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L'amour à l'italienne

Titre original : Rome Adventure
  • 1962
  • Approved
  • 1h 59min
NOTE IMDb
6,4/10
1,6 k
MA NOTE
L'amour à l'italienne (1962)
Official Trailer
Lire trailer3:38
1 Video
74 photos
Le passage à l'âge adulteRomance de vacancesDrameRomance

Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueUnder fire for giving a student her copy of a romance novel, Prudence resigns from her teaching position and sails for Italy.Under fire for giving a student her copy of a romance novel, Prudence resigns from her teaching position and sails for Italy.Under fire for giving a student her copy of a romance novel, Prudence resigns from her teaching position and sails for Italy.

  • Réalisation
    • Delmer Daves
  • Scénario
    • Irving Fineman
    • Delmer Daves
  • Casting principal
    • Troy Donahue
    • Suzanne Pleshette
    • Rossano Brazzi
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    6,4/10
    1,6 k
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Delmer Daves
    • Scénario
      • Irving Fineman
      • Delmer Daves
    • Casting principal
      • Troy Donahue
      • Suzanne Pleshette
      • Rossano Brazzi
    • 58avis d'utilisateurs
    • 14avis des critiques
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
    • Récompenses
      • 1 nomination au total

    Vidéos1

    Rome Adventure
    Trailer 3:38
    Rome Adventure

    Photos74

    Voir l'affiche
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    + 68
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    Rôles principaux50

    Modifier
    Troy Donahue
    Troy Donahue
    • Don Porter
    Suzanne Pleshette
    Suzanne Pleshette
    • Prudence Bell
    Rossano Brazzi
    Rossano Brazzi
    • Roberto Orlandi
    Angie Dickinson
    Angie Dickinson
    • Lyda Kent
    Hampton Fancher
    Hampton Fancher
    • Albert Stillwell
    Constance Ford
    Constance Ford
    • Daisy Bronson
    Al Hirt
    Al Hirt
    • Al Hirt
    Iphigenie Castiglioni
    • Contessa
    Chad Everett
    Chad Everett
    • Young Man
    Gertrude Flynn
    Gertrude Flynn
    • Mrs. Riggs
    Pamela Austin
    Pamela Austin
    • Agnes Hutton
    Lili Valenty
    • Angelina
    Mary Patton
    • Mrs. Helen Bell
    Maurice Wells
    • Mr. Bell
    Phillip Angeloff
    • C.I.T. Clerk
    • (non crédité)
    Larry Arnold
    • Waiter
    • (non crédité)
    Brandon Beach
    • Guest
    • (non crédité)
    Mary Benoit
    Mary Benoit
    • Librarian
    • (non crédité)
    • Réalisation
      • Delmer Daves
    • Scénario
      • Irving Fineman
      • Delmer Daves
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs58

    6,41.5K
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    Avis à la une

    6kirksworks

    As travelogue, glorious, as story - eh

    There is a time for most people when, as children, they become aware.  It's the time when suddenly, the world opens up and you see yourself fitting in.  Things you took for granted or never noticed over night become worth investigating.  You become aware of not only your surroundings, but the time in which you find yourself.  Just like that things get emblazoned on your brain like never before.  For me, that happened in 1960.  It has always been a special year.  It was the year I discovered girls.  It was the year art had new meaning for me.  It was the year I learned to type and it was the year I realized movies would be a part of my life forever.

    When I watch films from 1960 they bring back that connection to becoming aware.  They aren't all my favorite films, but it doesn't matter.  When I see pretty much any film from the early 60s I get a jolt.  Even if I've never seen the film before, movies that were made in the early 1960s, somehow trigger a response.  It's a combination of the hair styles, the fashion, automobiles, the film stock and lighting use of that time, the cast, acting and scoring style.  Films from 1960 through about 1962 have this in spades, including "Rome Adventure."

    Suzanne Pleshette and Troy Donohue just radiate early 60s like nobody's business, as does Max Steiner's score, the cinemascope cinematography and the dialog.  Even watching the credits in combo with Steiner's music swept me back to that era.  In this regard the film was a joy to watch.  It's very romantic, but you know that going in.  

    Having said that, essentially, "Rome Adventure" is a travelogue romance, and pretty much nothing more.  I enjoyed it but I can't say it was very good.  Though it has some of the same cast members, it doesn't hold a candle to Delmer Daves' previous film, "Summer Place."  It's no where near as well written and quite shallow by comparison.  The visual symbolism (the candelabra, for example, representing Donohue's integrity) was more than heavy-handed.  I wonder what most women today would think of the scene where Donohue tells Pleshette that women's role on Earth is to be the anchor for the man?  I can understand the meaning behind the thought, but in todays PC environment, the way it was handled in the big love scene at the climax is totally chauvinistic. It comes down to script.  It could have been written in a way that suggested Donohue was talking about just he and Pleshette themselves, but the grand gesture of suggesting that the notion that all women were put on earth as the anchors for men is a cage many people (men and women) would bristle at. And the use of Al Hirt gives new meaning to the term "shoe-horned in."

    I really enjoy Suzanne Pleshette in most things I've seen her in.  She ended up being cast often as the world weary but intelligent woman who harbors an old love. This is exactly the character she plays in Hitchock's "The Birds," losing out to Tippi Hedren for Rod Taylor's love.  Pleshette's small role is still one of the most remarkably well-developed of any secondary character in all of Hitch's films.  When Rod Taylor discovers what has happened to her during a bird attack, it's a powerfully emotional moment.  Amazing how much sympathy she created for herself with so little screen time. Pleshette in "Rome Adventure" doesn't start out playing the world weary woman she became in later films, but she sort of becomes one as the film progresses.  Of course, the ending pretty much disregards that concept of her character, but it's there nonetheless.  

    Troy Donohue, who gave a very good and believable performance in "Summer Place," is pretty wooden here.  He's actually the film's greatest flaw, which I find hard to understand.  He had the same director and writer as "Summer Place," yet Donohue just doesn't connect.  There is little chemistry between he and Pleshette, certainly no fire like he had with Sandra Dee.  

    The real star of "Rome Adventure" is Italy.  It was photographed to look quaint and romantic, but the choice of locations, the time of day and consideration of lighting were all beautifully realized.  The film has many similarities to another film from that same year (which also gives me that early 60s jolt), "Light in the Piazza."  Rozzano Brazzi, who stars in "Rome Adventure," was also in "Piazza," playing a similar character.  In the case of "Piazza," however, he's after the mother (played by Olivia deHavilland).  "Piazza" also stars ingénue of the day, Yvette Mimieux and up and coming heart throb, George Hamilton.  Hamilton plays an intrinsically happy Italian who falls in love with Mimieux' childlike character.  "Piazza" is much more successful as a Euro romance than "Rome Adventure" because its plot takes some truly unexpected turns.   "Rome Adventure" unfortunately telegraphs all its surprises along the way.

    Yet, in spite of all this, I found there was a lot to enjoy, and I think it's even a film worth revisiting on occasion, if nothing more than to give me another early 60s jolt, but to also re-experience that idyllic world of Rome the filmmakers created.
    7atlasmb

    Suzanne Pleshette Explores The Beauty Of Italy

    Prudence Bell (Suzanne Pleshette) travels to Italy to discover adventure and finds Don Porter (Troy Donahue) and love. As they explore the areas around Rome, viewers are treated to some idyllic scenery. Their relationship has its ups and downs, especially when Don's former flame, played by Angie Dickinson, reenters his life.

    Through it all, the song "Al di la" is featured, and the film's grade deserves two bumps just for that. It may be the perfect accompaniment to a love story set in Italy. Even Al Hirt, who appears as a surprisingly engaging trumpeter in the film, plays a jazz rendition.

    This itinerant love story with a peripatetic plot loses focus on occasion, but it always come back to Prudence, where it belongs. Pleshette's beautiful quirkiness feels grounded in true love. No surprise, then, that Pleshette and Donahue would marry later.

    An uncreative ending deserves the loss of one grade point. But it is difficult to be very disappointed in a film that features so much beauty.
    luths2

    Acting Is Not What Teenage Girls Remember!

    Yes, I agree that Suzanne Pleshette and Troy Donahue are not exactly Katherine Hepburn and Lawrence Olivier in this film, but their "chemistry," a beautiful Italian setting, glorious fashion and the overall romantic "intrigue" more than make up for that. In the early 1960's, Troy Donahue was the ultimate in "eye candy" for us teenage girls (and older women, too, I'm sure). I have thought for years that I was surely the only 13-year old girl who sat in a darkened theater so TOTALLY "transported" for several hours by the romance in this film, but apparently I was not. I listen to an "oldies" radio station in the Dallas/Ft. Worth area and I cannot believe how MANY times other listeners request that the incredibly romantic "Al Di La" from the dimly-lit-romantic-restaurant-scene be played. Hooray for a day when sex was something seriously contemplated and not something graphically displayed like today!
    petelush

    How less can be more in romances

    Rome Adventure is not only intrinsically enjoyable but is an excellent illustration of the power of restraint, innuendo, and "naughtiness" in romance films. It was made just before the dam broke and everything was allowed to go in movies. The lovebirds' struggle over whether to end Suzanne Pleshette's virginity has a charm, heat even, that cannot exist amidst the too-much-information sex scenes we see today. Boxed-in attitudes manifested in Rome Adventure make the slightest double entendre unexpected and powerful, even giggly. The kissing is tender and tongueless but very intimate for all that. I have no interest in promoting abstinence in life or in film, but see this picture and then try telling yourself that nothing was lost when big screen freedom came in.
    6MOscarbradley

    The real star of this movie is Italy

    This sudsy, corn-filled romance would have been affectionately known as a 'woman's picture' back in 1962 when it was made. Today we would call it a 'chick-flic'. After giving up the western, (and he made a handful of very good ones), Delmer Daves turned to churning out some very glossy love stories, usually taken from best-selling novels of variable quality and, more often than not, starring the hottest property of the day, Troy Donahue. Donahue was blonde and beautiful and he could even act after a fashion in that kind of stiff American manner that belonged to an altogether different age; perhaps that is why his career was so short-lived.

    Here he's an American artist living in Rome and the girl that falls for him was newcomer Suzanne Pleshette who has left American in search of adventure while clinging to her virtue. If for nothing else we should be eternally grateful for any film that gives us Pleshette who was smart, sexy and beautiful beyond her years but whose career never went anywhere either. There is also an older man in the mix as well, a charming Italian played by ... yes, you guessed it, Rossano Brazzi, (were all middle-aged Italian men like Brazzi?), and a bitch played by Angie Dickinson. (Pleshette acts her off the screen). But the real star of the movie is Italy, photographed in all its Technicolor, travelogue glory pushing the story very much into the background. The Italian tourist board should still be paying Daves royalties.

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    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      The interior of The American Bookshop is the set of the River City Library from Warner Bros. Le marchand de fanfares (1962).
    • Gaffes
      The opening credits read "introducing Suzanne Pleshette". That is actually incorrect. She was the female lead 4 years earlier as Sergeant Pearson in the 1958 movie the Geisha Boy with Jerry Lewis.
    • Citations

      Daisy Bronson: The first time a good-looking Italian man pinched my bottom, I said, "This is for me!"

    • Connexions
      Featured in Cinema: Alguns Cortes - Censura III (2015)
    • Bandes originales
      Al di là
      Music by Mogol

      Lyrics by Carlo Donida

      Performed by Emilio Pericoli

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    FAQ20

    • How long is Rome Adventure?Alimenté par Alexa
    • What is 'Rome Adventure' about?
    • Is 'Rome Adventure' based on a book?
    • What are the lyrics to 'Al Di La'?

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 5 juillet 1963 (France)
    • Pays d’origine
      • États-Unis
    • Langues
      • Anglais
      • Italien
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Los amantes deben aprender
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Orvieto, Terni, Umbria, Italie
    • Société de production
      • Warner Bros.
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

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    • Durée
      • 1h 59min(119 min)

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