अपने निकृष्ट अतीत से दूर होने के बाद, भूतपूर्व स्ट्रीटवॉकर ने अपने बेटे के साथ फिर से मिल जाते है . हालांकि, कोई जबरन वसूली योजना एक सभ्य मध्यमवर्गीय जीवन के लिए उसकी आकांक्षाओं को जोखिम में... सभी पढ़ेंअपने निकृष्ट अतीत से दूर होने के बाद, भूतपूर्व स्ट्रीटवॉकर ने अपने बेटे के साथ फिर से मिल जाते है . हालांकि, कोई जबरन वसूली योजना एक सभ्य मध्यमवर्गीय जीवन के लिए उसकी आकांक्षाओं को जोखिम में डालती है. क्या वह उसे उस प्रलोभन से बचा सकती है जिसने उसकी जवानी को मानसिक आघात पहुंचाया?अपने निकृष्ट अतीत से दूर होने के बाद, भूतपूर्व स्ट्रीटवॉकर ने अपने बेटे के साथ फिर से मिल जाते है . हालांकि, कोई जबरन वसूली योजना एक सभ्य मध्यमवर्गीय जीवन के लिए उसकी आकांक्षाओं को जोखिम में डालती है. क्या वह उसे उस प्रलोभन से बचा सकती है जिसने उसकी जवानी को मानसिक आघात पहुंचाया?
- पुरस्कार
- 2 जीत और कुल 1 नामांकन
फ़ीचर्ड समीक्षाएं
"Mamma Roma", the second movie of Pier Paolo Pasolini, is an impressive, cruel, touching, riveting realistic drama. Anna Magnani has an awesome performance in the role of a limited mother trying to live an honest life and give the best for her son. Franco Citti has a short, but also fantastic acting in the role of a nasty pimp. In times when Hollywoodian fairytale world prevails in most worldwide movie theaters and rentals, it is good to revisit the real world in this unforgettable gem. My vote is eight.
Title (Brazil): "Mamma Roma"
Anna Magnani was renowned for her earthy, passionate, "woman-of-the-soil" roles and she is one of the main reasons to see the film. She is Rome's flesh and soul, its spirit and symbol, its loud laugh and bitter tears.
Anna Magnani plays the titular character, an aging, plump, and earthy whore. Her pimp has retired and let her go, so Mamma Ro' runs off to the country to gather up her teenage son. The backstory of the son is left obscure. Apparently Mamma Ro' left him with some relatives or something like that. Her son, Ettore, is excited to move to Rome, but he is not sure whether he trusts his mother. She has abandoned him for most of his life presumably (one of the great gifts that Pasolini has in this film is that he never spells anything out, but just suggests and implies a lot).
The film shifts between Mamma Ro' and Ettore. Ro' is running a respectable fruit stand, although she likes to hang around all of her friends who are still prostitutes and pimps. Probably the most memorable shot of the film occurs when Ro' walks down the streets of rural Rome at night. The camera moves backwards on a dolly, and Ro' is constantly walking towards it. Her friends approach her, talk with her and walk with her a while, only to drop back. A few seconds later, a new companion will walk up next to Ro' and walk beside her, talk with her. There are actually two scenes with this shockingly beautiful technique, used at strategic points of the film. Mamma Roma cares about her son more than anything. She is a good mother, or at least she is overly determined to be one.
Ettore, on the other hand, lives a life of boredom. School does not interest him, nor does work. He would rather hang around with all the local hoodlums and the local tramp who lives down the street. He wanders around amongst the ruins of ancient Roman city walls. The landscape is simply beautiful, but in a very desolate manner. As the film progresses, Ettore grows more and more delinquent.
The themes of mother and son are universal. Of making amends and of growing up. This film captures the feel of human existence as almost no other film does. Pasolini is a genius, he has his fingers right on the pulse of human rhythm. I think that he captures what the neorealist directors were always after. They always got bogged down in melodrama, although I do love a ton of them. Mamma Roma is the kind of film that makes me happy to be alive. It's not exactly a happy film, but it is wonderfully life affirming. When Mamma Ro' rode proudly down the street on the back of her son's motorbike, it left a mark on me never to be erased.
And this is the genius of Pasolini's film. That we have the two figures of Ettore and Mamma Roma, who each emerge in the film at the hour of their seeming liberation-- Mamma freed from her pimp and Ettore from his "hicks" in the country--who nonetheless crumble under the weight of history. All they are left to do is wonder, to paraphrase Ettore during the end, "why so many people are torturing (them)," when all they (Mamma Roma and Ettore) want to do is good. Existential despair that resonates today amidst grave financial uncertainty and uncertain class ascendancy.
क्या आपको पता है
- ट्रिवियाAt the film's premiere in the Quattro Fontane Cinema (Rome, 22nd September 1962), Pier Paolo Pasolini was attacked by fascists who protested against the film.
- गूफ़In the opening titles, the music that is playing over the titles is noted as "Concerto in Do maggiore di Vivaldi," which translates in English as "Concerto in C major by Vivaldi." The music actually playing is the Largo (slow) movement from Vivaldi's Concerto in D minor (catalog number RV 540)
- भाव
[English subtitled version]
Mamma Roma: He was sixty-five and I was fourteen. I got married in a young fascist girl's uniform!
- कनेक्शनFeatured in Cinema forever - Capolavori salvati (2001)
- साउंडट्रैकViolino tzigano
Music by Cesare A. Bixio (as Bixio)
Lyrics by Bixio Cherubini (as Cherubini)
Performed by Joselito
टॉप पसंद
- How long is Mamma Roma?Alexa द्वारा संचालित
विवरण
बॉक्स ऑफ़िस
- दुनिया भर में सकल
- $14,910
- चलने की अवधि1 घंटा 46 मिनट
- रंग
- पक्ष अनुपात
- 1.85 : 1