| Index | 10 reviews in total |
13 out of 14 people found the following review useful:
O.K., but that ONE scene! Wow!, 23 March 2007
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Author:
Pamela-5 from Los Angeles, California
First, O.K., this film is a guilty pleasure. So I'm an inveterate
romantic. So kill me.
There is one scene when Faye says to Marcello, "I don't want your
pity." He responds by saying, increasingly heatedly, "Pity? PITY? WHAT
pity?" Then he throws her down on the ground and kisses her, saying, "I
LOVE you! I LOVE you! I LOVE you!" Now, c'mon. If you're a romantic
(and you probably aren't), you'll adore this scene. Others will become
nauseous. So sorry.
Sometimes a girl has to have her fantasies. Apologies to all you
realists and intellectual cinemaphiles.
8 out of 9 people found the following review useful:
Commenting On A Place For Lovers..., 27 July 2000
Author:
Ismar Tirelli Neto (mister_sebastian@yahoo.com) from Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
... is a rather odd and thankless task. I never dreamt of
thinking about the
likes of Vittorio De Sica, Faye Dunaway and Marcello Mastroianni without
using the highest of praise, but this uninteresting, plodding 1969 film
provided me with a chance to do so.
This film is proof that the unthinkable, what we judge to be impossible
and
beyond imagination, can happen.
Dunaway is Julia, a peculiar, to say the least, american woman who makes a
living out of designing gowns, who has an affair with Valerio, a married
italian engineer working on the development of the airbag.
They're rich, they're glamorous, they're beautiful, they're in love...
nothing could part them. Except Julia is suffering from a terminal
illness,
and is bound to die in a matter of days.
Sticking to the basic rules of screenwriting as I know them, this movie is
irritatingly plodding. We only discover that Julia is dying towards the
end,
and we never know whose is the main dilemma - Julia's or Valerio's. Should
they stick together and face bravely Julia's last days on Earth? is the
main
query, I guess. The only problem is that this query, this dilemma, is
presented to the audience in the last twenty minutes of film, and
resolved -
better yet, unresolved - in the last five. The other 70 minutes or so of
film are spent as they stay together and play amusing little games with
each
other. A time in which the five writers of the film could easily delve
into
their main characters psyches - if anything else - is wasted. Julia's just
plain weird and depressed, and Valerio seems terribly cold and unfeeling.
It also clearly aspires to be profound. It aims at being something lyric,
but, trapped inside it's own pretentious attitude, it becomes a schmaltzy
tearjerker.
The acting is not bad at all, though. But the script provides Dunaway and
Mastroianni with little chance to showcase their many talents. Also, the
set
designs are gorgeous, as mentioned by the first reviewer, and the
soundtrack
is lovely. The title song, written by Manuel De Sica - hail, nepotism! -
is
sung by none other than Ella Fitzgerald.
Well, all in all, this movie is a bizarre one, but it is worth viewing
nevertheless, mainly as existing proof that nothing - I mean, nothing - is
impossible. :)
5 out of 6 people found the following review useful:
A pleasure, 22 December 2009
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Author:
nickrogers1969 from Sweden
I am so lucky and happy to finally have seen this rare film!!!! It's
been released on DVD in Sweden!!!! It's been impossible to see this
film. Has it been shown anywhere since its initial release in 1968?
The film was in that infamous book "50 Worst Films" by the Medved
brothers. It's not bad at all, quite gripping actually if you like
tragic romance on film. It's well made with good direction by de Sica
and good acting by Faye Dunaway and Marcello Mastroianni.
It IS very much a European film from the 1960's. A bit too trendy for
most and that means people will think it is dated. It's a nice document
of its time. I do wonder why it wasn't a hit back then, since the film
has two big stars and a well known director. Perhaps it's too stilted.
I am a great Faye Dunaway fan so for me it was a HUGE pleasure to see
this film. I also LOVE films from the sixties high on style.
It's strange that the plot is very similar to the huge hit Love Story
from 1970, yet Amanti is completely forgotten. Maybe the story of two
jetset people in luxurious environments became a bit tired after a
while. The plot is rather thin with very little background explanation.
The film also borrows a lot of elements from other films: two beautiful
adults in a love affair (A Man and a Woman), a woman seeing shocking
news on TV (Persona), beautiful decadent rich people (La Dolce Vita),
rich people stealing in a shop (Breakfast at Tiffany's)...
Faye also reminds me of Monica Vitti walking around full of stylish
angst in Antonioni movies. (Nothing wrong with that!) She even acts
kooky like Vitti in some scenes! It's lovely to see Faye so relaxed on
the screen. She seems to be genuinely enjoying herself and is
absolutely luminous. Maybe it's because she fell in love with Marcello
during filming. She gives a very sensitive performance as Julie.
6 out of 8 people found the following review useful:
More than a love story, 20 December 2002
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Author:
Rodolfo Soriano Núñez (rsnunezmex@aol.com) from New York/Mexico City
This is an excellent movie. To focus only on whether Ms. Dunaway is able or not to "warm" (whatever that means) is pointless. Vittorio DeSicca provides an admirable portrait of late 60s Italy, and more broadly of the kind of moral tensions going on during the late 60s worldwide. Marcelo Mastroianni was playing pretty much himself on the screen, while Faye Dunaway is on the other extreme of her rendition of Bonnie in Bonnie and Clyde, frail, ill, sad. To my mind this movie is a jewel of the Italian masters. The Italian cinema will later overplay these kinds of extreme situations of ailing lovers confronted with an awful fate, as in Anonimo Venezziano, and many others in the early 1970s, but Amanti stands on its own, not only because of the beautiful cinematography (the Alps and Italy at large), but also because of Ms. Dunaway rendition of the character.
4 out of 5 people found the following review useful:
Beautifully filmed ambiguity of love, 19 March 2006
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Author:
ksundstrom from France
Italian upper class environment in the 1960's: beautiful houses and interiors, women of course also and so well dressed but, as in Dolce Vita, bored and wont to indulge in ambiguous erotic games - exciting for some and decadent for others. Mastroianni and Dunaway meet in such a venue before the evening festivities begin and fall in love and escape to the mountains at Cortina. The director Vittorio De Sica keeps the film viewer at a distance by introducing a "third party", the breathtakingly beautiful mountain scenery. Intense love and imminent death of one of the lovers is not an unusual story. Through the beautiful photography, the cool and tight directing of De Sica, one senses that the dangerous mountains will provide the ending. The acting does not drag you in willy-nilly to experience ardently the emotions but leaves you to decide how you would have acted in such a tragedy. Some might agree with the American critic Maltin who found it pseudo romantic slop, others with a European sensitivity may decide like the lovers or remain ambiguous, but definitely not unmoved by their own thinking and their own feelings.
4 out of 6 people found the following review useful:
I think Moonspinner55 has this movie pegged., 25 April 2011
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Author:
planktonrules from Bradenton, Florida
Before I began writing my review, I read through Moonspinner55's and
noticed that although they seemed to have this film pegged, they sure
have a lot of 'not helpfuls'. While this sort of thing is very common,
it's sad--as their review very nicely summed up this film.
Faye Dunaway's performance was reminiscent of a zombie--a well-coiffed,
bejeweled and heavy false eyelashed zombie. And I really don't so much
blame her but the terrible script and the wrong direction by a very
talented director...Vittoria De Sica. Perhaps this film is why after
her huge success in "Bonnie and Clyde" her career just kind of fizzled.
Let's talk about De Sica just a bit. He is one of my favorite
directors--directing such masterpieces as "The Children Are Watching
Us" (I'd put this in my Top 10 of best films ever), "Miracle in Milan"
and "Umberto D". However, the sort of films he directed brilliantly had
some things in common--and are so completely unlike "A Place For
Lovers" and other De Sica miscues (such as "Indiscretion of an American
Wife"). His best works are of the Italian Neo-Realistic style--using
non-actors in the roles and emphasizing the 'everyman' approach to the
problems in the film. In other words, real people in real situations.
However, when it came to the glossy love stories, this brilliant
director was cold, impersonal and pretty dreadful at times. He just
didn't seem to know how to use these people in love stories. Yet, with
famed Sophia Loren in a non-love story, he created the brilliant "Two
Women". Love stories with big-name casts he just seemed
ill-suited--though as an actor he did fine in such films (and appeared
in about 150 films).
Here in "A Place for Lovers", the film is wooden--unemotional and
disconnected. This is odd, as the film is about a dying woman--yet you
really could care less for her. She is unlikable and stiff. A better
script surely would have helped, but giving his actress the suggestion
to smile would have helped even more! I loved the director, but here he
is way out of his comfort zone.
As a result of a bad story, bad direction and lifeless characters
(though Marcello Mastroiani isn't too bad), the film is painfully dull
and not worth your time---UNLESS. That is unless you are a nut like me
who LIKES seeing bad films on occasion. In fact, this movie is number
47 on my quest to see all 50 of the films featured in Harry Medved's
brilliant "The Fifty Worst Movies of All Time". While I don't always
agree with all of his choices, as a teenager he was able to compile the
list and write an amazingly funny and clever book--long before anyone
thought to come up with bad movie lists or suggest actually TRYING to
see bad films. I am not sure I'd have included "A Place For Lovers",
though if you are trying to list a movie from either the worst romance
or worst illness categories, it sure is a reasonable choice!
If you care about such an odd quest, I have just obtained the final
three films from this list and anticipate soon reviewing "King Richard
and the Crusaders", "North West Mounted Police" and "Daughter of the
Jungle"--then my bizarre and twisted hobby will be at an end. Then,
it's off on some other bizarre and twisted quest!! Happy viewing,
folks.
A case of undying love, 15 March 2012
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Author:
sol from Brooklyn NY USA
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
***SPOILERS*** Nowhere as bad as you were made to think it is in it
being considered to be one of the 50 worse films of all times the film
Vittorio De Sica's "A Place for Lovers" does have its moments.
Especially in the interacting between its two stars Faye Dunnaway as
the rich American divorcée Julia and Marcello Mostroianni as Valerion
the Italian race car driver and inventor of a new revolutionary air bag
filled with water. The water bag would not only save countless lives on
the road but prevent cars from catching fire as well after a near fatal
traffic accident.
It's Julia who despite looking as fit and healthy as a Olympic caliber
womens gymnast or swimmer is suffering for a fatal and unnamed illness
that will soon kill her. It's Julia who had earlier escaped from a New
York City hospice center to spend her last days in sunny Italy. It's
while catching the local TV news in her rented mansion, she seems to be
loaded with cash, Julia sees Valerion whom she once met in the states.
It was Valerin who gave her his phone number in Italy if she ever
visited there. Wanting to spend her last days on earth with the
handsome Valerion Julia gives him a call to come up and see her for a
few days before she checks out for good. What he doesn't realizes is
that Julie in checking out for good means that she's days away from
dying of her fatal and unnamed illness! It doesn't take long for
Valerion to fall madly in love with Julia but in her just having days
to live she wants to break off the relationship before he finds out the
fatal medical condition that she's in. This happens almost by accident
when Julia's good friend Maggie, Caroline Mortimer, from America shows
up at a ski lodge in the Italian Alps where the two are staying. Maggie
wants to get Julia back to be treated for her illness even though its
fatal and there's no chance that she'll survive the treatment. It that
the treatment would only ease the pain, with heavy doses of morphine,
she's suffering as she goes under the waves or white sheet in the local
county morgue!
***SPOILERS*** It takes a lot of soul searching on Valerion's part but
he finally comes to the sad conclusion that the little time he has with
Julia should be spent in making her happy and not feel that she's on
her way out, from life, as the unnamed and fatal illness takes hold of
her in its final and fatal stages. Going so far in letting Julia behind
the wheel to show her how in love he is with her Valierion risks his as
well as Julia's life in her madly driving through the dangerous roads
in the Alps in her attempt to kill herself. It was after that incident
that Julia finally came to her sense and agreed to go back to the NYC
hospice center and, with the treatment provided to her there, die both
quietly and peacefully and most of all without pain! Which in fact was
the best present that a tearful and love sick Valerion could have given
her!
P.S Jokes aside "A Place for Lovers" started a trend in the movies
about fatal and unnamed disease flicks among lovers that's still
around,now over 40 years, today. With the granddaddy of those movies
"Love Story" being released two years later in 1970 which became the
biggest money making film of that year!
1 out of 2 people found the following review useful:
Loved it, lived it, 12 August 2000
Author:
royale-3 (royale@earthlink.net) from New York
To be honest, I am a fan of this type of Italian movie and I have been to the Villa in outside of florence where the opening was shot.There is a certain feeling for this type of Late 60's Italian movie that one has to feel good about. I adored the soundtrack and If anyone know of any disk that "Ella" sang that title song, Please let me know
6 out of 17 people found the following review useful:
Devastatingly dull..., 1 April 2001
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Author:
moonspinner55 from redlands, ca
Before I read her telling autobiography, I didn't sense much about Faye Dunaway that was either grounded or warm. Of course she's a first-rate actress, but she's also an aloof one (most of the time she could be acting in front of the mirror). Her performance in "A Place For Lovers" (the US title) is no different. She never connects with the viewer and spends the entire time staring at Marcello Mastroianni's collar (these two did have an off-camera affair--go figure!). The romantic set-up: he's a married Italian, she's an American businesswoman in poor health. She also harbors a peculiar death wish for the both of them. This is an odd, unaffecting picture only worth-watching out of curiosity, but it won't thrill anyone--particularly fans of Dunaway, who floats by in a whiff of chiffon, with impossibly blonde hair and impossibly thick eyelashes. * from ****
5 out of 19 people found the following review useful:
Well, at least the furniture's nice..., 7 October 1998
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Author:
Alonso Duralde from Dallas, TX
One of the biggest disasters ever to be perpetrated by a major film-maker, Vittorio de Sica's "Amanti" ("A Place for Lovers") is a wheezy romance involving Faye Dunaway -- as an ultra-glam fashion designer -- and Marcello Mastroianni -- as a married man who has an affair with Faye, not realizing that she's dying from one of those mysterious Hollywood Starlet terminal diseases. The production design is fabulous, but the acting and the script are not to be believed.
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