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I figli della violenza

Titolo originale: Los olvidados
  • 1950
  • VM18
  • 1h 25min
VALUTAZIONE IMDb
8,2/10
23.106
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
I figli della violenza (1950)
A group of juvenile delinquents lives a violent and crime-filled life in the festering slums of Mexico City, and the morals of young Pedro are gradually corrupted and destroyed by the others.
Riproduci trailer3:06
1 video
99+ foto
Dramma psicologicoCrimineDramma

Un gruppo di giovani delinquenti vive una vita violenta e piena di criminalità nei bassifondi putrefatti di Città del Messico, e la morale del giovane Pedro viene gradualmente corrotta e dis... Leggi tuttoUn gruppo di giovani delinquenti vive una vita violenta e piena di criminalità nei bassifondi putrefatti di Città del Messico, e la morale del giovane Pedro viene gradualmente corrotta e distrutta dagli altri.Un gruppo di giovani delinquenti vive una vita violenta e piena di criminalità nei bassifondi putrefatti di Città del Messico, e la morale del giovane Pedro viene gradualmente corrotta e distrutta dagli altri.

  • Regia
    • Luis Buñuel
  • Sceneggiatura
    • Luis Alcoriza
    • Max Aub
    • Luis Buñuel
  • Star
    • Alfonso Mejía
    • Roberto Cobo
    • Estela Inda
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • VALUTAZIONE IMDb
    8,2/10
    23.106
    LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
    • Regia
      • Luis Buñuel
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Luis Alcoriza
      • Max Aub
      • Luis Buñuel
    • Star
      • Alfonso Mejía
      • Roberto Cobo
      • Estela Inda
    • 166Recensioni degli utenti
    • 58Recensioni della critica
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
    • Nominato ai 2 BAFTA Award
      • 12 vittorie e 6 candidature totali

    Video1

    Trailer [OV]
    Trailer 3:06
    Trailer [OV]

    Foto104

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    + 96
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    Interpreti principali42

    Modifica
    Alfonso Mejía
    Alfonso Mejía
    • Pedro
    Roberto Cobo
    Roberto Cobo
    • El Jaibo
    Estela Inda
    Estela Inda
    • La madre de Pedro
    Miguel Inclán
    Miguel Inclán
    • Don Carmelo, el ciego
    Alma Delia Fuentes
    Alma Delia Fuentes
    • Meche
    Francisco Jambrina
    Francisco Jambrina
    • El director de la escuela granja
    Jesús García
    • El padre de Julián
    • (as Jesús García Navarro)
    Efraín Arauz
    Efraín Arauz
    • Cacarizo
    Sergio Virel
    • Miembro pandilla
    • (as Sergio Villarreal)
    Jorge Pérez
    • Pelón
    Javier Amézcua
    • Julián
    Mario Ramírez
    Mario Ramírez
    • Ojitos
    Ernesto Alonso
    Ernesto Alonso
    • La Voz al Comienzo de la Película
    • (non citato nei titoli originali)
    Victorio Blanco
    • Vagabundo
    • (non citato nei titoli originali)
    Juan Luis Buñuel
    Juan Luis Buñuel
      Rubén Campos
      • Un asilado
      • (non citato nei titoli originali)
      Lupe Carriles
      Lupe Carriles
      • Doña Rufinita, vecina
      • (non citato nei titoli originali)
      Daniel Corona
      • Un golfo
      • (non citato nei titoli originali)
      • Regia
        • Luis Buñuel
      • Sceneggiatura
        • Luis Alcoriza
        • Max Aub
        • Luis Buñuel
      • Tutti gli interpreti e le troupe
      • Produzione, botteghino e altro su IMDbPro

      Recensioni degli utenti166

      8,223.1K
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      Recensioni in evidenza

      7ma-cortes

      A powerful and provoking story dealing with violence and poverty of youngsters in Mexico slums

      This ¨ The Young and the damned¨ or ¨The forgotten ones¨deals with a group of juvenile outsiders delinquents who live violent and crime-full existences in the squalid slums of Mexico. There a reform-school escaped young , El Jaibo , goes back to his neighborhood and seeks vengeance against the informant who allegedly sent him in prison. Obsessed to find him, at last he meets him, and a terrible retribution takes place. The weak and unwitting little boy Pedro and the violent villain El Jaibo will intricately interweave their bitter fates . While the young boy Pedro, : Mejia, is gradually coerced and corrupted by the nasty leader delinquent bent on revenge : Roberto Cobo.

      Wrenching, documentary- like account of waifs, beggars, street urchins, delinquents and poor youngsters in the streets from the Mexican metropolis. And sadly showing quite a few amoral roles , corruption , badness and despicable acts of pure evil carried out by some young people . Graphic and depressing, including violent and disagreeable scenes. It is not for all tastes, but nonetheless masterfully done. From surrealist Luis Buñuel shot in 21days and edited in 4 days, being stunningly photographed in black and while by excellent cameraman Gabriel Figueroa .

      The picture was well directed by Luis Buñuel during his Mexico period. He first Mexico made film was Gran Casino with Jorge Negrete and following The great Madcap or El Gran Calavera with Fernando Soler. Then, he was hired by producer Oscar Dancigers to make this film The Forgotten Ones based on facts, and being shot in Tepeyac studios. He followed directing in Mexico with the same producer a lot of titles, such as : The devil and the flesh, Mexican bus ride, The Brute, El, Robinson Crusoe , A woman without love, Wuthering heights , The criminal life of Archibald Cruz , Evil eden, Nazarin , The Young one , The Angel Exterminator , Simon of the desert . And his French period including : Diary of a chambermaid , Belle de Jour, The milky way , Discreet charm of Bourgeoise, The phantom of Liberty. The exiled Spanish director also shot in Spain some films , such as : Las Hurdes tierra sin Pan, Tristana, Viridiana and his last film : Obscure object desire. Rating : Above average . Essential and indispensable watching for Luis Buñuel buffs
      10arnis12

      one of the all time greats

      I just saw this at the local art house theatre and I realized that I've never seen a decent print of this masterpiece which ranks alongside Citizen Kane and the Bicycle Thieves as the greatest film ever made. What a shame? I'm waiting for Criterion or somebody to restore it and give it the respect it so rightfully deserves.

      However, watching butchered, scratched prints with a muddy soundtrack has given the film a charm and personality. It's as dirty and grungy as the story it is telling.

      This film is perfect. It's the closest thing to artistic TRUTH that I've seen. And yes the characters are rotten but they break your heart. Just when you think Jaibo is one of the screens greatest villains, he tells a story about being abandened as a child, and seeing the beautiful face of a woman who looked like a saint who may or may not have been his mother. Powerful stuff. Never have I seen a more relentless and brutal film. It never shys away from the truth and try to sugar coat it. All the kids are complex. They're neither innocents or devils. The story of troubled youth and urban violence have been told countless of times, but this is the real deal and the measuring stick for all.
      10berrrrgman

      A Masterpiece

      Please, right now, take away the featured user comment that calls Los Olvidados a "nice, short drama." This is perhaps the worst assessment of any movie I have ever heard, and whoever said it cannot recognize how masterful the film is because his or her senses have been dulled by too many action movies. I say that because this film, from surrealist master Luis Buñuel, is as admirable as nearly any portrait of poverty and crime, with the probable exception of DeSica's The Bicycle Thief. In fact, though, Los Olvidados is much much more brutal and harrowing than The Bicycle Thief (not to say that this assures it to be a superior film). Buñuel mostly takes a break from his surrealist tendencies in this film, with the exception of a few remarkably effective dream sequences, and creates a ultra-realist portrait of Mexican slums that is uncompromisingly frank. All the characters, including a young boy caught up in a dangerous gang, his harsh mother, the gang leader and vicious bully, and a bitter old blind man, among others, and what transpires among them are expertly captured by Buñuel's camera. To characterize this movie, I would call it a much more bleak and brutal Neo-realist film, with a touch of surrealism. I would also characterize it as a masterpiece. Why this film does not show up on more top film lists I am unsure, but all I can say is that it should not be missed by any serious film connoisseur.
      9Asa_Nisi_Masa2

      Neo-realism with an extra gear

      Where do I start? Perhaps, by writing WOW a few hundred times in a row...

      The very opening shots and voice-over warn us that this was not an optimistic movie. It instantly made me believe this would be Las Hurdes in Mexico, something like a fictionalised version of Buñuel's 1933 faux-documentary about the extreme poverty of the peasants in the remote Spanish Las Hurdes region. In the first half hour, Los Olvidados's mood and style remained faithful to the influence of several Italian neo-realist movies I'd seen, namely De Sica and perhaps some early Pasolini (namely, Accattone). In a looser sense, maybe also Mira Nair's Salaam Bombay! seemed to have gotten some inspiration from Buñuel's movie. And finally, I could also and more obviously see that Fernando Meirelles's Cidade de Deus (City of God) owed more than a little to this 1950 masterpiece. I love it when I finally get to see the movie that has influenced so many other (usually minor, but more famous) films that have followed it even several decades after its release! Los Olvidados would still have been an excellent film, even if it had remained Italian neo-realistic-like till the end. But to my delight and wonder, it became something much more unique and memorable as soon as its own distinct, Buñuelian flavour kicked in halfway through, IMO elevating this picture to something more than "just" powerfully gritty and cinematically honest (as can be said and admired in the works of De Sica, Rossellini et al). To be honest, though I AM Italian and the spirit of neo-realism is somehow deeply embedded in my cultural subconscious, my problem with the Italian neo-realists has always been their lack of vision, or refusal to also venture into the otherworldly, the spiritual, the dream-like, the allegorical. Though I bow before the greatness of the Italian neo-realist masters, I will never feel completely conquered by their otherwise mesmerising pictures. Before watching Los Olvidados, I was never quite sure of the reason for this. With this movie, Buñuel has finally put his finger on exactly what I've always found was missing in pictures like Sciuscià, Accattone and Roma Città Aperta for them to truly get not just under my skin, but into my wildest dreams and imagination as well - an ability to interweave the fantastical in something that couldn't be more grounded in reality. Yet, why can't the lives of the underprivileged underbelly of the world, in this case a Mexican shantytown of the late 40s, also evoke magic? Is the fantastical only a privilege of the bougeoisie? I think not! Thank you, Buñuel, for inspiring me into thinking about this...
      10Quinoa1984

      Not just an important note for Bunuel, but for neo-realism as well

      Los Olvidados, translated as The Young and the Damned, is a treatise on the street-life of kids in Mexico City. There are at least three characters who are of focus here, and three others on the sidelines with equal importance: El Jaibo, a rough young man who's grown up on the street his whole life, and who's picked up more than his share of wicked, ego-driven habits; "Big Eyes" as he's called by a Blind Man (he's credited as Lost Boy on this site) is a kid whose lost his father, and is taken in by the old-fashioned, hardened old man, who lives next to the girl Meche; and Pedro, the hero, is deep down a good soul, but with a side that just wants to roam the streets, at the carelessness of his estranged mother, who like her son is poverty stricken. Pedro, one day, witnesses Jaibo commit a killing of a squealer, and this puts him in a bad position, as his relationship with his mother unfolds, and so on.

      All through Los Olvidados, based on real events and real people from the streets, I kept on feeling for these people in the same way I did for the characters I saw in the neo-realism movies like La Terra Trema and Shoeshine. Here are people who are so starkly depicted who can practically smell the streets coming off of them. That they are non-professionals in real settings, like in those movies, and the stories are such simple yet heart-felt, goes to show the mastery of Luis Bunuel. While he became infamous for such films in the thirties like Un Chien Andalou and L'Age D'Or, and later for such originals like Discreet Charm of the Bourgeoisie and the obscure Phantom of Liberty (the climax in that is something that could've inspired most gross-out comedies of late), this film displays his worth as a writer/director outside of the reputation he garnered in that he tells us the story, with the little details and complex emotions that the Italian directors were able to bring forth, while every once in a while reminding us that it is his brand of movie-making at work.

      And, un-like his other works, he does this ever-so fleetingly that I only caught his style creeping in twice: the first was a tip of the hat to his surrealistic roots, when Pedro has a dream that seems to correspond perfectly to his truths and the truths of the neighborhood as he asks her why (in an earlier scene) she didn't give him any meat. She brings over a large piece of meat, and as she brings it to him a hand creeps up (Jaibo) that grabs at him to take it away. There is just enough imagery and just enough message that the dream works as one of Bunuel's best sequences. The second time was a very brief moment when Pedro is working with some chickens and eggs, and at one point Pedro looks at the camera and throws an egg at the lens. Indeed, this could be seen as out of place for such a straight-forward drama on torrents of youth that resonate generation after generation (this is inspired by neo-realism to an extent, yet probably inspired the likes of Clockwork Orange and even the recent City of God), however we get an inkling of what Bunuel is trying to tell us- these are real people in real settings and in a somewhat melodramatic story set in times of economic drought and such, and feel for them as I do - but don't forget, it's only a movie.

      In my opinion, Los Olvidados should be discovered by movie buffs, since it is possibly Bunuel's most accessible work, but perhaps Discreet Charm would still be the first to see if wanting to get the Bunuel vein.

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      Trama

      Modifica

      Lo sapevi?

      Modifica
      • Quiz
        When it was released in Mexico in 1950, its theatrical commercial run only lasted for three days due to the enraged reactions from the press, government, and upper and middle class audiences.
      • Blooper
        In a shot of Pedro's corpse, the victim can clearly be seen breathing.
      • Citazioni

        Don Carmelo, el ciego: I hope they'll kill every one of them before they born!

      • Versioni alternative
        SPOILER: In the director's cut, Pedro is stabbed to death by Jaibo, and Meche and her grandfather dump his body outside the town. The blind man denounces Jaibo to the police, who shoot Jaibo when fleeing arrest. Pedro's mother is left alone alone, in despair. A shorter "happy" ending, never used by the director, was filmed probably to accommodate censorship authorities or the sensibilities of the distributors: Jaibo dies in an accidental fall when he's fighting Pedro, who retrieves the stolen banknote from him. Pedro has a short conversation with Ojitos, and then returns to the reformatory farm-school (to a loud musical crescendo).
      • Connessioni
        Featured in Le ciné-club de Radio-Canada: Films présentés: Los olvidados, Le tempestaire (1956)

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      Dettagli

      Modifica
      • Data di uscita
        • 19 febbraio 1964 (Italia)
      • Paese di origine
        • Messico
      • Lingua
        • Spagnolo
      • Celebre anche come
        • The Young and the Damned
      • Luoghi delle riprese
        • Estudios Tepeyac, Città del Messico, Distretto Federale, Messico
      • Azienda produttrice
        • Ultramar Films
      • Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro

      Botteghino

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      • Lordo in tutto il mondo
        • 134.918 USD
      Vedi le informazioni dettagliate del botteghino su IMDbPro

      Specifiche tecniche

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      • Tempo di esecuzione
        • 1h 25min(85 min)
      • Colore
        • Black and White
      • Proporzioni
        • 1.37 : 1

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