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Uccellacci e uccellini

  • 1966
  • Not Rated
  • 1 घं 29 मि
IMDb रेटिंग
7.2/10
6 हज़ार
आपकी रेटिंग
Ninetto Davoli and Totò in Uccellacci e uccellini (1966)
Totò and his son Ninetto are drifting on a road in Italy when they meet a speaking crow.
trailer प्ले करें3:15
1 वीडियो
80 फ़ोटो
कॉमेडीड्रामाफ़ैंटेसीव्यंग्यस्लैपस्टिक

अपनी भाषा में प्लॉट जोड़ेंTotò and his son Ninetto are drifting on a road in Italy when they meet a speaking crow.Totò and his son Ninetto are drifting on a road in Italy when they meet a speaking crow.Totò and his son Ninetto are drifting on a road in Italy when they meet a speaking crow.

  • निर्देशक
    • Pier Paolo Pasolini
  • लेखक
    • Pier Paolo Pasolini
  • स्टार
    • Totò
    • Ninetto Davoli
    • Femi Benussi
  • IMDbPro पर प्रोडक्शन की जानकारी देखें
  • IMDb रेटिंग
    7.2/10
    6 हज़ार
    आपकी रेटिंग
    • निर्देशक
      • Pier Paolo Pasolini
    • लेखक
      • Pier Paolo Pasolini
    • स्टार
      • Totò
      • Ninetto Davoli
      • Femi Benussi
    • 32यूज़र समीक्षाएं
    • 41आलोचक समीक्षाएं
  • IMDbPro पर प्रोडक्शन की जानकारी देखें
    • पुरस्कार
      • 4 जीत और कुल 4 नामांकन

    वीडियो1

    Trailer
    Trailer 3:15
    Trailer

    फ़ोटो80

    पोस्टर देखें
    पोस्टर देखें
    पोस्टर देखें
    पोस्टर देखें
    पोस्टर देखें
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    + 74
    पोस्टर देखें

    टॉप कलाकार25

    बदलाव करें
    Totò
    Totò
    • Totò Innocenti
    • (as Toto')
    • …
    Ninetto Davoli
    Ninetto Davoli
    • Ninetto Innocenti
    • (as Davoli Ninetto)
    • …
    Femi Benussi
    Femi Benussi
    • Luna
    Umberto Bevilacqua
    Umberto Bevilacqua
    • Incensurato
    Renato Capogna
    Renato Capogna
    • Mascalzone
    Alfredo Leggi
    Alfredo Leggi
    • Mascalzone
    Renato Montalbano
    Renato Montalbano
    • San Francesco
    Flaminia Siciliano
    • Mascalzone
    Lena Lin Solaro
    Lena Lin Solaro
    • Urganda
    Giovanni Tarallo
    • Il contadino affamato
    Vittorio Vittori
    Vittorio Vittori
    • Ciro Lococo
    Nello Appodia
    • Party Guest
    • (बिना क्रेडिट के)
    Gabriele Baldini
    • Dante's Dentist
    • (बिना क्रेडिट के)
    Lina D'Amico
      Pietro Davoli
      • Mascalzone
      • (बिना क्रेडिट के)
      Rossana Di Rocco
      Rossana Di Rocco
      • Ninetto's Girlfriend
      • (बिना क्रेडिट के)
      Cesare Gelli
        Vittorio La Paglia
        Vittorio La Paglia
          • निर्देशक
            • Pier Paolo Pasolini
          • लेखक
            • Pier Paolo Pasolini
          • सभी कास्ट और क्रू
          • IMDbPro में प्रोडक्शन, बॉक्स ऑफिस और बहुत कुछ

          उपयोगकर्ता समीक्षाएं32

          7.26K
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          फ़ीचर्ड समीक्षाएं

          eibon09

          Comedy That Thinks

          Confusing but fascinating motion picture about the experiences of a father and son. A Felliniesque story with the two main characters experiencing anything strange or surreal tht comes their way. Maybe influenced from the work Pasolini did with Fellini on Nights of Cabiria(1957) and La Dolce Vita(1960). Has many areas in it that is characteristic of a Federico Fellini film. Even the father reminds me of some characters from a Fellini picture. The direction is simple as well as subtle. Uccellacci E Uccellini/Hawks & Sparrows(1965) is Pasolini's lightest and most gentle picture of his filmography. Light years away from the controversial and nilistic sections of his later films. An uncharacteristic film for Pier Paolo Pasolini because of its cheerful and clownish nature. The comedy in Hawks and Sparrows(1965) is in the tradition of such silent greats as Chaplin, Keaton, and Lloyd. Complex film that probably should be seen more than once to attempt at getting a clear meaning of its allegoric nature.

          Hawks and Sparrows(1965) gets some good acting from the leads Toto and Ninetto Davoli. On casting people for Pasolini's film he remarked("I use both actors and non-actors, and I am not interested in their ability. I take them for what they are") with an interesting line. This quote from Pasolini is important in the casting of Hawks and Sparrows(1965) because of his personal perference of non actors over actors. The first film I have seen with the actor Toto. Ninetto Davoli does a decent job for a person who never acted before in his life. The rest of the actors are good in the segments they are in. The director liked using non actors because he wanted a natural and unconscious style that could not be possible with a pro actor. Pier Paolo Pasolini was one of the best and most rare type of movie makers to inhibit is cinema with mostly non actors. Each episode is funny and yet intellegent. Pasolini conveys the character of Toto as someone who is unaware of life around him. Filled with the usual political beliefs Pasolini was into.

          The opening credits are creative and very unusual. They are played over the screen in the form of a prose. I only wish that more films would use this kind of opening credits instead of the usual opening credits because its more interesting here. The director's intention was to make a film that was pure prose and in the tradition of Buster Keaton and Charles Chaplin. Hawks and Sparrows(1965) does retain the elements of the tragic comedy with the themes of class and poverty. Ennio Morricone plays one of his best film scores in a non Leone film. Pasolini and Morricone did some good work together as director and film composer. Shows how good Pasolini was at in using simple images to push forward a themematic idea. The bird that follows the father and son represents something that is the total opposite of the two. Visual poetry at its finest and and most beautiful. One scene that has recently resurfaced during the late 1980s was an unreleased episode called "Toto At The Circus".
          8jotix100

          The Birds according to Pasolini

          A picaresque approach by a master of the Italian cinema resulted in this personal and different film by Pier Paolo Pasolini. The director, who wrote and produced this picture, was in great form in this story that is more like a fable, deliciously acted by Toto and Ninetto Davoli, one of the best pairings in Pasolini's movies.

          The film is, in many aspects, a road movie. From the beginning, we watch as Toto and Ninetto take to the road in their trip to nowhere, it seems, but a trip which permits Pasolini examine some of the things that obsessed him, mainly his dislike for organized religion, as he perceived it in his country, as it clashed with reality. He takes the life of Saint Francis and the story about his relationship with the birds as the main topic for the movie.

          It's hard to add anything else to what already has been said by the valuable contributions to IMDb. This film is one of the most inspired by the director. In it, he doesn't pound on the viewer's head those things that were dear to him. In fact, the film has a whimsical touch as we follow the two travelers, Toto and Ninetto, through rural Italy as a raven keeps telling them stories.

          Toto is perfect as the older man who is living in his own world and doesn't see the changes around him. Ninetto Davoli gives a great performance as the happy go lucky son. Their surname, is Innocenti, or Innocent, which in a way, fits their characters rather well.

          The black and white cinematography by Mario Bernardo and Tonino Delli Colli works wonders for the film. Ennio Morricone's musical score also enhances all that one sees on the screen. This is a light Passolini, but one that delves deep into the subjects that were so dear to the director's heart.
          chaos-rampant

          Sang in the language of birds

          There are very few things to say about life. There are a million ways to say it, but we come back to the same few items: living-loving to the fullest matters, with every force available in your body, being one with just this world, sensitive to it, alert. We have come up with a million ways to say it, because it's easier said than done. It is easier to think than do. And I think that anyone who is passionate about life and the art he makes has hit this limit, that when all is said and done, thought is like the buzz of a small mosquito, persistent but drowned in the swell of universal music.

          You have to let go at some point, what the old mystics knew as ecstasy. This is of course near-impossible to accomplish in the grind of life, which is why in the old days, they set apart time for ritual and storytelling - not as distinguishable as they are now, these two. We do so with cinema. And I value, above all else, filmmakers who make more than films, who set apart time for ritual dance that disembodies the self, mends consciousness into the air. Antonioni - Parajanov - Iwai - Herzog - they have all done this at least once.

          And even though I'm only getting to know Pasolini, I can tell that that he was a passionate man, a man of thought who wanted to go beyond thought, who wanted to be true to music as it rises from the earth and makes a mockery of our efforts to explain intellectually.

          Here is his attempt at a disembodied narrative, characteristically Italian.

          The story is that we follow two ordinary rascals on their round through the small world, father and son, both very Italian characters, rowdy, temperamental. In the neorealist mode of some fifteen years ago, there would be a single reality, one of hardship and human ruins, the journey would be one of simple, 'real' encounters, that used to be the conceit in those days, the unmediated presentation of life. Indeed, we start here from a 'realist' world and come back to it full-circle in the end with real footage from the funeral of a prominent member of the Italian Left, signifying the end of the postwar era of new hope.

          Inbetween, however, we have something else. There is a second reality that we slowly shift to, one of naked dreams, of ritual and storytelling, song and dance.

          Each individual performance is exhilarating. Each has its own air. The rock'n'roll dance - hip and youthful sashaying, 'tuning out'. The Franciscan story - earthy, good-humored religiosity. The lighting up of fireworks - evocative of spontaneous magic and roads. Being shot at from a barn - the silent comedies of Chaplin and Keaton. The scene of giving birth - Italian theater, circus, carnivals.

          Our two lovable dunces are not dramatic characters, they do not change. Rather, they are on screen, so that in moving through the world, they will reveal different facets of contradictory existence, all of them exaggerated in the Italian manner. They are in turn victims and oppressors, fools and sages, beggars and hedonists, defiant and obeisant, shifting in and out of iconography and roles, booted from one stage to the next.

          Their companion is a talking raven (Pasolini - disembodied from his narrative and made fun of), always spouting thoughts and opinions on religion and politics, which are promptly ignored; who would listen, when there's skirt to be chased?

          Being characteristically Italian means that the different threads are not layered together, we simply move from one stage to the next. We get beautiful but scattershot imagination, but it is redeemed by a powerful center. Human nature as the moon that causes the waters to wash out on the shore everything from a deep sea - good or bad. It's a sublime notion.

          And you just have to see this for the choreography in the Franciscan story; dissipating human landscape, to human buffoonery on the ground, to swarms of birds rolling in the sky. God as learning to walk in the language of birds. Wonderful.
          Zen Bones

          You've never seen anything like this!

          How does one describe a film like this? Imagine a Bunuel film like THE MILKY WAY. A couple of men walking on an empty road. They're on a strange journey only their destination is the beginning of their journey (huh?) and the two men are as funny as the best cinema clowns in screen history. Somewhat Felliniesque, somewhat Chaplinesque, throw in a little De Sica and even a dash of Monty Python and you can begin to have some idea of what this incredible blend of absurd and hilarious satire is like. Unlike Bunuel's films, this film is joyous. It has heart, passion, and an imagination springing somewhere from the soul. The film takes its stabs at religion, academics, and government but it does it in a playful way that leaves one feeling rejuevenated instead of that sour feeling that one feels after watching most social satires. It's hard to believe that this is a Pasolini film. It's about as far on the spectrum from SALO that one can get, yet it's sad that in comparison this film is almost completely unknown.

          This is definitley worth seeking out on video. I'm hoping that I can find a soundtrack recording for this. It is one of the best Ennio Morricone scores I've heard, which is saying a great deal!
          8debblyst

          Viaggio in Italia con Pasolini

          "Uccellacci e Uccellini" is probably the best chance to get acquainted with Pasolini's political thoughts pre-1968 other than reading him. It's a candid, allegoric and provocative attempt to express his ideas about a very specific epoch in Italian history, after the death of left-wing political "father" Palmiro Togliatti in 1964 (whose funeral is one of the great scenes of "Uccellacci") and the "death" of Neo-Realism. It also reflects the intense differences between social classes, intellectual trends and political forces that would lead to the acts of "contestazione generale" in the late 1960s.

          WIth "Uccellacci", we can learn some of Pasolini's thoughts on Marxism, Fascism, religion, the Catholic church, the role of intellectuals, the bourgeoisie, political parties, the dire conditions of the campesinato and the borgate (slums), poverty, greed, famine, cultural and social apartheid -- you name it. That's the main problem with this passionately personal and visually stunning walking-road-movie: too many targets, too little time to hit them all in the bull's eye.

          A natural follow-up to his documentary "Comizi d'Amore" (1965) -- in which he traveled all over Italy interviewing people about their thoughts on love and sex -- Pasolini shows in "Uccellacci e Uccellini" the unofficial apartheid in Italy, a basically "unmelting" pot of dozens of different ethnic, linguistic and cultural backgrounds "artificially" unified in mid-19th century but still plagued by social/economical/cultural chasm. And he also denounces the sterility of the discourse of the "official-left" intelligentsia, which he clearly despised (and which heavily attacked him on many issues and occasions).

          In the Italy of the 1960s, the Left was concerned with the struggle of workers, intellectuals and students against the establishment; the contadini (peasants) weren't even properly considered as a political force -- they were the symbol of archaic, pre-boom Italy. Pasolini was the main voice to take the side of the peasants; against famine, sophism falls flat, as the intellectual crow will shockingly discover at the end of "Uccellacci". The political discourse can no longer be theoretical; it has to be urgent, pragmatic, directed towards action. Godard, Bertolucci, Alea, Ruy Guerra, Resnais and others also approached the theme at the time; but, unlike the majority of intellectual-filmmakers of the 60s, Pasolini ACTUALLY had had a rural (though highly literate) background.

          Wildly (in)famous at the time as poet/filmmaker/writer/anti-Vatican political activist (but, contrary to a false general belief, he was never a gay militant, though he certainly wasn't in the closet), Pasolini picks up the journey into the "Italia profonda" from Visconti's "Ossessione" and "La Terra Trema" to most of Rossellini and leaves his own distinctive signature in the very complex era of the economic boom.

          Pasolini smartly uses the parable genre with much comic relief so he can talk about serious political issues in a "commercial" film, relying heavily on veteran champion Totò's immense talent, charisma and experience. In one of his last films, Totò is joined by 16 year-old newcomer Ninetto Davoli, here in a completely relaxed, natural performance; they make a perfect duo. The cinematography by master Tonino delli Colli features jaw- dropping locations and compositions. The music by Ennio Morricone is memorable, his very personal touch instantly recognizable; and there are funny sung (!) opening credits. There are two minor letdowns that prevent total audience adhesion: 1) it lacks a brighter tempo, the rhythm falters at times; 2) the episodes are rather loosely linked 3) there are episodes which might be shorter (the wonderful but overlong St. Francis story) and others might be longer (the visit to the rich landowner's house).

          "Uccellacci e Uccellinni" is a very personal Pasolini ("my favorite" he said in a 1969 interview) and one of his few films not based on literature classics, mythology or the Bible. It's mandatory for all interested in Pasolini's work and/or the political issues of the 1960s, as well as for fans of the unforgettable, one and only Totò.

          इस तरह के और

          Nostra signora dei turchi
          6.7
          Nostra signora dei turchi
          Comizi d'amore
          7.5
          Comizi d'amore
          Accattone
          7.6
          Accattone
          Mamma Roma
          7.8
          Mamma Roma
          Porcile
          6.6
          Porcile
          Edipo Re
          7.2
          Edipo Re
          Bellissima
          7.7
          Bellissima
          Il vangelo secondo Matteo
          7.6
          Il vangelo secondo Matteo
          Medea
          6.9
          Medea
          La ricotta
          7.3
          La ricotta
          La prima notte di quiete
          7.1
          La prima notte di quiete
          Bianca
          7.3
          Bianca

          कहानी

          बदलाव करें

          क्या आपको पता है

          बदलाव करें
          • ट्रिविया
            Film's opening credits are not only displayed on screen but also comically sung in Italian to a jaunty Ennio Morricone score, with a memorably droll rhyming of the film title with the director's full name.
          • क्रेज़ी क्रेडिट
            The opening credits are performed as a song.
          • कनेक्शन
            Edited into Histoire(s) du cinéma: Une histoire seule (1989)
          • साउंडट्रैक
            Uccellacci E Uccellini (Titoli Di Testa)
            Composed by Ennio Morricone and Pier Paolo Pasolini

            Performed by Domenico Modugno

          टॉप पसंद

          रेटिंग देने के लिए साइन-इन करें और वैयक्तिकृत सुझावों के लिए वॉचलिस्ट करें
          साइन इन करें

          अक्सर पूछे जाने वाला सवाल

          • How long is The Hawks and the Sparrows?Alexa द्वारा संचालित

          विवरण

          बदलाव करें
          • रिलीज़ की तारीख़
            • 10 दिसंबर 1969 (पश्चिम जर्मनी)
          • कंट्री ऑफ़ ओरिजिन
            • इटली
          • भाषा
            • इतालवी
          • इस रूप में भी जाना जाता है
            • The Hawks and the Sparrows
          • फ़िल्माने की जगहें
            • Fiumicino, Lazio, इटली
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            • Arco Film
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          बॉक्स ऑफ़िस

          बदलाव करें
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          तकनीकी विशेषताएं

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