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IMDbPro

Una breve vacanza

  • 1973
  • PG
  • 1h 52m
IMDb RATING
7.5/10
1K
YOUR RATING
Florinda Bolkan and Daniel Quenaud in Una breve vacanza (1973)
DramaRomance

Clara, diagnosed with tuberculosis, is treated in a sanatorium in the Alps where she can finally take a break from her miserable life.Clara, diagnosed with tuberculosis, is treated in a sanatorium in the Alps where she can finally take a break from her miserable life.Clara, diagnosed with tuberculosis, is treated in a sanatorium in the Alps where she can finally take a break from her miserable life.

  • Director
    • Vittorio De Sica
  • Writers
    • Rafael J. Salvia
    • Rodolfo Sonego
    • Cesare Zavattini
  • Stars
    • Florinda Bolkan
    • Renato Salvatori
    • Daniel Quenaud
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.5/10
    1K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Vittorio De Sica
    • Writers
      • Rafael J. Salvia
      • Rodolfo Sonego
      • Cesare Zavattini
    • Stars
      • Florinda Bolkan
      • Renato Salvatori
      • Daniel Quenaud
    • 12User reviews
    • 8Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 5 wins & 1 nomination total

    Photos35

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    Top cast25

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    Florinda Bolkan
    Florinda Bolkan
    • Clara Mataro
    Renato Salvatori
    Renato Salvatori
    • The Husband
    Daniel Quenaud
    • Luigi
    José María Prada
    José María Prada
    • Ciranni
    • (as Josè Maria Prada)
    Teresa Gimpera
    Teresa Gimpera
    • Gina
    Hugo Blanco
    Hugo Blanco
    • The Brother-in-Law
    Julia Peña
    • Edvige
    • (as Julia Pena)
    Miranda Campa
    • Nurse Guidotti
    Angela Cardile
    • The Redhead
    Anna Carena
    Anna Carena
    • The Mother-in-Law
    Monica Guerritore
    Monica Guerritore
    • Maria
    Maria Mizar
    • Nurse Garin
    Alessandro Romanazzi
    • The Son
    Adriana Asti
    Adriana Asti
    • Scanziani
    Enrico Baroni
    Edda Conti
    Lia Giovannella
    Franca Mazzoni
    • Director
      • Vittorio De Sica
    • Writers
      • Rafael J. Salvia
      • Rodolfo Sonego
      • Cesare Zavattini
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews12

    7.51K
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    Featured reviews

    10wedraughon

    one of the best movies ever made

    This is the story of a woman given a respite from her grim life as a devoted wife and mother. She takes her illness in stride and goes off to the mountains to a sanatorium for a cure. While there, she meets people she would never have met otherwise and has time to experience a life other than one of drudgery and selfless devotion. She is even given a chance of escape/salvation. Will she take it? Ah, but that would be a spoiler!

    This superb movie shows that realism can be moving and gripping. This woman's plight, her decency and her quiet heroism make for one of the best motion pictures ever made. If it could be released on video or DVD, I'm sure it would do well. Let's hope the owner of the rights to this movie soon figures this out.
    ItalianGerry

    Awakening of a woman.

    Vittorio De Sica collaborated again on this excellent film with screenwriter Cesare Zavattini, as he had in the postwar "Shoe Shine," "The Bicycle Thief," Umberto D," and their 60s French film "A Young World." They have fashioned, from a story by Rodolfo Sonego, a realistic and at times romantic drama about an Italian housewife (Florinda Bolkan in an amazing performance), living in a Milan suburb and married to a crass husband (Renato Salvatori) who treats her like a pack animal.

    She supports the husband, unemployed because of an accident as well as her three sons and several in-laws, by working in a grim factory worse than that in Petri's "The Working Class Goes to Heaven" or Rossellini's "Europa '51."

    She collapses from exhaustion and TB and is sent at company expense for "una breve vacanza" at a sanatorium in the Dolomites. Here she experiences a major change and awakening, not merely physical and emotional (as in a tender relationship with a machinist) but a profound radical change in which she examines for the first time her fundamental nature as a human being and as a woman. She can never be the same after she returns home.

    Italian class and sex attitudes are perceptively analyzed here, and there is un unforgettable characterization by Adriana Asti as a foul-mouthed yet compassionate woman in the last days of a terminal illness. (Remember her in Bertolucci's "Before the Revolution"?)

    I find it ironic that though this great "feminist" movie was written and directed by men, it is more effective in that regard in ways that its contemporary "Swept Away," made by a woman, is not.
    8CC_qingreen

    Be like a train; concentrate on your road and go with no hesitation!

    Be like a train; go in the rain, go in the sun, go in the storm, go in the dark tunnels! Be like a train; concentrate on your road and go with no hesitation!" Mehmet Murat ildan

    Trains are featured prominently in this film. Without them, our heroine, Florinda Bolkan wouldn't be able to go to work, or even mountain retreat. Like trains, she would go on with her life journey - with no regrets and hesitations, in spite of tears.
    10jwelch666

    One woman's monumental toil for love, duty and survival

    Finally available on DVD. I had been wanting to share this movie with friends for more than 30 years. It has always been on my top 10 list of best movies ever seen.What I remember most are the subtle scenes which communicate so much, the woman wrapping her meat patty from her factory provided lunch in a napkin and slipping it into her purse in order to be able to give it to her son later on. Or after finally going to see a doctor, first making a last-minute detour into a department store to buy new underwear, too embarrassed that the doctor would see her in what she had on. Or at the very end, when the train passes by the billboard with the Mao graffiti on it (the most subtle of political comment). This is a splendid and brilliant movie, exposing the complexity of social circumstance without ever taking the easy way out, or suggesting there is ever an easy answer, in this case just a brief vacation.
    7ferbs54

    Who Knew TB Could Be Such A Blessing?

    Those viewers who are feeling a little down about their own particular life situation may be a bit cheered when they see what Clara Mataro's daily grind is like, in Vittorio de Sica's 1973 offering "A Brief Vacation." The sole breadwinner in her family, living in a dingy, cramped apartment on the outskirts of Milan with her loutish husband, thuggish brother-in-law, waspishly senile mother-in-law and three young sons, her torturous job at a rubber factory is just another element in her daily hell. No wonder that when the National Health clinic forces her to go to a sanatorium in the Italian Alps to cure her incipient TB, Clara views this as the titular brief vacation. (If only the U.S. had a health care system like this!) Away from her usual troubles and surrounded by new friends, Clara inevitably blossoms, and that metamorphosis is wonderful to see. Florinda Bolkan, who had greatly impressed me in such marvelous gialli as "Lizard in a Woman's Skin" and "Don't Torture a Duckling," is superb here as Clara, especially when the prospect of a possible love affair at the sanatorium arises. Clara's fellow patients are a very interesting bunch; de Sica, the old neorealist master, directs winningly yet unobtrusively; son Manuel de Sica's theme song "Stay" is lush and superromantic; and the snowy backdrop of the Alpine countryside is often quite spectacular. So, does the film give poor Clara the reward of a happy ending? I would never dream of telling, but those who have seen such earlier de Sica classics as "The Bicycle Thief" and "Umberto D" might be able to guess. Clara Mataro is a remarkably well-drawn character, and my feeling is that most viewers will be very happy that they have spent a few brief hours with her....

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      According to producer Arthur Cohn, Elizabeth Taylor, Sophia Loren, and Jane Fonda all wanted to play the role of Clara Mataro, which ultimately went to Florinda Bolkan.
    • Connections
      Referenced in Carrie au bal du diable (1976)
    • Soundtracks
      Stay
      Music by Manuel De Sica

      Lyrics by Gene Lees

      Sung by Christian De Sica

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    FAQ16

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • June 2, 1975 (Spain)
    • Countries of origin
      • Italy
      • Spain
    • Language
      • Italian
    • Also known as
      • A Brief Vacation
    • Filming locations
      • Milan, Lombardia, Italy
    • Production companies
      • Verona Produzione
      • Azor Films
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Gross US & Canada
      • $660,569
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      1 hour 52 minutes
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.66 : 1

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