Alberto Sordi

  • Mario Monicelli – Il Marchese del Grillo aka The Marquis of Grillo (1981)

    1981-1990ComedyItalyMario Monicelli

    Quote:
    The movie depicts some episodes of the life of a noble in the Rome of the early XIX century. Loosely based on folklore accounts about the real Onofrio del Grillo (who actually lived in the XVIII century), this character plays a number of pranks, one even involving Pope Pius VII. The movie won two David di Donatello, four Nastri d’Argento in 1982 and a Silver Bear as Best Director at the Berlin International Film Festival, still in 1982.Read More »

  • Dino Risi – Venezia, la luna e tu AKA Venice, the Moon and You (1958)

    1951-1960ComedyDino RisiItalyRomance

    The “casanova” gondolier Bepi struggles to accept his future monogamous life, after meeting two exotic girls from America.Read More »

  • Michelangelo Antonioni & Mauro Bolognini & Franco Indovina – I tre volti AKA The Three Faces (1965)

    Michelangelo Antonioni1961-1970ComedyFranco IndovinaItalyMauro Bolognini
     I tre volti (1965)
     I tre volti (1965)

    Synopsis
    Michelangelo Antonioni served as just one of three directors on this Dino de Laurentiis production that also corralled Franco Indovina (Antonioni’s assistant on three films) and Mauro Bolognini for three segments that all adhered to the titular theme, The Three Faces of a Woman: Il Provino, Latin Lover, and Famous Lovers. Il Provino (or Prefazione, The Preface), Antonioni’s contribution, stars a former member of Iranian royalty, Saroya; the entire film consists of her screen test. Indovina’s Latin Lover chronicles a professional woman’s experience with a male escort, hired by her business to keep her company on her travels to Rome. Finally, Bolognini’s Famous Lovers focuses on a woman whose marriage is threatened by an affair with a dashing young writer. ~ Michael Hastings, All Movie GuideRead More »

  • Sergio Corbucci – Sono un fenomeno paranormale (1985)

    Sergio Corbucci1981-1990ComedyItaly
    Sono un fenomeno paranormale (1985)
    Sono un fenomeno paranormale (1985)

    Quote:
    Roberto Razzi, skeptical and convinced atheist, is the conductor of the Futuro program, in which he unmasks the most common tricks and deceptions that make the miracle cry out to everyone.Read More »

  • Luigi Zampa – Il medico della mutua AKA Be Sick… It’s Free (1968)

    1961-1970ComedyItalyLuigi Zampa

    Review Summary
    This comedic social satire mercilessly lampoons Italy’s ineffectual health-care system that allows for corruption and mass hypochondria. An ambitious Dr. Tersilli (Alberto Sordi) bets his fellow doctors that he can amass more patients and benefits than they can. Learning the ins-and-outs of the system, his office is soon jammed with patients seeking treatment for a variety of real or imagined maladies. The beginning of the film opens with the doctor’s collapse due to exhaustion in his fervent goal to see over 2,000 patients. The remainder of the film flashes back to how the vibrant young physician is turned into a frail patient who must stay at home and dispense advise over the telephone. ~Read More »

  • Dino Risi – Una Vita difficile AKA A Difficult Life (1961)

    1961-1970ComedyDino RisiDramaItaly

    Synopsis:
    In this slow-starting but effective drama, comedian Alberto Sordi changes hats to play Silvio Magnozzi, a man so dedicated to his high moral standards that he loses out on most of the things he wants in life -including his wife. He watches while others march up the ladder of success way ahead of him, sometimes by hypocritically licking the boots of their superiors or doing just anything at all to attain advancement. After his death grip on his principles causes his wife to walk out, Silvio relents and starts to live like others. Now he is supposedly happily residing on Easy Street, his wife is back — and so what is bugging him?
    ~ Eleanor MannikkaRead More »

  • Luigi Comencini – L’ingorgo – Una storia impossibile AKA Traffic Jam (1979)

    1971-1980ComedyCommedia all'ItalianaDramaItalyLuigi Comencini

    Synopsis:
    A tremendous congestion hits the Rome highway ring. The biggest traffic jam ever seen lasts more than 36 hours. At the beginning the people blocked in their cars react normally. But as more time passes, the more we witness personal dramas, hysteric reactions and other grotesque situations. All the episodes are linked as if in a single plot. Cars and their hosts are a microcosm of stories part of a larger universe: the congestion.Read More »

  • Luigi Filippo D’Amico – Il Presidente del Borgorosso Football Club AKA The President of the Borgorosso Football Club (1970)

    1961-1970ClassicsComedyItalyLuigi Filippo D'Amico

    Hilarious comedy on the world of football fans !
    16 March 2002 | by skulli99 – IMDB review

    Albero Sordi is known in Italy, not only for his many comical and dramatic film roles but also for playing parts which reflected the new realities of Italian society.In 1970 the football sports industry was nothing new , but a comedy/comical film about it definitely was.

    Albero Sordi plays the part of Benito Fornaciari, a pale, religiously devout Catholic Upper Middle class Italian, who inherits from a long lost uncle a minor league football club , of all things !! He decides to visit the club so as to sell it.But the local population has other ideas ,through an almost armed uprising they “force” him not to sell the club, but rather, lead it to other glories on the football field.Read More »

  • Mario Monicelli & Dino Risi & Ettore Scola – I nuovi mostri [115min cut] (1977)

    1971-1980Dino RisiEttore ScolaItalyMario Monicelli

    20 years after the monumental “I mostri” which was a great example of Italian sketch comedy, 3 of the greatest Italian directors ever (Risi, Monicelli, Scola), the best Italian writers ever (Age, Scarpelli), the best Italian actors ever (Tognazzi, Gassmann, Sordi) and one of the most beautiful woman in the world (Ornella Muti) participate to this great tribute. The last sketch (a funeral) is symbolic : the death of the Italian comedy, which made Italy the second country in the world for cinematographic productions during 50’s and 60’s.Read More »

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