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Mamma Roma

  • 1962
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 46m
IMDb RATING
7.8/10
11K
YOUR RATING
Mamma Roma (1962)
Drama

An ex-prostitute reunites with her son, but an extortion scheme threatens her aspirations for a decent life.An ex-prostitute reunites with her son, but an extortion scheme threatens her aspirations for a decent life.An ex-prostitute reunites with her son, but an extortion scheme threatens her aspirations for a decent life.

  • Director
    • Pier Paolo Pasolini
  • Writer
    • Pier Paolo Pasolini
  • Stars
    • Anna Magnani
    • Ettore Garofolo
    • Franco Citti
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.8/10
    11K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Pier Paolo Pasolini
    • Writer
      • Pier Paolo Pasolini
    • Stars
      • Anna Magnani
      • Ettore Garofolo
      • Franco Citti
    • 46User reviews
    • 46Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 2 wins & 1 nomination total

    Photos109

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    Top cast27

    Edit
    Anna Magnani
    Anna Magnani
    • Mamma Roma
    Ettore Garofolo
    Ettore Garofolo
    • Ettore
    Franco Citti
    Franco Citti
    • Carmine
    Silvana Corsini
    Silvana Corsini
    • Bruna
    Luisa Loiano
    • Biancofiore
    Paolo Volponi
    Paolo Volponi
    • Il Prete
    Luciano Gonini
    Luciano Gonini
    • Zacaria
    Vittorio La Paglia
    Vittorio La Paglia
    • Il sig. Pellissier
    Piero Morgia
    Piero Morgia
    • Piero
    Franco Ceccarelli
    • Carletto - un amico di Ettore
    Marcello Sorrentino
    • Tonino - un amico di Ettore
    Sandro Meschino
    • Pasquale - un amico di Ettore
    Franco Tovo
    • Augusto - un amico di Ettore
    Pasquale Ferrarese
    • Lino - un amico di Ettore
    Leandro Santarelli
    • Begalo
    Emanuele Di Bari
    • Gennarino il trovatore
    Antonio Spoletini
    • Un pompieretto
    Nino Bionci
    • Un pittoretto
    • Director
      • Pier Paolo Pasolini
    • Writer
      • Pier Paolo Pasolini
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews46

    7.811K
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    Featured reviews

    8msavard-161-206286

    "Why am I nobody, and you the King of Kings?"

    As my first Pasolini film, Mamma Roma is as good an introduction as I could have wished. The plot is terrific and heartbreaking, and the depth and range that Mamma Roma's character calls for is delivered in full by Magnani. One must only consider the two separate occasions we see Mamma walk the line after dark. What a force! Her figure attracts so many men, almost like a light in an otherwise dark night would attract insects. But none of these men can keep up with her--the past she recounts, although lightheartedly, is too troublesome a road for anyone to walk down. Indeed, she herself never finds an escape from it.

    And this is the genius of Pasolini's film. That we have the two figures of Ettore and Mamma Roma, who each emerge in the film at the hour of their seeming liberation-- Mamma freed from her pimp and Ettore from his "hicks" in the country--who nonetheless crumble under the weight of history. All they are left to do is wonder, to paraphrase Ettore during the end, "why so many people are torturing (them)," when all they (Mamma Roma and Ettore) want to do is good. Existential despair that resonates today amidst grave financial uncertainty and uncertain class ascendancy.
    10laserbeam-1

    Ettore as Mantegna's Christ: another perspective

    Just wanted to point out that in the final scenes, Pasolini shows Ettore in jail (for stealing), strapped to a table, and it's very much like Andrea Mantegna's painting, "The Dead Christ." This might say a lot about what Pasolini thought about Christ's crucifixion, and how we might view Mamma Roma the whore and her son Ettore (perhaps not as mother and son, but as Mary Magdalene and Christ?). This final scene also makes one recall how the opening scene, the marriage of Carmine (the pimp) and his bride, looks so much like DaVinci's painting, "The Last Supper"... and so the film opens with a visual reference to Christ the pimp before he dies, and ends with one of Christ the thief after he dies.

    So many things about this film have elements of the story of Christ, only they're turned on their head. Ettore's relationship with the loose woman Bruna, his familiar dealing with moneylenders, his lazy and thieving followers, his lack of a trade, his stealing -- it's as if he's the opposite of Christ. And yet Ettore is blessed: he's rooted in nature (he grew up on a farm, he recognizes birds by their songs, acts spontaneously on his natural feelings of anger or lust) and he's set within a story that's essentially about the power of morality and redemption. Mamma Roma is a flawed woman but a good woman who's trying to do the right thing, to mend her ways. And Ettore is not so much an anti-Christ as he is a proto-Christ -- a pre-Christian figure. The film 'Mamma Roma' may have more to do with being a pagan story than a Christian one...
    eibon09

    Anna Magnani is Magnificent in Pier Paolo Pasolini's Excellent Feature

    Mamma Roma(1962) is one of the best films to come out of Italy during the 1960's. Anna Magnani is terrific as a strong willed mother who wants to give her son a better future to look foward to by living in the city. Its a homage to the neo-realist classics of the late 40's and mid 50's. In fact, this film compares greatly with some of the early films by De Sica and Fellini. Mamma Roma and his previous film added on another facet to the multi talented, multiple artist Pier Paolo Pasolini. The movie is filled with many political and religious ideas that the director believed in.

    Mamma Roma(1962) deals with the themes of betrayal, loneiness, and class status. The film has a nililistic feel to it when it comes to the youth of the story. There are parts of this motion picture that reminded me of Luis Bunuel's Los Olvidados. They both see the youth as people who have nothing to look foward to. Its the opposite of a coming of age story because nothing positive happens to the teen protagonist. The direction by Pasolini is well done as he showed that he was on his way to becoming one of the most important film makers in Italy during the late 20th Century.

    It contains some poetic moments. Its a film that doesn't get much credit due to the bleak nature of the main characters. Its this sense of hopelessness that turned many viewers off to this movie in 1962. It was rereleased in its full version several years ago by Martin Scorsese' film company. The film is a class study of people who try to escape their old ways only to be unsuccessful in the attempt to turn over a new leaf. The art direction was done by future director Flavio Mogherini.

    Ettore Garofolo does a good job in the role of Ettore, Mamma Roma's son. Anna Magnani is wonderful at alternating between motherly and sensual instincts. In 1962, Mamma Roma was denounced by the police to the Magistrate's office for its portrayal of the young teens. The case was eventually dismissed. One scene that was good is the scene where Mamma Roma shows her son what's its like to be respectable. Another memorable moment is the final shot of Magnani attempting to jump out the window.

    Ettore is presented as a martyr in the vein of a religious symbol. His final scenes are both heart breaking and sad. Although Mamma Roma is a prostitute, she still in a awkward way has a moral consciousness that gradually develops throughout the movie. Her ideology is developed through the mass media. What's sad is that Mamma Roma does not realize that her ideals are corrupted until she feels that she has failed in her relationship with her son. Pasolini believed that "The only thing that makes man really great is the fact that he will die", and "Man's only greatness lies in his tragedy".
    8lastliberal

    Whatever you do to your mother will come back around to you.

    If Sarah Palin wants to support what she calls her "Mama Grizzlies," she should have Mamma Roma in her stable. This woman (Anna Magnani - The Rose Tattoo, The Secret of Santa Vittoria) is one tough grizzly, especially when it comes to her son, and trying to keep him on the straight and narrow.

    She used to be a woman of the evening, until her pimp (Franco Citti - Accattone!, Godfather III) marries a country girl and retires, letting her reclaim her now teenage son (Ettore Garofolo in his first film) and move to Rome.

    He soon falls for a loose woman and in with some unsavory characters. That's when the grizzly rears on her hind legs and goes to work.

    Director Pier Paolo Pasolini (The Gospel According to St. Matthew, The Decameron, and the last before he was murdered, Salò) used Citti in many of his films. His films, while critically acclaimed, could draw moral outrage. Five minutes were cut from this film by the Italian authorities; although I can only guess where. He still was one of the best, and directed a winner here.
    10enicholson

    The shame and grace of a struggling mother and her son...

    Mama Roma, played by an amazing Anna Magnani, desperately wants a good, respectable life for her 17 year old son, played by Ettore Garafalo. She would do anything for him. If at one time she sold her body on the streets of Rome partly as an act of rebellion against a failed marriage of convenience, she now must resume the work to raise funds to pay off a threatening former pimp (played by the cool, charismatic Franco Citti), while raising a few extra lira to get her son a few nice things on the side. She implores a priest to help her son find a decent job and does a host of other things to try and get Ettore away from the life of a hood.

    The problem is that her son is like she presumably was (and is still capable of being) -- a rebellious, angry child drawn to the street life. He also, almost instinctively, falls for a young whore who may or may not resemble his young mother.

    This is a great film. Pasolini cares deeply for these characters. Are Ettore and his mother a Madonna and Christ as sometime prostitute and would be criminal? Perhaps. Though their sins are not necessary for their survival, their hardships and sufferings take on a religious, martyred quality. Mamma Roma is the lost, heroic sinner of the Italian lower classes who can sometimes struggle to better themselves through respectable work, faith and redemption. But she can't do enough for herself and her son by being virtuous, so she must turn to the street on occasion. And either due to his environment or his temperament, both products of his mother, Ettore, in all his youthful impatience and vigor, can't resist the effortless ennui and easy thrills of hanging out with petty hoods, stealing from whoever they can, and dallying around with a young whore.

    Rome looks and feels like a prison in this film. The city feels walled off by apartment buildings, the entrance into which feels like the entrance into an ancient city -- perhaps ancient Jerusalem. Outside the modern buildings stand patches of ancient ruins. Ettore lives his life among these overlooked, neglected ruins, which perhaps foreshadow his own future. If this is to be his future it won't be because of a lack of love and effort on the part of Mama Roma; instead it will be because of the neglect of the prison of Rome, and because of his own wild, bitter heart; the heart of a boy for which Mama Roma would devote her life.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      At the film's premiere in the Quattro Fontane Cinema (Rome, 22nd September 1962), Pier Paolo Pasolini was attacked by fascists who protested against the film.
    • Goofs
      In the opening titles, the music that is playing over the titles is noted as "Concerto in Do maggiore di Vivaldi," which translates in English as "Concerto in C major by Vivaldi." The music actually playing is the Largo (slow) movement from Vivaldi's Concerto in D minor (catalog number RV 540)
    • Quotes

      [English subtitled version]

      Mamma Roma: He was sixty-five and I was fourteen. I got married in a young fascist girl's uniform!

    • Connections
      Featured in Cinema forever - Capolavori salvati (2001)
    • Soundtracks
      Violino tzigano
      Music by Cesare A. Bixio (as Bixio)

      Lyrics by Bixio Cherubini (as Cherubini)

      Performed by Joselito

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • January 7, 1976 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • Italy
    • Language
      • Italian
    • Also known as
      • Мама Рома
    • Filming locations
      • Rome, Lazio, Italy
    • Production company
      • Arco Film
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Gross worldwide
      • $14,910
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 46m(106 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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