Different groups of people share cabin #19 for changing at an Italian beach.Different groups of people share cabin #19 for changing at an Italian beach.Different groups of people share cabin #19 for changing at an Italian beach.
Gigi Proietti
- Gigi
- (as Luigi Proietti)
Cathy Marchand
- Ketty
- (as Katy Marchand)
Flora Carabella
- La nonna
- (as Flora Mastroianni)
Hugh McKenzie-Bailey
- Il prete
- (as McKenzie Bailey)
Featured reviews
I can't believe so many people gave negative comments about this movie. And I have to say, I'm getting tired of people giving negative comments on a movie from a foreign country, about which they know nothing, after seeing a badly dubbed version.. This movie is great. It's amazing, though not surprising, how Citti can keep your attention up without ever leaving the casotto.. I'm actually surprised that people found it boring. I was planning to see the beginning of it, and go out, but I just could not stop until the end. You follow a few parallel stories from a fixed point of view, sort of similar to Scola's "La cena", but kind of lighter, even though I wouldn't call this a comedy. It is a bit surrealistic, but in a very realistic and convincing way. It features a lot of the best actors of the time, including Tognazzi, Melato, Proietti, Stoppa.
So what's wrong with you guys? Reading comments to Italian movies, I sometimes have the sensation that the few Americans interested in Italian movies are just looking for the sleazy details, and completely miss or misunderstand all the rest. There's a lot more to Italian movies than sleaze. If you willingly watch one, and don't get it, before firing up low votes and negative comments, please consider the possibility that, well, yes, maybe something was "lost in translation".. and it might not just be the lines, but also the tone, accents, gestures, dressing codes, cultural, social and historical background... For example, the attitude of the two girls, hanging around with two guys and hoping they will get food for free, might sound unlikely in a "Sex and the city" episode, but looks perfectly natural in the Rome of the seventies.
Most Italian directors put no effort in making their products available to foreigners, and even when they do, you still see a different movie if you're from here. Just don't blame it on the movie!
So what's wrong with you guys? Reading comments to Italian movies, I sometimes have the sensation that the few Americans interested in Italian movies are just looking for the sleazy details, and completely miss or misunderstand all the rest. There's a lot more to Italian movies than sleaze. If you willingly watch one, and don't get it, before firing up low votes and negative comments, please consider the possibility that, well, yes, maybe something was "lost in translation".. and it might not just be the lines, but also the tone, accents, gestures, dressing codes, cultural, social and historical background... For example, the attitude of the two girls, hanging around with two guys and hoping they will get food for free, might sound unlikely in a "Sex and the city" episode, but looks perfectly natural in the Rome of the seventies.
Most Italian directors put no effort in making their products available to foreigners, and even when they do, you still see a different movie if you're from here. Just don't blame it on the movie!
Italian comedy from director Sergio Citti takes place mostly inside a changing-cabin at the beach, wherein a large assortment of colorful characters come in to chat and change their clothes before going out again. This roundelay naturally affords a great many of the female beachgoers to be seen sans clothes, but their pasty skin and unattractive figures probably won't entice many people-peepers. A dubbed Jodie Foster is here, bikini-clad with a darling smile, playing a secretly-pregnant teenager looking for a man to make love to her in order to pin fatherhood on him. Catherine Deneuve also turns up in an incoherent dream sequence, apparently doing Citti a favor (her acting "payment"--a Bulgari ring--was reportedly lost during a slapping scene and never recovered). Hopeless nuttiness. * from ****
All the action takes place in a cabin lying on a beach, where different characters come to strip and change in swimsuits but, not only, they do many other things... And they do it very well, what could have been very boring, it's very exciting and comic. Everything thanks to the script, the direction and especially to the actors, a great number of extraordinary actors, one better than the other: Ugo Tognazzi, Mariangela Melato, Anna Melato, Gigi Proietti, Paolo Stoppa, Michele Placido, Franco Citti, a young and beautiful Catherine Deneuve and a very very young Jodie Foster (only 15 years old).
While many people when they were young might have fantasized about spying on attractive members of the opposite sex as they changed clothes in one of those changing rooms along the beach, actually being stuck in one of these rooms for 90 minutes and having to spy on EVERYONE who comes in is a different thing entirely. The characters in this movie are no more physically appealing than your average beach-goer (one is literally a mutant), and they are even more annoying. The funniest characters are Jodie Foster's grandparents. In one of those wacky Italian scenarios they're trying to foist their already-pregnant granddaughter on some unsuspecting guy who'll then obliged to marry her. Why they'd choose any of the morons in this movie though is beyond me. The worst characters are two idiotic, ugly-looking guys (dubbed with Brooklyn accents) who have unaccountably picked up two reasonably attractive girls (who just want someone to buy them lunch?!), but then one of them gets hit in the head with a canoe (don't ask) and spends the rest of the movie dreaming about sheep, naked women, and Catherine Denueve (in what has to be her most pathetic role). I can think of only three reasons why someone would enjoy this movie: you're a fan of Italian sex comedy (hello? anyone?), you want to leer at a barely pubescent Jodie Foster (have they released John Hinckley from the mental institution yet?), or you want to see some really unattractive people naked. Everyone else should stay out of the casotto.
If French director Jaques Tati were born in Italy, had a much smaller budget and was somewhat of a pervert he probably would have directed films like "In the Beachouse", a wildly offbeat comedy with no plot! The entire movie more-or-less takes place in an ocean-side dressing house, a series of reoccurring site-gags and hilarious character studies. A real-time interaction between a large group of unusual people including 2 prostitutes and their reluctant and somewhat bizarre client, an all-girl swim team, a large black dog and a scene stealing white chihuahua, and a couple trying to get their knocked-up under age grand daughter laid so they can pin the blame on some poor schmuck and marry her off. The grand daughter, incidentally, is played by a nubile Jody Foster (!!!) who probably doesn't mention this film much in her résumé! With a mostly Italian cast including Ugo Tognazzi and featuring Catherine Deneuve in a dream sequence.
Did you know
- TriviaDuring an outdoor scene on the bank of a stream near Viterbo, in which some actresses (including Ely Galleani and Ulla Johannsen) were completely naked, a crowd of onlookers had gathered causing a traffic jam, so much so that soon after the police had to intervene which led the actresses to the police station, only to be released shortly after.
- ConnectionsReferenced in Jag är med barn (1979)
- SoundtracksJohnny Guitar
Composed by Victor Young
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Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Si la plage m'était contée
- Filming locations
- De Paolis Incir, Rome, Lazio, Italy(interiors shot)
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
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By what name was La cabine des amoureux (1977) officially released in Canada in English?
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