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La belle Romaine

Original title: La romana
  • 1954
  • 1h 48m
IMDb RATING
6.6/10
429
YOUR RATING
La belle Romaine (1954)
Drama

During the fascist era, Adriana a beautiful young model, becomes a prostitute after a love affair gone wrong. She meets Mino, a partisan who falls in love with her and wants to redeem her.During the fascist era, Adriana a beautiful young model, becomes a prostitute after a love affair gone wrong. She meets Mino, a partisan who falls in love with her and wants to redeem her.During the fascist era, Adriana a beautiful young model, becomes a prostitute after a love affair gone wrong. She meets Mino, a partisan who falls in love with her and wants to redeem her.

  • Director
    • Luigi Zampa
  • Writers
    • Alberto Moravia
    • Giorgio Bassani
    • Luigi Zampa
  • Stars
    • Gina Lollobrigida
    • Daniel Gélin
    • Franco Fabrizi
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.6/10
    429
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Luigi Zampa
    • Writers
      • Alberto Moravia
      • Giorgio Bassani
      • Luigi Zampa
    • Stars
      • Gina Lollobrigida
      • Daniel Gélin
      • Franco Fabrizi
    • 8User reviews
    • 6Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 nomination total

    Photos24

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    Top cast21

    Edit
    Gina Lollobrigida
    Gina Lollobrigida
    • Adriana Silenzi
    Daniel Gélin
    Daniel Gélin
    • Mino Diodati
    Franco Fabrizi
    Franco Fabrizi
    • Gino Molinari
    Raymond Pellegrin
    Raymond Pellegrin
    • Astarita
    Renato Tontini
    • Carlo Sonzogno
    Pina Piovani
    • La madre di Adriana
    Xenia Valderi
    Xenia Valderi
    • Gisella
    Gino Buzzanca
    • Riccardo
    Mariano Bottino
    • Tommaso
    Mario Addobbati
    • Tullio
    Giovanni Di Benedetto
    • Il pittore
    • (as Gianni Di Benedetto)
    Riccardo Garrone
    Riccardo Garrone
    • Giancarlo
    Alberto Anselmi
    Bianca Maria Cerasoli
      Ada Colangeli
      • La padrona della pensione
      Vincenzo Milazzo
      Riccardo Ferri
      • Il locandiere
      Alfredo De Marco
      • Director
        • Luigi Zampa
      • Writers
        • Alberto Moravia
        • Giorgio Bassani
        • Luigi Zampa
      • All cast & crew
      • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

      User reviews8

      6.6429
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      Featured reviews

      6boblipton

      The Sin Of Beauty

      Gina Lollobrigida goes to work as an artist's model in 1930s Rome. She is young, beautiful, and desired by many men, some whom lie to her, like Franco Fabrizi, some who force her, like Raymond Pellegrini, some who threaten her, like Renato Tontini.... and then there's Daniel Gélin.

      All of them claim to love her. Will any of them work out? It's a tough, cruel life for a beautiful young woman, surrounded by men who lie to her. Luigi Zampa's drama shares some story-telling techniques from Neo-realism, but it's a glossy studio production that shows off Lollobrigida's beauty and acting talents. Like many movies about hard times for poor women, it harkens to the Japanese shomin-gekkim, the low-class tragedy. Although this doesn't seem to offer any particularly deep message, it's fine commercial film-making, far more telling than the repressed Hollywood weeper of the era
      7CinemaSerf

      Woman of Rome

      With the "Duce" still very much in charge of Italy, the young "Adriana" (Gina Lollobrigida) is coasting along in life, using her good looks to attract the attention of "Gino" (Franco Fabrizi) and hoping that they will marry. A casual meeting with aspiring Fascist "Astarita" (Raymond Pellegrin), however, soon puts that plan on the fire - especially as he clearly has designs her himself. She's a bit despondent and turns to the game to make her living. At times she comes across as almost desperate for love, for attention - yep, even sex, but perhaps when she meets "Mino" (Daniel Gélin) she might find some sort of purpose in life? Well the fly in that ointment is that he's a committed anti-Fascist and is known to the authorities. With him taking risks on a daily basis and her in possession of some fairly profound news, is there any hope for redemption for her and happiness for them? This is certainly one of Lollobrigida's better efforts as she tackles this role with quite a degree authenticity. There's virtually no glamour for her to hide behind and she delivers with a rawness as the young woman whose options are largely limited by her looks - a situation common to many women at the time. The choices of men her character makes are maybe not the best but both Gélin and Pellegrin provide solid foils as the story develops juggling romance with elements of politics and crime. It's touching at times, steadily paced and well worth a couple of hours, I'd say.
      2CutUncut2021

      Pasticcio

      Grim pastiche of the still overrated misogynist Moravia, starring the incompetent Lollo, whose hallmark pouting manipulations here play neatly into the hands of the male-dominated Italian film industry, then and now. Zampa's emasculated recreation of the unspeakable horrors of Fascism is shameful: a weak scenography by Bassani and lazy transition from an indifferent book, each scene delivered in bite-sized morsels for a smug semi-illiterate Italian audience enjoying the so-called economic boom, now feeling exonerated from their abject mass collaboration with the regime barely a decade earlier. Watchable only for Gélin and the interiors and exteriors of a Rome before the country's colonisation by American-style consumerism in the 1960s, replacing one regime with another.
      8discount1957

      Why was there no review up to now ?

      I wonder why there's no review of this film up to now, not only because it's a very good movie. Beside of that, it features one of the biggest female movie-stars of the 20th century, Gina Lollobrigida, in an early leading role, in the prime of her beauty. To my taste, she appears here much more impressive than in later and better-known roles. The underlying story ('La Romana')was a big success in the USA in the year 1947, and millions of it were sold worldwide, was written by one of the most famous 20th-century-Italian writers, Alberto Moravia. The film itself is a late example of the equally famous Italian neorealistic style, with a depressing finale, regarding its heroine.

      The story is set in the Italian fascist era (1935), full of tension, and very atmospheric. The streets, cars and people of the later post-war-Rome (1954, when the film was made)are shown in gritty black-and-white. In a sequence playing within a Cinema, film within film, one sees marching fascist Italian troops on the screen, giving a feeling as if you were a cinema-visitor yourself, and then the propaganda is suddenly cut short by an action of anti-fascists. In spite of a scene like this, the film centers on the individual aspects of the protagonists, rather than on the underlying political aspects.
      8adrianovasconcelos

      Good cautionary tale with open-ended, frustrating ending

      Three exceedingly positive aspects to LA ROMANA: sound direction by Luigi Rampa, excellent B&W photography, and superb performances from Lollobrigida, Piovani, and Gelin.

      The dramatic impact on Adriana's life caused by a philandering husband who promises her marriage, only to get found out as a thief, and causes her to descend to the status of prostitute, is well examined- The character of Astarita, played by Raymond Pellegrin, is particularly cynical in light of his lofty position as medical doctor in the days of the Duce.

      The exchanges between La Lollo and Piovani, as her knowing mother, who wants the best for her daughter and sees a great deal of promise in her, only to throw it all away, are both hard and a real delight to watch.

      Credible script.

      LA ROMANA is no masterpiece but it is definitely worth seeing, especially if you are a fan of the Italian cinema.

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      Drama

      Storyline

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      Did you know

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      • Trivia
        Submitted to the British Board of Film Censors (as Woman of Rome) by Exclusive Films and passed with an "X" certificate on 5 March 1957. First shown in London at the Hammer preview theatre on 21 March 1957 (for press and trade only). For the general release on 20 May 1957 the film, surprisingly enough, shared the bill with Frankenstein s'est échappé (1957). Exclusive also had an English subtitled print which the BBFC passed on 27 February 1957, also with an "X." This version opened in London (as La Romana) on 8 September 1957 at the Berkeley, Tottenham Court Road and ran for three weeks. The co-feature this time was the far more appropriate Riz amer (1949).
      • Connections
        Featured in Discovering Film: Gina Lollobrigida (2015)

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      FAQ14

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      Details

      Edit
      • Release date
        • May 25, 1955 (France)
      • Countries of origin
        • Italy
        • France
      • Language
        • Italian
      • Also known as
        • Woman of Rome
      • Filming locations
        • Ponti-De Laurentiis Studios, Rome, Lazio, Italy(Studio)
      • Production companies
        • Excelsa Film
        • Omnium International du Film
        • Ponti-De Laurentiis Cinematografica
      • See more company credits at IMDbPro

      Tech specs

      Edit
      • Runtime
        • 1h 48m(108 min)
      • Color
        • Black and White
      • Aspect ratio
        • 1.37 : 1

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