| Index | 3 reviews in total |
10 out of 11 people found the following review useful:
One of Rossellini's last for the big screen, 18 February 2006
Author:
tentender from France
A fascinating prelude to Rossellini's series of historical films made for television, Vanina Vanini suffers a bit from the desire to showcase star Sandra Milo (wife of the producer) -- not a very interesting actress -- but its attention to historical detail is extremely interesting. See, for example, the scene in which prisoners are forged into their chains -- astonishing and vivid. Laurent Terzieff is excellent (and looks terrific), as is (and does) Martine Carol. I saw this film at the Cinematheque Francaise in a decent print. It was preceded and followed by talks by an uncredited co-scenarist, Jean Gruault, who revealed that, to highlight Milo, the producer insisted on cutting three reels (about a half hour's running time), most of it focusing on Carol's character. The producer destroyed the negative, but a few years later a print was found of all the missing material. In a dismal twist of fate, a fire in the suburban Paris warehouse where it was stored destroyed -- definitively -- the last remnants of this missing material. Pity, as the film is a little hard to follow as it stands and, according to Gruault, the lost material provided much of the motivation that is lacking.
6 out of 6 people found the following review useful:
The Red and the Black., 4 April 2006
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Author:
dbdumonteil
When I was a child ,I saw the trailer: it was the story of a princess
in love with a shepherd in my child's mind.And of course I did not know
who Rossellini was.
I had to wait twenty years or so to have the opportunity to see the
film.The precedent user is completely right and his comment is more
than useful: Martine Carol's part was reduced to nothing or almost
nothing.She only appears at the beginning of the movie then she
disappears after two or three scenes,leaving the lion's share to
co-star Sandra Milo.The first thirty minutes are very hard to follow
and the story really begins when Vanina visits Pietro,a Carbonaro who
was injured after his escape from San Angelo Castle and taken in by her
father whose motives remain a bit obscure (the precedent user wrote
that thirty minutes were cut and that they were essential to understand
them).
After a muddled beginning,the film hits its stride and remains
absorbing till the very end.Rossellini is one of my favorite Italian
directors and even when he was sub-par,he was better than most of his
colleagues.
The most original thing in Rossellini's work is his great interest in
history and in Christianity.From the Fascist years ( "l'Uomo della
Croce" )to the birth of Neorealism ("Roma Città Aperta" ,"Germania Anno
zero" ) and from the Bergman years ("Giovanna d'Arco al Rogo" and
"Europa 51" ) to the final years ("la Presa del Potere di Luigi XIV" is
the best film about the Sun King I know).
History and Christianity are both present in "Vanina Vanini": Vanina is
an aristocrat of the past,she cannot feel History move ,she 's always a
prisoner of a decadent religion,which is still firmly entrenched in the
good/bad conflict and she's still afraid of sin and damnation.In direct
contrast to her,we have Pietro ,an educated carbonaro who was
influenced by the French Revolution "which was not made by the populace
but by enlightened minds " .Between Vanina's faith and Pietro's
solidarity with his companions there is no room for a love as burning
as theirs.
Based on a short story by Stendhal,this is probably the most overlooked
of all Rossellini's works .Laurent Terzieff is a very gifted actor:
although the most "Nouvelle Vague" of all the thespians of the era
(late fifties/early sixties),he was never hired by Godard and his
clique and found his best parts with "old" brilliant directors (Marcel
Carné,Henri-Georges Clouzot,Claude Autant-Lara)
6 out of 7 people found the following review useful:
Better than reputation would suggest, 24 June 2006
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Author:
politian from United States
If one doesn't let anticipation over the prospect of Rossellini working with Stendahl's work run too high, this film should not disappoint. It is not Rossellini being "hands on" - it involved many production problems and came at a time when RR was preparing to turn his back on cinema, and still it works as a costume drama with intelligent plotting and setting. Let's put it this way - as an RR film, it's maybe a 5. As a costume drama set next to the nonsense of today, it's a 14. Much of Stendahl seems to have gotten lost, but the film still has a cogency that may be due to RR's increasing interest in making use of history to explore themes that go beyond mere incident and character. He was moving toward Louis xiv, and beyond.
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