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Il bidone

  • 1955
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 53m
IMDb RATING
7.5/10
7.5K
YOUR RATING
Il bidone (1955)
A trio of con-men led by a lonesome swindler must deal with their job and family pressures.
Play trailer3:17
1 Video
99+ Photos
CaperTragedyComedyCrimeDrama

A trio of con-men led by a lonesome swindler must deal with their job and family pressures.A trio of con-men led by a lonesome swindler must deal with their job and family pressures.A trio of con-men led by a lonesome swindler must deal with their job and family pressures.

  • Director
    • Federico Fellini
  • Writers
    • Federico Fellini
    • Ennio Flaiano
    • Tullio Pinelli
  • Stars
    • Broderick Crawford
    • Richard Basehart
    • Giulietta Masina
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.5/10
    7.5K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Federico Fellini
    • Writers
      • Federico Fellini
      • Ennio Flaiano
      • Tullio Pinelli
    • Stars
      • Broderick Crawford
      • Richard Basehart
      • Giulietta Masina
    • 41User reviews
    • 44Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 2 nominations total

    Videos1

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    Trailer 3:17
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    Photos156

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    Top cast32

    Edit
    Broderick Crawford
    Broderick Crawford
    • Augusto Rocco
    Richard Basehart
    Richard Basehart
    • Carlo
    Giulietta Masina
    Giulietta Masina
    • Iris
    Franco Fabrizi
    Franco Fabrizi
    • Roberto Giorgio
    Sue Ellen Blake
    Sue Ellen Blake
    • Susanna
    Irene Cefaro
    Irene Cefaro
    • Marisa
    Alberto De Amicis
    Alberto De Amicis
    • Rinaldo
    Lorella De Luca
    Lorella De Luca
    • Patrizia
    Giacomo Gabrielli
    Giacomo Gabrielli
    • Il Baron Vargas
    Riccardo Garrone
    Riccardo Garrone
    • Riccardo
    Paul Grenter
    • Un truffatore
    Emilio Manfredi
    Lucetta Muratori
    Lucetta Muratori
    Mario Passante
    Mario Passante
    • Conman
    Sara Simoni
    • Sorella di Stella
    Xenia Valderi
    Xenia Valderi
    • Luciana
    Mara Werlen
    Mara Werlen
    • Maggie
    Maria Zanoli
    Maria Zanoli
    • Stella Florina
    • Director
      • Federico Fellini
    • Writers
      • Federico Fellini
      • Ennio Flaiano
      • Tullio Pinelli
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews41

    7.57.5K
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    Featured reviews

    7ma-cortes

    An interesting and brooding Fellini film about three small-time delinquents who swindle unfortunate people.

    Augusto (Oscarized america actor Broderick Crawford), Carlo (Richard Basehart who married the italian Valentina Cortese), and Roberto (Franco Fabrizi) are scam artists who often work together. The three Italian conmen pull capers in Rome tring to make a better life for themselves. Middle-age divorced Augusto is the oldest, most seasoned in the business, and the trio's spiritual leader. They either are immune to the notion that most of their victims are not wealthy, most distressed, most uneducated, most unfortunate, rural peasants or don't care that they make at most a few hundred thousand lira at a time in order to dupe and swindle them.

    Another film of magical insight by Federico Fellini the master movie maker of 'La Dolce Vita'. A new dissection of Italian society in the mid-1950s, in similar style to 'I Vittellone' from the hand of a Fellini who already shows in this work his skills as a fierce observer of reality. Dark overtones permeate one of Fellini's best efforts

    Sensitive and interesting film about a trio of swindlers led by a lonesome con-man must deal with their jobs and family pressures; packing drama, emotion, good feeling and Italian social habits. Fellini's drama, argued by some to be one of his finest works. The flick contains a highly symbolic internal logic, enjoyable imagery and attractive plot peppered with dramatic events. An enjoyable analysis of the lives of three people trapped in scams and corruption in order to get better their lives and eventually getting redemption. Their discontent leads them to carry out different activities, not all of them worthy of admiration. Fellini made a scathing and thoughtful portrait of manners on some swindlers around Rome in the 1950s. The roles are multi-dimensional and the storyline has brilliant insights into maturity, family, remorse and loneliness. Here Fellini demonstrates a real sensibility to the underprivileged of the world and his belief in a certain redemption. Almas sin conciencia (1955) is both a stand-alone movie and the centerpiece of Federico Fellini's unofficial "trilogy of loneliness," preceded by La strada (1954) and followed by Le notti di Cabiria (1957). All three are key works marking the last great moments of Italian neorealism. Good cast bring up the level of this movie. Along with two American actors: Broderick Crawford, Richard Basehart giving nice acting, there are good Italian actors and comedians who will eventually develop fruitful film careers, such as: Franco Fabrizi, Riccardo Garrone and feature film debut of Lorella De Luca, and, of course, Fellini's, Giulietta Masina.

    The motion picture was masterfully directed by Federico Fellini and with magnificent interpretations all around. Fellini who inspired the word "Felliniesque" was one of the best Italian filmmakers/writers . He frequently cast Marcello Mastroianni and Giulietta Masina and Score by Nino Rota. His best works include dreams like imagery and nostalgia. He made Italian classics , such as : ¨8 and 1/2¨, ¨Roma¨, ¨Satyricon¨, ¨I Vitellone¨ , ¨La Dolce Vita¨ , ¨The clowns¨, ¨Casanova¨, ¨And the ship sails on¨, "City of Women" , "Orchestra Rehearsal" and directed his wife Giulietta in various films such as : ¨The white sheik¨ , ¨Il Bidone¨, ¨Juliet of the Spirits¨, "The Nights of Cabiria" ¨Ginger and Fred¨, ¨La Strada¨(1954) that won the first ever Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film and N. Y. Critics Award to Foreign Film; in addition, including some auto-biographic elements, especially in ¨Amarcord¨ (1973) , though he denied his film to be autobiographical, but agreed that there are similarities with his own adolescence. ¨Il bidone (1955)¨ rating: 7/10. Essential and indispensable seeing for cinema classics fans and Fellini enthusiasts.
    10Ymir4

    Brilliant and poignant. A must for all Fellini fans!

    This is a richly poetic film, a stark portrait of three con-men who make their living by swindling the poor out of what little money they have. The film moves back and forth between the scams they pull in the countryside and their lives in the city between jobs. The group's leader is Augusto, played expressively by the great Broderick Crawford. The other two con men are Roberto (Fabrizi), a lady chaser and risk-taker, and Picasso (Basehart), a family man and painter. Picasso's wife Iris is played by the great Giulietta Masina. Crawford (who won an Oscar for "All the King's Men," a film I need to see) is really excellent as Augusto, who begins addressing the matter of his conscience when by chance he runs into the daughter he has abandoned.

    The party and dance scenes in the film's first half are really fantastic and crazy, full of men and women dancing to Nino Rota's music, crazy situations and fights arising, lots of drinking, lots of people looking at the camera (including a photographer who bounces up from the bottom of the frame, takes a picture, and kneels back down out of sight…that's typical Fellini there). For all of the fun that's present in this film, it takes some very moving and sad turns...and the amazing thing is how Fellini balances something funny and surreal to something truly heartbreaking (the film's final 15 minutes are stunningly touching).

    Nino Rota's score is, as always, marvelous and really nails the feel and tone of the film. There are many themes, including a somber theme for Augusto's daughter, a really eccentric circus march theme, and lastly a terrific emotional theme that especially pulls into sharp effect in the film's closing moment. All of his themes are cleverly adapted in many variations bouncing between different styles of music- from mambo to wildly eccentric dance to rather Arabian to his typical circus-like music to just as often something very dramatic and emotional. This great score was released by CAM records just a couple years ago, it includes most of the music that's in the film, and is a great listen for Rota fans.

    `Il Bidone' is the most ignored and overlooked film in Fellini's body of work, which is unfortunate. It's truly unforgettable how it depicts struggle, loneliness, and utmost guilt in the loveliest and most poignant ways imaginable.
    7gavin6942

    Solid Crime Tale

    A trio of con-men lead by a lonesome swindler must deal with their job and family pressures.

    Bosley Crowther called it "a cheap crime thriller." He added, "For this film, which is often mentioned in estimations of the master's works, is notable as a false step in his movement toward the development of a type of story material ... But it contains some very strong Fellini phases and accumulations of moods that make it well worth seeing. And it is generally well played ... Broderick Crawford's performance as the swindler is heavy and sodden, with a particular flair for postured histrionics in the swindle scenes." I suspect that opinions have changed since Crowther's day and people are generally more positive. It may be a "cheap crime thriller", but I happened to really enjoy that aspect -- the three cons who are so depraved they will even pretend to be the Church to rob from the poor. And then we get the beautiful contrast of their home lives. These are not three evil bachelors, but men who have wives and children. Does that make their crime worse?
    10jotix100

    The swindlers

    Federico Fellini followed "La Strada" with this film. A forgotten classic that on second viewing still has the same impact when we saw it at a retrospective of the master's work some time back. Fellini was instrumental in creating this magnificent movie about con men that operated in Italy in the years that followed the end of WWII. Fellini worked on the screen play with his collaborators, Tullio Pinelli and Ennio Flaiano; they gave life to all these swindlers and made them human. Nino Rota's music and Otello Martinelli's cinematography compliment the film and make it even better.

    Fellini was a director that got a lot from his actors, as he shows in "Il Bidone". Working with Broderick Crawford, and again with Richard Basehart, he was able to have both men give excellent performances, especially Mr. Crawford, who looks as though he is nothing but Italian because he convinces us he is the hard man he is portraying.

    The three friends, Augusto, Picasso, and Roberto, go from one scheme to the next, never thinking about who are they stealing from. The best caper occurs at the beginning of the film as the trio arrives at the farm of the two older women with the promise of riches hidden in their land. Mr. Crawford's bishop is perfect. So is the assistant priest of Richard Basehart. Franco Fabrizi is the driver. The solution for getting the money away from the poor women is something not to be believed.

    Augusto's life is an empty one. He goes from one job to another trying to outsmart his victims. It's not until Augusto meets his daughter Patrizia by chance, that he begins to feel what might be some remorse for his actions as he notices his beautiful daughter now grown and on her way to making something out of her life. His conscience begins to bother him because he realizes the evil of his ways.

    The other best sequence in the film involves the party at Vargas' house where the swindlers have been invited to celebrate the arrival of the new year. We watch as Iris, Picasso's wife, realizes what her husband and the others are really up to. Roberto, the ladies' man, steals the gold cigarette case, not realizing that he is at the home of another con man and his actions will not go unnoticed, but even the embarrassment he goes through in front of the guests will make him give up his life.

    "Il Bidone" is a fine example of the Italian cinema of those years as it shows an artist of the caliber of Federico Fellini in top form. The film will delight people that haven't been exposed to that part of Mr. Fellini's career seldom seen these days.
    8tim-764-291856

    'Forgotten' Fellini is unforgettable.

    Though I'd seen Il Bidone many years ago on TV, I didn't realise it was a Fellini film until the internet joined the dots between film titles and synopsises. I always did remember its starkness, its raw beauty and its redemptive narrative - and at last I bought the DVD and was reunited with this minor classic.

    This is where the re-watch proved its worth - the multi-layers of post- war Italian society; its Catholicism fighting at odds with poverty and corruption. The characters interweave their human stories to take us on various personal journeys. Fellini's attempt to include American actors as the male leads, dubbed, fooled me - the oft drawling Broderick Crawford seemed perfect as the guilt-weary protagonist (aka The Swindler) who in actuality was often drunk on set.

    For me, the audacious nature of the Swindlers in action, abusing the Catholic position of power by posing as high clergy and conning penniless peasants was bold; certainly for its time. Re-watching brought the trademark Fellini wild party in full swing - as wild and spirited as any he's staged - all rather sickened and over-the-top; portrayed as being funded by immoral, criminal money and in total pursuit of power and hedonism. The ending is one of those that etches itself into your psyche, both haunting and provocative.

    However, unlike most 'popular' Fellini films, the leads aren't that likable and one doesn't rally with them in the way of, say, Cabiria or La Strada. That maybe explains why this Fellini isn't generally known, or loved. It's actually rather closer to La Dolce Vita in tone and could be seen as a precursor to that classic.

    Il Bidone isn't the easiest film to watch and has its faults; a jarring narrative and inconsistencies that one accepts from amateur crowds on location. But this does add up to a naturally buzzing and strident film, balanced by occasional poignant moments of tenderness as consciences are so sorely pricked, it's heartbreaking.

    So, if you're into Fellini, don't let this one pass you by. The director is in his prime here, as voyeur and narrator rather than the self-satisfied but still genius of his indulgent 8 and a half.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      This film is both a stand-alone movie and the centerpiece of Federico Fellini's unofficial "trilogy of loneliness", preceded by La strada (1954) and followed by Les nuits de Cabiria (1957). All three are key works marking the last great moments of Italian neorealism, which was waning as central figures like Roberto Rossellini and Vittorio De Sica moved to different genres. In the 1950s, he still held the neorealist conviction that nothing is more dramatic than the lives of ordinary people transferred to the screen with a minimum of embellishment.
    • Goofs
      (at around 10 mins) When the bones are taken out of the ground, they are completely white with no dirt on them; it's as if they'd been washed (or never buried at all).
    • Quotes

      Augusto: We've gotta figure out something better. We can't go on like this.

      Roberto: Who's saying we should? I'm not an idiot. This is just for fun, just to keep us going. I'm going to sing. When I save up some money, I'll take lessons. I've bought all the Johnnie Ray's records. He's really my style.

      Augusto: You'll never take lessons.

      Roberto: I'm not ending up like you!

    • Alternate versions
      The Prime Video master, circulating on subscription services such as FilmBox, has been censored to blur out shots of actors smoking.
    • Connections
      Edited into Histoire(s) du cinéma: La monnaie de l'absolu (1999)

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    FAQ16

    • How long is The Swindle?Powered by Alexa
    • Did they dub the Italian for Crawford and Basehart?

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • February 29, 1956 (France)
    • Countries of origin
      • Italy
      • France
    • Languages
      • Italian
      • Latin
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Le gang en soutane
    • Filming locations
      • Acquedotto dell'Acqua Felice, Rome, Lazio, Italy
    • Production companies
      • Titanus
      • Société Générale de Cinématographie (S.G.C.)
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 53m(113 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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