| Index | 10 reviews in total |
16 out of 21 people found the following review useful:
Secrets and whisperings, 30 March 2000
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Author:
Eric Sayettat (sayettat@hotmail.com) from Paris, France
All of Visconti's talent is in this movie, beautiful scenes with beautiful
actors, mystery, psychological torment,...
Past and present, death and life are intertwined on the screen and little by
little, one starts suspecting something else...
Slowly, the terrible secret so well kept within the walls of the palazzo's
garden, emerges. Only "grande familie" can generate and keep secrets like
that. Only Visconti, born and raised in one of them could depict that so
well.
12 out of 16 people found the following review useful:
Still magical!, 23 September 2005
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Author:
pldeaguinaga from Mexico
After watching "Sandra...", for the first time in mi life I wanted to know who the director was. It was 1966 and me 15, so until that moment, I was only interested in who starred what but never fully understood the director's work enormous importance. Since then, Visconti not only became one of my favorite directors ever but a parameter when judging a film. Actually, I had seen The leopard years before, when I was to young to notice more than the beauty in Cardinale and the sumptuous sets. About "Sandra" I still remember vividly not only how beautiful and glamorous Cardinale looked but how handsome and elegant Sorel was; how mysterious the whole black and white atmosphere was and the intriguing plot... which I didn't fully understood because even if the action seemed to say something, the subtitles said something else!. I thought then my mother was right when she used to tell me: You are too young to understand this and that. Well, not without relief, I learn, years later, than the subtitles had been made in Spain, during the Franco's days, so its censorship had erased all incest traces. After that, a new copy was made to match subtitles and story (and thats, thankfully, what you can find, at least in Spanish!). But even after so many years, and in my adulthood, I find Sandra as magical as the first time and still is one of my favorite movies, as many Visconti's works like Rocco and his brothers, Death in Venice or The dammed, as well, of course, The Leopard.
9 out of 12 people found the following review useful:
Shadowy Secret from the Past, 13 February 2009
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Author:
Claudio Carvalho from Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
After a farewell party, Sandra Dawson (Claudia Cardinale) and her
American husband Andrew Dawson (Michael Craig) travel to her hometown
in the province of Volterra for a homage of the locals to her father, a
prominent scientist that died in the concentration camp of Auschwitz.
The couple is welcomed by the maid Fosca (Amalia Troiani), and Andrew
becomes fascinated with the house. Sandra has issues with her
stepfather Pietro Formari (Fred Williams) and her insane mother (Marie
Bell) and misses her brother Gianni Wald-Luzzati (Jean Sorel), who is
an aspirant writer. When Gianni appears in the house out of the blue,
Andrew unravels a shadowy secret from the past of the siblings.
The unknown "Vaghe Stelle dell'Orsa..." is another great movie of this
artist called Luchino Visconti. The plot about incestuous relationship
and family issues in the hands of another director could have become a
melodramatic soap-opera. But Visconti explores the sensuality and
beauty of Claudia Cardinale to deliver an intriguing and quite erotic
family drama without any redemption. The set decoration, as usual, is
another piece of art, supported by a classy music score. My vote is
eight.
Title (Brazil): Not Available
3 out of 3 people found the following review useful:
Forbidden desire., 4 September 2009
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Author:
bennyraldak from Netherlands
Great film about dark secrets and forbidden desire. Luchino Visconti depicts the life of a beautiful woman caught between her past and her present. Underneath her beauty she turns out to be filled with ugly and painful memories. Sandra (played by Claudia Cardinale) struggles with obscure feelings of guilt, alienation and questionable longings. After she takes her husband to her childhood home she finds herself thinking about her painful past. When her somewhat estranged brother shows up things turn out to be more obscure. Hidden secrets and feelings from the past seem to float to the surface once again. The o so beautiful Sandra turns out to be a complex and mysterious woman. A little more raw than most of Visconti's work, but still beautiful and authentic. A film about a woman struggling with her demons, both inside and outside of her.
1 out of 1 people found the following review useful:
The decay of an aristocratic family, 21 September 2010
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Author:
Ilpo Hirvonen from Finland
Luchino Visconti often dealt with the disintegration of family in his
films; The Damed, The Leopard, Conversation Piece.. The stories were
tragedies and only in Bellissima (1951) the family sticked together in
the end. Sandra (Vaghe stelle dell'Orsa...) is also a film about this,
but specifically about an aristocratic family full of betrayal, decay
and immorality.
Incest is a leading theme in Sandra; we are given clues about it
throughout the film, but not a definite proof. The affair of the
siblings remains in the shadows and there's something odd in the
relationships between the children and the parents. Visconti first
approaches this controversial theme calmly, showing it as a small thing
- we are not told much about it. But then he increases it to enormous
dimensions.
Luchino Visconti sets this story to a dying city around a aristocratic
class that is dying out. Great tragedies, misfortunes and decay lead
this class to extinction. Already in Senso Visconti achieved an
aesthetic revolution, but he continues this in Sandra with a political
and ethic revolution. Sandra is not the easiest film by Visconti and
many people in the theater seemed to neglect it. In the beginning I
found it a little unreachable and absurd but it grew up to be a
beautiful allegorical description of the decay of an aristocratic
family.
5 out of 9 people found the following review useful:
The beautiful stars of Ursa Major.., 31 March 2009
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Author:
alexx668
An uneven entry in the Visconti canon, "Sandra Of A Thousand Delights"
comes directly after "The Leopard", and while I consider "The Leopard"
a masterpiece, it was still a film where Visconti was developing as a
director, not really reaching the masterly stylistic highs of "The
Damned" or "Death In Venice", but with a majestically deep plot that
made up for any directorial deficiencies.
Now, "Sandra Of A Thousand Delights" is still a point in Visconti's
career where he's developing as a director. He's close but he's not
quite there. Shot in black and white, and with an overly dark
photography that emphasizes the desolate feel, even though this is a
highly intense drama - perhaps too dramatic for it's own good, it
doesn't have the necessary substance to back up the plot. In the end
it's just a family drama and nothing more, even if it's a forceful one:
Sandra reunites with her family on the eve of her father's memorial
service but there's two dark secrets lurking in the shadows; her
incestuous affair with her brother, and her adulterous mother's
dereliction of her husband (Sandra's father) in a concentration camp.
7 out of 13 people found the following review useful:
I'm not a Freudian, Electra!, 5 December 2006
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Author:
Tom Doe from Japan
As they say, the characters in this movie are based on the Greek
mythology, namely, the killed father (Agamemnon), his wife
(Clytemnestra), her new husband (Aegisthus), the daughter, Sandra
(Electra), the son, Gianni (Olestes) and ex-boyfriend of the daughter,
Pietro (now he is a doctor but he comes form a tenant farmer family
like in the original), and the Trojan War is replaced with the Second
World War ... the story line is difficultly categorized into a direct
adaptation like Mourning Becomes Electra (an O'Neill's play, made into
a movie by Dudley Nichols 1947), however, it follows the traditions of
the Greek tragedies : the past and the blood dominate and determine
every destiny of the characters.
Here, Andrew (the outsider) is an interesting character. Innocently,
(without receiving an oracle!), he analyzes 'the curse' of the dead
father rationally, objectively and very ordinarily in vain and opens
Pandora's box with his 'good' foolhardiness. Besides, he judges Gianni
according to 'his' ethics as a total stranger and raises his fist
against his brother-in-law. And still he is never involved in the
mythology and should walk away forever. Is he an incarnation of our
prosaic civilization of today? The establishment that he is an American
(who has a camera!) could be an irony in Visconti's own way?
By the way, recently I watched Desperate Housewives, season 2, Episode
9, "That's Good, That's Bad", and suddenly I remembered the scene in
which Gianni takes out the pills and threatens Sandra : George who took
the pills menaces Bree ... (so I'm writing this comment now, but I know
it's an exaggerated analogy, anyway....)
Jean Sorel is heavenly beautiful. The scene in the water tower takes my
breath away. César Franck's music suits the aestheticism of the
director, too.
If you are an amateur of Visconti's works, you might know this one
doesn't end just as in the original script. Do you think Sandra flies
across the ocean to join Andrew or she buries herself in her destined
blood there eternally?
Including Mourning Becomes Electra, it could be interesting to refer to
also : 1. Les Enfants terribles / Jean-Pierre Melville (1950) 2.
Höhenfeuer /Fredi M. Murer (1985) 3. Jeux d'artifices / Virginie
Thévenet (1987) 4. La Banyera / Jesús Garay (1989 / fantastic!)
4 out of 10 people found the following review useful:
"Burned" edge of subtitles, 28 August 2007
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Author:
m_imdb-311 from Denmark
About the very beautiful and sensational subtitles, including the car
drive through the landscape - with dialogue! - and made without back
projection, the burned film material in the right side of the screen
might be a malfunction in the technical process, but is still
maintained in the copy to stress the holocaust theme of Vaghe stelle
dell'Orsa... (the original Italian title of "Sandra" spells a line from
the 19th century poet Giacomo Leopardi, quoted later in the film). The
burned or overexposed film material is by so far foreshadowing the
burning of the plot's MacGuffin-like novel named "Vaghe stelle
dell'Orsa" (literary "bright stars of the Bear"). Wonder, what the
non-existing contents of the Thorah-like manuscript, who in a sense
remind of film reels, really is, since it makes the blackmailed sister
so upset? The burned film strip during the subtitles inspired the
Swedish director, the newly departed Swedish director Ingmar Bergman to
burn the celloid in a scene of his film Persona.
The burned edge can only be observed in the DVD version issued from the
Japanese market, not in the American, cropped versions on VHS tape.
2 out of 10 people found the following review useful:
the worst Visconti's movie, 19 December 2007
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Author:
daniel-smague from France
This movie is definitely the worst movie Luchino Visconti has ever made. All actors and especially Claudia Cardinale are ridiculous. The choice of black and white could be interesting ,but why to choose so much contrasted black and white photography ? Claudia Cardinale's face has never been so ugly lighted.Visconti's whose masterpieces like "Senso" are so marvelous was completely wrong with this pseudo freudian movie which is, nowadays, very old-fashioned.Even the musical score on the sound track is bad.It's really awful to hear the lines of dialog between Claudia Cardinale and Michael Craig covered by such loud and inappropriate piano concerto.
8 out of 28 people found the following review useful:
Strange, made no sense, but for some reason, I liked it, 14 December 2003
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Author:
inoz from Philadelphia
This movie made very little sense to me. First of all, the subtitles (I'm
not a fluent Italian) were written in white text over a frequently white
background. The actors were very good, especially Claudia Cardinale as
Sandra. The storyline itself, however, was a bit odd.
First of all, Sandra and Gianni had some strange preoccupation with being
nearly naked. That didn't bother me, though. What bothered me was the fact
that the storyline started at one point and never progressed. At the end
of
the movie, I knew little more than I did at the beginning. For example,
what
exactly happened with Sandra's parents and Giraldini and Pietro? Nothing
was
explained.
However, the movie was strangely captivating. I wanted to get up screaming
'WHAT'S GOING ON???' (and at some point, I probably did) but I never fund
myself trying to escape the room. I kept wanting to know what was going
on... I never did.
Although this comment may seem confusing, I would still recommend this
movie. It's good for anyone who wants to know what Italian cinema is all
about. Nearly all old Italian movies I've seen are the
same.
They don't end. They just stop. 'Sandra' follows this standard.
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