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Femmes sans nom

Titre original : Donne senza nome
  • 1950
  • 1h 40min
NOTE IMDb
6,5/10
87
MA NOTE
Irasema Dilián, Vivi Gioi, Françoise Rosay, and Simone Simon in Femmes sans nom (1950)
DrameGuerre

Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueThis is the sad story of several desperate ladies incarcerated somewhere in Italy in a camp for displaced women after the end of World War II. Among them, Anna, a Yugoslav, who has seen her ... Tout lireThis is the sad story of several desperate ladies incarcerated somewhere in Italy in a camp for displaced women after the end of World War II. Among them, Anna, a Yugoslav, who has seen her husband killed in Trieste by political enemies. She is pregnant and her one and only aim r... Tout lireThis is the sad story of several desperate ladies incarcerated somewhere in Italy in a camp for displaced women after the end of World War II. Among them, Anna, a Yugoslav, who has seen her husband killed in Trieste by political enemies. She is pregnant and her one and only aim right now is her baby to be born. Janka, a beautiful Polish girl who has lost her mind, is ... Tout lire

  • Réalisation
    • Géza von Radványi
  • Scénario
    • Géza von Radványi
    • Corrado Alvaro
    • Liana Ferri
  • Casting principal
    • Simone Simon
    • Vivi Gioi
    • Françoise Rosay
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    6,5/10
    87
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Géza von Radványi
    • Scénario
      • Géza von Radványi
      • Corrado Alvaro
      • Liana Ferri
    • Casting principal
      • Simone Simon
      • Vivi Gioi
      • Françoise Rosay
    • 2avis d'utilisateurs
    • 1avis de critique
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
    • Récompenses
      • 1 victoire au total

    Photos1

    Voir l'affiche

    Rôles principaux33

    Modifier
    Simone Simon
    Simone Simon
    • Yvonne Dubois - la francese
    Vivi Gioi
    Vivi Gioi
    • Greta - l'alemana
    Françoise Rosay
    Françoise Rosay
    • La contessa belga
    Irasema Dilián
    Irasema Dilián
    • Janka Novatska - la polacca
    • (as Irasema Dilian)
    Gino Cervi
    Gino Cervi
    • Il brigadiere Pietro Zanini
    Mario Ferrari
    Mario Ferrari
    • Il capitano
    Umberto Spadaro
    Umberto Spadaro
    • Dottor Lo Monaco
    Eva Breuer
    • Christine Obear
    • (as Eva Broyer)
    Liliana Tellini
    • Una prigioniera
    Betsy von Furstenberg
    • Boshe
    • (as Betsy Furstenberg)
    Susan Donnell
    • La prigioniera inglese
    Lamberto Maggiorani
    Lamberto Maggiorani
    • Il fidanzato di Anna
    Gina Falckenberg
    Gina Falckenberg
    • Hilda von Schwartzendorf - La dottoressa nazi
    • (as Gina Del Torre Falkenberg)
    Valentina Cortese
    Valentina Cortese
    • Anna Petrovic - la jugoslava
    Anna Maria Alegiani
    • Una prigioniera
    • (non crédité)
    Caterina Arvat
    • Una prigioniera
    • (non crédité)
    Ann Castel
    • Una prigioniera
    • (non crédité)
    Maria Del Vivo
    • Una prigioniera
    • (non crédité)
    • Réalisation
      • Géza von Radványi
    • Scénario
      • Géza von Radványi
      • Corrado Alvaro
      • Liana Ferri
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs2

    6,587
    1
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    Avis à la une

    8GianfrancoSpada

    Womanity after war...

    Shot in 1950, this film emerges from a Europe still raw from the war's dislocations, and nowhere is that more evident than in its choice of setting: a Displaced Persons Camp in southern Italy. While the physical environment shares certain visual and narrative echoes with the better-known POW camp subgenre, it is fundamentally different - less rigid in its hierarchy, more porous in its boundaries, and charged with an uncertainty that no military chain of command could quite impose. The film was among the earliest to be shot in Puglia, a region that, from early 1944 onward, had become a patchwork of camps hosting displaced persons of nearly every nationality: liberated forced laborers, ex-prisoners of war, stateless refugees, and civilians caught in the shifting frontlines. This local history gives the film an authenticity that is impossible to fake; the air itself seems saturated with the residue of transient lives.

    The cinematography takes full advantage of this setting, using the washed-out Mediterranean light not to romanticize but to underline the desolate impermanence of the camp. Interiors are cramped and damp, with sunlight filtering in only reluctantly, giving the impression that even in a warm climate, hope struggles to penetrate. The camera often lingers on the open gates and low fences - features absent from the fortified, escape-proof POW environments - and yet these shots convey a deeper sense of entrapment, because here the barrier is not physical strength but the bureaucratic limbo of papers, interrogations, and political vetting. The editing retains a raw immediacy, cutting abruptly between moments of uneasy camaraderie and sudden flare-ups of mistrust. Sound design is sparse, relying heavily on ambient noises - chatter in multiple languages, the thud of boots in dusty corridors - creating an aural portrait of rootlessness.

    When placed beside The Captive Heart (1946) and The Wooden Horse (1950), the differences become instructive. Both of those films, rooted firmly in the male POW tradition, are structured around an arc of unity and purpose: men bound by shared nationality or military allegiance, working toward collective escape as a clear assertion of agency. In The Captive Heart, the emotional stakes are tied to maintaining morale and identity under an unambiguous enemy authority; in The Wooden Horse, the ingenuity of the escape plot itself is the narrative's spine. In contrast, the film at hand dismantles these certainties. Here, the characters - all women, from diverse and sometimes antagonistic backgrounds - are bound less by solidarity than by necessity, and there is no singular goal like "escape" to unify them. Instead, the drama arises from the unstable balance between survival, distrust, and the haunting knowledge that the outside world may offer no better refuge.

    This gendered shift in perspective transforms familiar tropes. Where male POW films often derive suspense from physical obstacles - watchtowers, guards, barbed wire - this film's tension is largely internal and social. The women's strategies are not about tunneling under fences but about navigating the subtleties of authority, alliance, and self-preservation in a space where the rules are unclear and constantly shifting. The absence of a single "enemy" figure, replaced by an impersonal apparatus of officials and interpreters, erodes the clean moral binaries on which the POW subgenre typically depends.

    Placing it alongside The Cry of the Earth (Il grido della terra,1950), another Puglia-shot work that directly engages with displaced persons, is revealing. The Cry of the Earth leans toward a more dramatized and at times propagandistic framing, its narrative moving toward a vision of rural rebirth and integration into Italian society. By contrast, this film resists resolution; its ending offers no triumphant reintegration, instead leaving characters suspended in a space where war's end has not truly ended their exile. Both films share a fascination with Puglia as a postwar crossroads, but the one under discussion uses that backdrop less as a promise of renewal and more as a stage for the lingering complexities of identity and belonging in the aftermath of mass displacement.

    Technically, the performances remain one of the strongest elements. The actors resist the easy path of stoic martyrdom, instead inhabiting a spectrum of guardedness, suspicion, and occasional flashes of vulnerability. This restraint works in concert with the film's visual language: long takes allow glances and pauses to carry as much weight as spoken lines, while the composition often positions individuals at the margins of the frame, visually reinforcing their precarious status. This is a world where even the most transient connection feels fragile, and the camera treats those moments with the same unflinching gaze it gives to the camp's weathered walls and dusty yards.

    The historical moment of its production - just five years after the war, with Europe's refugee crisis still unresolved and the Cold War beginning to harden ideological divisions - seeps into its tone. It refuses both the sentimental optimism of reconstruction cinema and the patriotic certainties of wartime propaganda. Instead, it gives us a portrait of the war's residue: a condition without uniforms or frontlines, but with rules and boundaries that are no less constricting for their ambiguity.

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    Histoire

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    Le saviez-vous

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    • Anecdotes
      Italian censorship visa #7591 dated 7 March 1950.
    • Connexions
      Featured in Cinema: Alguns Cortes - Censura II (2014)

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    Détails

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    • Date de sortie
      • 30 novembre 1950 (France)
    • Pays d’origine
      • Italie
    • Langues
      • Italien
      • Allemand
      • Français
      • Anglais
      • Albanais
      • Serbo-croate
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Women Without Names
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Cinecittà Studios, Cinecittà, Rome, Lazio, Italie
    • Société de production
      • Navona Film
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

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    • Durée
      • 1h 40min(100 min)
    • Couleur
      • Black and White
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.37 : 1

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