IMDb RATING
8.1/10
53K
YOUR RATING
A waifish prostitute wanders the streets of Rome looking for true love but finds only heartbreak.A waifish prostitute wanders the streets of Rome looking for true love but finds only heartbreak.A waifish prostitute wanders the streets of Rome looking for true love but finds only heartbreak.
- Won 1 Oscar
- 17 wins & 7 nominations total
François Périer
- Oscar D'Onofrio
- (as François Perier)
Ciccio Barbi
- Man on the Stage
- (uncredited)
Luciano Bonanni
- Pascello
- (uncredited)
Loretta Capitoli
- Rosy
- (uncredited)
Amerigo Castrighella
- Hypnotised man
- (uncredited)
Leo Catozzo
- The Man with the Sack
- (uncredited)
Dominique Delouche
- Priest with the Flag
- (uncredited)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaFederico Fellini cast film editor Leo Catozzo as the "man with the sack" and wanted to keep that sequence in the release print over the objections of producer Dino De Laurentiis. De Laurentiis thought the scene slowed the film down and finally resorted to stealing the scene from the editing room. According to DeLaurentiis, about 5-7 years after its original release, Fellini rang him and begged to get the scene back, so he could restore it. As the movie had now achieved a classic status, the producer agreed.
- GoofsWhen the pilgrims pass Cabiria in the night, there is a closeup of the naked feet of the women. On the following wide shot, the women are wearing shoes.
- Quotes
Maria 'Cabiria' Ceccarelli: [in Italian]
[to Oscar]
Maria 'Cabiria' Ceccarelli: Guess there's some justice in the world. You suffer, you go through hell. Then happiness comes along or everyone.
- Alternate versionsNights of Cabiria has been available in videos in the original version. The Rialto Pictures 1998 version, released in theaters in 1998, restores a scene showing a mystery man with a sack delivering food and blankets to people sheltered in holes. The 1998 version restored picture and sound, has a new translation, and is available from The Criterion Collection (DVD) and Homevision Cinema (DVD). Update 2019: The film has been restored in 4K from the interpositive and is now available for the first time on home video in a Blu Ray version that is comparable to a good 35mm print.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Decoy: Ladies Man (1958)
Featured review
I would not argue that there could be better films made before and after Cabiria. Perhaps. But there never will be another "Nights of Cabiria" - the last Fellini's film with the linear structure, his third and the most successful collaboration with his actress wife, Giulietta Masina, his immortal love letter to her. Of all his characters, Fellini once said, Cabiria was the only one he was still worried about. Of all the characters, I've seen in the films, Cabiria is the one I often think about - what ever happened to her? Did she survive? Was she able to find love?
I've never seen the face so alive, changing its expression every moment. If the face is the soul's mirror, Cabiria's (Masina's) face reflects her every single emotion and how effortlessly she goes from bitter cynicism to wistful yearning, from despair to hope, from tears to smile. While there's life there's hope. As long as Cabiria smiles in the end of this tragicomic masterpiece, there is hope for all of us.
I've never seen the face so alive, changing its expression every moment. If the face is the soul's mirror, Cabiria's (Masina's) face reflects her every single emotion and how effortlessly she goes from bitter cynicism to wistful yearning, from despair to hope, from tears to smile. While there's life there's hope. As long as Cabiria smiles in the end of this tragicomic masterpiece, there is hope for all of us.
- Galina_movie_fan
- Jan 24, 2005
- Permalink
Details
Box office
- Gross US & Canada
- $766,530
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $38,988
- Jul 5, 1998
- Gross worldwide
- $770,764
- Runtime1 hour 50 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1
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