 |
|
Release Date: 1962 Cast: Edy Nogara, Leopoldo Trieste, Daniela Rocca, Margherita Girelli, Renato Pinciroli, Angela Cardile, Marcello Mastroianni, Bianca Castagnetta, Stefania Sandrelli, Daniela Igliozzi, Lando Buzzanca, Pietro Tordi ...MORE
Cast: Edy Nogara, Leopoldo Trieste, Daniela Rocca, Margherita Girelli, Renato Pinciroli, Angela Cardile, Marcello Mastroianni, Bianca Castagnetta, Stefania Sandrelli, Daniela Igliozzi, Lando Buzzanca, Pietro Tordi, Antonio Acqua, Odoardo Spadaro, Ugo Torrente ...LESS
Categories: Movies, Comedy, Satire, Black-and-white, World cinema, Domestic Comedy Divorce, Italian Style (Italian: Divorzio all'italiana) is a 1961 Italian comedy film directed by Pietro Germi. The screenplay was written by Ennio De Concini, Pietro Germi, Alfredo Giannetti, and Agenore Incrocci; based on the novel Un delitto d'onore (Crime of Honor) by Giovanni Arpino. It stars Marcello Mastroianni, Daniela Rocca, Stefania Sandrelli, Lando Buzzanca, and Leopoldo Trieste.
Ferdinando Cefalù (Marcello Mastroianni), an impoverished Sicilian nobleman, is married to Rosalia (Daniela Rocca) an unattractive but devoted wife. However, he is in love with his cousin Angela ( MORE
Divorce, Italian Style (Italian: Divorzio all'italiana) is a 1961 Italian comedy film directed by Pietro Germi. The screenplay was written by Ennio De Concini, Pietro Germi, Alfredo Giannetti, and Agenore Incrocci; based on the novel Un delitto d'onore (Crime of Honor) by Giovanni Arpino. It stars Marcello Mastroianni, Daniela Rocca, Stefania Sandrelli, Lando Buzzanca, and Leopoldo Trieste.
Ferdinando Cefalù (Marcello Mastroianni), an impoverished Sicilian nobleman, is married to Rosalia (Daniela Rocca) an unattractive but devoted wife. However, he is in love with his cousin Angela (Stefania Sandrelli), a very much younger and attractive woman that he sees only during the summers because her family sends her away to the city to a nunnery to receive her education. Besides his wife, he shares his life with his elderly parents and his spinster sister and her boyfriend that runs a funeral business; the family share their once stately Palace with his uncles, who are slowly but surely eating away the remainders of the then rich estate of the Baron.
Ferdinando spends his spare time (which is most of it) imagining several ways in which he can do away with his wife, such as throwing her LESS
|
Comments About Divorce, Italian Style