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7.1/10
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A new starlet is discovered and has ups and downs in Italian films.A new starlet is discovered and has ups and downs in Italian films.A new starlet is discovered and has ups and downs in Italian films.
- Awards
- 1 win
Antonio Acqua
- Movie Theatre Owner
- (uncredited)
Emma Druetti
- Simonetta Rota's Mother
- (uncredited)
Rita Giannuzzi
- Simonetta Rota's Friend
- (uncredited)
Vittorio Manfrino
- Clara Manni's Father
- (uncredited)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaMichelangelo Antonioni offered the lead to Lucia Bosè after both Gina Lollobrigida and Sophia Loren turned it down.
- Quotes
Clara Manni: I was thinking of eternal love, all he wanted was an affair with a film star. And he got it.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Antonioni: Documents and Testimonials (1965)
Featured review
A usually neglected Michelangelo Antonioni early film, "The Lady without Camelias" is a caustic story about a beautiful Milanese shop clerk (Lucia Bosé) who briefly becomes a movie star. She soon discovers than she is fenced in and humiliated, with a new and rich husband who can't tolerate her romantic scenes -- he prefers her to play Joan of Arc, with disastrous consequences.
It is actually one of the cruelest and most accurate portraits of studio film-making and the Italian movie world. As the film develops, it only gets better, the last scene being a little masterpiece of its own. Michelangelo Antonioni, who had already worked with Bosé on "Chronicle of a Love Affair", offered her the part of Clara after Lollobrigida (and, it is said, Loren) had turned it down, and she does wonders in one of her best parts on the silver screen. I have never been really touched by Antonioni's (much more famous, much more serious) Trilogy, but I have enjoyed this "minor" work. Compared to later Antonioni, the film feels crowded, yet some of the director's favorite themes are already there (most notably, misunderstanding between men and women, and masculine weakness). For those (like me) who always found Antonioni quite hard to follow in his later films, try this bitter tale in post-war Italy, I think it gives a different and lighter approach to this director's work.
It is actually one of the cruelest and most accurate portraits of studio film-making and the Italian movie world. As the film develops, it only gets better, the last scene being a little masterpiece of its own. Michelangelo Antonioni, who had already worked with Bosé on "Chronicle of a Love Affair", offered her the part of Clara after Lollobrigida (and, it is said, Loren) had turned it down, and she does wonders in one of her best parts on the silver screen. I have never been really touched by Antonioni's (much more famous, much more serious) Trilogy, but I have enjoyed this "minor" work. Compared to later Antonioni, the film feels crowded, yet some of the director's favorite themes are already there (most notably, misunderstanding between men and women, and masculine weakness). For those (like me) who always found Antonioni quite hard to follow in his later films, try this bitter tale in post-war Italy, I think it gives a different and lighter approach to this director's work.
- GrandeMarguerite
- Jul 30, 2007
- Permalink
- How long is The Lady Without Camelias?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Runtime1 hour 41 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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Top Gap
By what name was The Lady Without Camelias (1953) officially released in Canada in English?
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