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Sans pitié

Original title: Senza pietà
  • 1948
  • Approved
  • 1h 30m
IMDb RATING
6.6/10
588
YOUR RATING
Carla Del Poggio and John Kitzmiller in Sans pitié (1948)
CrimeDramaRomance

An African-American soldier stationing in Italy refuses to make a deal with local gangsters. However, when a girl he loves turns desperately to prostitution, Jerry is forced to change his mi... Read allAn African-American soldier stationing in Italy refuses to make a deal with local gangsters. However, when a girl he loves turns desperately to prostitution, Jerry is forced to change his mind to save her.An African-American soldier stationing in Italy refuses to make a deal with local gangsters. However, when a girl he loves turns desperately to prostitution, Jerry is forced to change his mind to save her.

  • Director
    • Alberto Lattuada
  • Writers
    • Federico Fellini
    • Alberto Lattuada
    • Ettore Maria Margadonna
  • Stars
    • Carla Del Poggio
    • John Kitzmiller
    • Giulietta Masina
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.6/10
    588
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Alberto Lattuada
    • Writers
      • Federico Fellini
      • Alberto Lattuada
      • Ettore Maria Margadonna
    • Stars
      • Carla Del Poggio
      • John Kitzmiller
      • Giulietta Masina
    • 10User reviews
    • 13Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 win & 1 nomination total

    Photos52

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    Top cast18

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    Carla Del Poggio
    Carla Del Poggio
    • Angela Borghi
    John Kitzmiller
    John Kitzmiller
    • Jerry Jackson
    Giulietta Masina
    Giulietta Masina
    • Marcella
    Folco Lulli
    Folco Lulli
    • Giacomo
    Pierre Claudé
    • Pier Luigi
    Raf Pindi
    • Capitano sudamericano
    • (as Lando Muzio)
    Daniel Jones
    • Richard
    Enza Giovine
    • Suor Gertrude
    Otello Fava
    • Dumb Man
    Romano Villi
    • Bandito
    Max Lancia
    • Cesare
    Mario Perrone
    Mario Perrone
    • Bandito
    Paola Marchetti
    Armando Libianchi
    Carlo Bianco
    • Barone Hoffman
    Joseph Falletta
    • Americano
    Patrizia Lari
    • Ospite dell'istituto di correzione
    Otello Bacci
    • Otello Bacci
    • Director
      • Alberto Lattuada
    • Writers
      • Federico Fellini
      • Alberto Lattuada
      • Ettore Maria Margadonna
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews10

    6.6588
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    Featured reviews

    7boblipton

    Life is Not a A Circus

    If this movie is at all well remembered or occasionally revived, it is not because of the director or stars. It is because one of its writers and assistant directors was Federico Fellini. Given his later success and directorial vehicles, it is sometimes forgotten that he rose to prominence as a writer of Italian neo-realism movies.

    These movies were acclaimed for their efforts to show real people with real problems. In large part they were a response to much of the production facilities in Italy being destroyed in the war and money being in very short supply for film production after the war. If the only setting you have for your movie is the ruined street or the impoverished countryside, you can't ignore that reality in the script.

    Director Alberto Lattuada, who had more of a career than promoting Fellini to co-director on VARIETY LIGHTS, directs very competently. The story might have played in Italy in 1948 as the story of a woman reduced to prostitution and her American GI lover, but the production people decided to make her lover Black, for shock value in the American market. Carla del Poggia as the woman overwhelmed by events, is excellent when contrasted with the cynicism everyone else in Italy seems to show. That gives this movie an upbeat, neo-realist message: things may be bad, but good people can find triumph in tragedy.
    3jordondave-28085

    The ending kind of sucked, and who can figure women like Angela out

    (1948) Without Pity/ Senza pietà (In Italian with English subtitles) CRIME DRAMA

    Co-written and directed by Alberto Lattuada that takes place just after the end of WWII with Angela Borghi (Carla Del Poggio) while riding in a train as a stowaway. And while the train was slowing down, another vehicle has been chased by military police vehicles. And because the train was slowing down, one of the men, the military police were chasing happened to climb onto the same cargo as Angela. And while she is ducking to avoid trouble a military officer, Johnny Saxon (Preston Foster) climbed in as well while the escapee he was chasing managed to escape to the other compartment who managed to get away, shooting and injuring Johnny unconscious while the train was moving. And by the time the train makes it next stop, is when she calls help for the injured Johnny. And while he is being taken care of, Angela is then being cross examined regarding her intentions. She tells them she was heading to Leghorn to visit her brother, and their reaction was to bring her to a Christian boarding house for women. And while holding her their, she then builds a rapport with other women. One in particular is Marcella (Giulietta Masina) to which after Angela learns her brother is no longer there like she claimed he has, she then tells Angela if there is anyone she wants to know about, it would be a guy who wears all white, his name is Pier Luigi (Pierre Claudé) we find out later he is a racketeer. At the same time Johnny wants to go back and thank the lady, Angela who has saved him.

    What is asinine about this movie is the fact that sometime during the movie, Johnny had the sufficient funds, connections, rides and money to drive Angela to her intended destination which is Leghorn, and for some odd reason the only car she wanted to be driven on, is on the vehicle driven by the racketeer himself; and for some odd reason the sufficient funds he had was spent on having fun at the fair; only when Johnny continues to hang around with Angela is when his problem worsens.
    8opusv5

    Very good film (from what I remember)

    I saw this film 30 years or more at a university screening. It's probably never been released on videotape and may never be on DVD. I remember it as an affecting drama of a relationship/affair between an Italian girl and an afro-American GI (Kitzmiller). Both characters are sympathetic, with the Italian girl eventual drawn into prostitution by the difficult conditions of a receding World War II. Yet it is those conditions, with the Americans now an occuppying force in Italy, that bring the two together in a way probably impossible but for war. This film could be, I suppose, "neo-realist," and would be nice to "revisit" again to confirm my initial good impression of it.
    6wilvram

    No Way Out

    A sombre account of a black G.I. attempting to desert in the aftermath of the Italian campaign and his involvement with a local girl, his recapture and second escape, while she has been coerced into prostitution by a gang of traffickers in goods and people, and their attempts to escape together once united.

    This only really came to life for me when the doomed couple were on the screen. John Kitzmiller does not come over as an experienced actor, yet this has the effect of making his scenes all the more poignant. Carla Del Poggio is good as his would-be lover. The evils it highlights are with us still very much today. The assertion by another reviewer that the film was banned in the UK is incorrect, along with the implication that the different backgrounds of the leading characters could be a cause of such a ban. In fact it was passed in May 1950 with an 'A' certificate, after two or three minutes of cuts, giving it a running time of ninety-one minutes, which I surmise is the version on the current R2 DVD.
    8masonfisk

    A RARITY INDEED...!

    A rare film noir w/an African American lead, John Kitzmiller, from 1948. Kitzmiller is a GI in Italy who comes in contact w/a travelling woman, Carla Del Poggio, & they hit it off as they spend the night hanging out but Del Poggio has ties to some criminal elements who when they get wind of who Kitzmiller is decide to jump him as he's transporting goods in a truck. The military, assuming he had something to do w/the crime, put Kitzmiller in jail while Del Poggio tries to curry favor w/the head crook to help him out. Kitzmiller escapes from jail hoping to reach Del Poggio but as the dictum of film noir dictates, only bad comes from trying to do something good. Raw & rough w/its edges unshaved, the film pulls the viewer along for this uneasy ride which if you watch enough of these things, you can see the ending from a mile off & we're all the better for it.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Because of its unflattering portrait of the US military occupation staff in Italy, the film was not allowed to be shown in either the American or the British sectors of Germany.
    • Goofs
      The final scene was filmed with two units and the wide shot shows, top left, all the crew of the second unit, plus the camera.
    • Quotes

      Marcella: You get uglier day by day. Any news?

    • Crazy credits
      This is a story not of two races but of two people who met in Italy just after the war. Men and women had forgotten compassion and abandoned tenderness in their desperate struggle for survival. But there was pity and devotion in the heart of one G.I. This is his story.
    • Connections
      Referenced in American Grindhouse (2010)
    • Soundtracks
      Brazil
      Written and performed by Ary Barroso

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • July 22, 1949 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • Italy
    • Languages
      • Italian
      • English
      • Spanish
    • Also known as
      • Without Pity
    • Filming locations
      • Livorno, Tuscany, Italy
    • Production company
      • Lux Film
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 30 minutes
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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    Carla Del Poggio and John Kitzmiller in Sans pitié (1948)
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