago. It well deserves to be seen.
A masterwork about Naples directed by a Neapolitan that really has it all. As with all 'portmanteau' films there are segments that 'appeal' more than others although here all of them have merit. The 'wow' factor obviously belongs to 'Pizza on Credit' in which a lusty, unfaithful wife pretends to have mislaid her wedding ring in the pizza dough. No director brought out the raw, earthy sensuality of Sophia Loren as well as de Sica who apparently choreographed her every move, gesture and inflection. Bringing them together proved a masterstroke by Carlo Ponti and as we know the de Sica/Loren partnership reaped rich rewards.
The segment called 'The Gambler' featuring de Sica himself as an impoverished nobleman is masterful. Just how many hopefuls he auditioned before casting Piero Bilancioni as the servant's son who keeps beating him at cards is anyone's guess but the boy is stupendous and one wonders what became of him.
Personally the story that stays with me most features Silvana Mangano as Teresa, a former prostitute who is faced with a tough choice between being the mistress of a large house and denied a husband's love or going back to her old 'profession'. The scene where she wavers and goes from tearfulness to defiant resolution is La Mangano at her most magnificent and is certainly one of the finest moments in Italian cinema.
Music is by Alessandro Cicognigni, a regular de Sica collaborator and Carlo Montuori, who went on to film 'Bicycle Thieves', is behind the camera. The story by Giuseppe Marotta is adapted by the ubiquitous Cesare Zavattini who also had a hand in the screenplay.
De Sica himself once said that 'Neapolitans, like children, always look good on camera' but in this he was being unduly modest.
A truly magical film of which one can never tire.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThe kid Gennarino is played by Pierino Bilancioni (wrongly listed ad Pierino Bilancione), at his only movie appearance. As an adult Bilancioni became a well-known and appreciated ice cream maker and owned a successful cafe in Posillipo (Naples). He received many awards for his activity, in particular for his hazelnut cream.
- Citations
Don Saverio Petrillo (segment "Il guappo"): "My condolences, Don Carmine, my condolences. Come have dinner at our place." That's what you told him. "Tonight you shouldn't be alone. Honor us." And it's been 10 years he's honoring us, this scum bag.
- Autres versionsThe segment on the funeral of a dead child was deleted from all release versions, and the short segment on the Professor only appeared in the original Italian version. For the remaining four episodes, the time was 107 minutes.
- ConnexionsFeatured in Le ciné-club de Radio-Canada: Film présenté: L'or de Naples (1959)
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Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Langue
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- The Gold of Naples
- Lieux de tournage
- Salita Cinesi, Rione Sanità, Naples, Campanie, Italie(The switchback ramp featured in the vignette Il Guappo.)
- sociétés de production
- Consultez plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
Box-office
- Brut – à l'échelle mondiale
- 5 046 $ US
- Durée2 heures 18 minutes
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 1.33 : 1
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By what name was L'or de Naples (1954) officially released in India in English?
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