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IMDbPro

Le larron

Original title: Il ladrone
  • 1980
  • 1h 48m
IMDb RATING
6.7/10
611
YOUR RATING
Edwige Fenech, Bernadette Lafont, and Enrico Montesano in Le larron (1980)
Comedy

In AD 33, a fake magician from Galilee shares his fate with Jesus Christ, whom he mistakes for a rival swindler.In AD 33, a fake magician from Galilee shares his fate with Jesus Christ, whom he mistakes for a rival swindler.In AD 33, a fake magician from Galilee shares his fate with Jesus Christ, whom he mistakes for a rival swindler.

  • Director
    • Pasquale Festa Campanile
  • Writers
    • Pasquale Festa Campanile
    • Renato Ghiotti
    • Ottavio Jemma
  • Stars
    • Enrico Montesano
    • Edwige Fenech
    • Bernadette Lafont
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.7/10
    611
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Pasquale Festa Campanile
    • Writers
      • Pasquale Festa Campanile
      • Renato Ghiotti
      • Ottavio Jemma
    • Stars
      • Enrico Montesano
      • Edwige Fenech
      • Bernadette Lafont
    • 4User reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 win total

    Photos2

    View Poster
    View Poster

    Top cast14

    Edit
    Enrico Montesano
    Enrico Montesano
    • Caleb
    Edwige Fenech
    Edwige Fenech
    • Deborah
    Bernadette Lafont
    Bernadette Lafont
    • Appula
    Sara Franchetti
    • Appula's lady-in-waiting
    • (as Sara Girgenti Franchetti)
    Susanna Martinková
    Susanna Martinková
    • Marta
    • (as Susanna Martinkova)
    Daniele Vargas
    Daniele Vargas
    • Ruffo
    Anna Orso
    • Maria Magdalena
    Auretta Gay
    Auretta Gay
    • prostitute named Deborah
    Enzo Robutti
    Enzo Robutti
    • Centurion
    Claudio Cassinelli
    Claudio Cassinelli
    • Jesus
    Stefania D'Amario
    Stefania D'Amario
    • Rachele the wife of Batuele
    • (as Maria Stefania D'Amario)
    Marcella Petrelli
    • Moglie di Batuele
    Jamil Joudi
    • Batuele
    Moncef Ben Yahia
      • Director
        • Pasquale Festa Campanile
      • Writers
        • Pasquale Festa Campanile
        • Renato Ghiotti
        • Ottavio Jemma
      • All cast & crew
      • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

      User reviews4

      6.7611
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      Featured reviews

      7Chip_douglas

      A bit of gutter humor in a biblical setting

      Comedian Enrico Montesano stars as Caleb, the good thief of the title. Not good in the sense of stealing from the rich and giving to the poor, but in that his escapades are funny. A contemporary of Jesus Christ (played by Claudio Cassinelli), Caleb is convinced that Jesus is a con artist just like him, and becomes jealous of his more accomplished 'tricks' and tries to copy them.

      From start to finish Caleb makes his inner-thoughts known by way of narration, revealing that the film is based on a novel, by Pasquale Festa Campanile. Naturally, the view of Christ presented therein caused quite a stir when the book came out. As director however, Campanile avoids most of the controversial parts and concentrates on the saucy bits instead.

      Practically every woman who meets Caleb falls for him, even though he often mentions how much he smells during his aforementioned voice-over. The one woman who proves to be his match is Edwidge Fenech as Deborah, a hooker (cured of leprosy by Christ). Despite of her profession, Fenech' nude scenes are kept to a bare minimum (though still pictures reveal at least one more scene of Caleb and Deborah in bed that doesn't appear in the film). Apart from Edwige, there are many beautiful shots of the landscape (filmed in her homeland Tunisia) and Ennio Morricone serves up one of his 'comical' scores.

      However at 110 minutes, Il Ladrone rather overstays his welcome. The story is really a collection of (mostly) comic set pieces. Many subplots and diversions could easily have been left out and the occasionally crude humor does not fit with the more serious parts about Caleb's envy for Christ. For example, a sad scene involving the death of Caleb's dog Joshua at the hands of evil Romans is followed up by a very silly bit with him taking revenge by selling an 'invisibility cream' to the killer.

      7 out of 10
      Vincentiu

      a thief adventure

      it is, in same time, a nice Italian comedy and a religious film. a joke and map of a fundamental discover. a portrait of actual world. and a seductive labyrinth. a touching film, too long, maybe, but interesting, fresh and full of smart manner to build a different work about sacrifice of Christ. so, it is perfect movie for entire family because, in fact, it is only a beautiful story about a man and his image about life. essence - the right performance and slices of commedia dell arte, the meridional spirit as perfect spice and courage to realize a small revolution of good thief image. nothing else. with flavor of childhood games , with precise view about metamorphose of an existence, it is source of special joy.
      6Bunuel1976

      THE GOOD THIEF (Pasquale Festa Campanile, 1980) **1/2

      This was a highly unlikely but surprisingly effective and enjoyable venture for Italian cinema to undertake at the start of the 1980s: the fanciful story of 'The Good Thief' who ended up being crucified next to Jesus Christ on Golgotha Hill. Then-popular comic Enrico Montesano is ideally cast in the title role of a confidence trickster who roams the streets of Galilee forever in search of the next merchant to sell his defective goods to (passing off a black goat – harbinger of bad luck – as white by painting it!; a dead dog, sold for his silvery skin, which jumps back to life upon hearing its master's whistle, etc.) or the next gullible simpleton to impress with his 'magical' skills (changing water into wine via a tube hidden inside his robe attached to his arms, etc.). Naturally, he does not take kindly to the appearance of Jesus (a very understated and virtually silent appearance by regular Euro-Cult tough guy Claudio Cassinelli) who, not only seems to impinge on his territory, but also seemingly outdoes his every trick with the greatest of ease and the minimum of fuss! Despite its reverent subject, being ostensibly an Italian comedy of its time and co-starring the bountiful Edwige Fenech (playing Lazarus' cousin, a has-been leper whore!) no less, one could hardly fail to find nudity here…although, surprisingly enough, the film's sexiest episode involves distinguished French actress Bernadette Lafont who, as the nymphomaniac wife of a Roman aristocrat, indulges in some prolonged posterior playtime with her willing slave Montesano!! Another ingredient that comes with the territory is crude humor of the scatological variety and this is exhibited via Montesano's encounter with a bunch of Roman soldiers who, entrapping him in a grave, first force him to display his circumcised organ and, then, to repay the favor douse him in collective peeing!! Incongruously, this is then followed by the film's most poignant sequence when the soldiers callously shoot dead his fateful dog (that, amusingly, had previously served as Montesano's 'eye' during card games)! Furthermore, director Festa Campanile (who was also the author of the controversial original source novel) cleverly makes his hapless protagonist a witness to Christ's ministry long before their fateful meeting on Good Friday: he shares a beggars' banquet at the Cana Wedding; he sees a lame man being cured; he goes to the Sermon on the Mount when the miracle of the multiplication of the bread and fish to feed the masses is performed; he is there to observe His walk on water; he is the one to benefit (albeit for a short-term) from Christ telling a wealthy acolyte to go dispose of his every earthly possession and follow Him, etc. Strangely enough, however, the all-important Cruxifiction scene is rather carelessly dealt with, as if the film-makers where impatient to wrap things up! In any case, their decision to shoot in Tunisia pays dividends in an authentic recreation of the times and the ubiquitous Ennio Morricone supplies a jaunty music score that pleases the ear without taxing one's memory.
      Kirpianuscus

      nice

      a collection of comedy scenes, using different types of humor, charming for the efforts of a thief to use the facts of the Savior for be the best in his "job".or, a story of faith. significant is the flavor of an Italian comedy, with known situations and problems and solutions, nice more than surprising, seductive like many other Meridional films , proposing a different version of a Biblical story, from the perspective of a poor character . short, a nice film.

      Storyline

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      Did you know

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      • Trivia
        Italian censorship visa # 74715 delivered on 1-2-1980.
      • Connections
        References Ben-Hur (1959)

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      Details

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      • Release date
        • February 24, 1982 (France)
      • Countries of origin
        • Italy
        • France
      • Language
        • Italian
      • Also known as
        • The Good Thief
      • Filming locations
        • Hamaet, Tunisia
      • Production companies
        • Carthago Films S.a.r.l.
        • Daimo Cinematografica
        • Films A2
      • See more company credits at IMDbPro

      Tech specs

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      • Runtime
        • 1h 48m(108 min)
      • Sound mix
        • Dolby
      • Aspect ratio
        • 1.66 : 1

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