Conversation Piece (film)
From The Art and Popular Culture Encyclopedia
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Conversation Piece (Template:Lang-it) is an award-winning 1974 film by Italian director Luchino Visconti.
The film features an international cast including the American actor Burt Lancaster, the Austrian Helmut Berger and the Italians Silvana Mangano and Claudia Cardinale (in a very short role as the professor's wife) and the French actress Dominique Sanda in a cameo as the professor's mother. It was shot in English language, however, an Italian dubbed version was also produced at the time, in which Lancaster's and Berger's lines are dubbed into Italian by other actors.
The film was censored in Spain for the nude and political content and because Francisco Franco's daughter and son-in-law are mentioned. However it was re-released uncut in 1983 in Spain. The word cunt was removed from its UK original release but restored on the British DVD edition.
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Plot
Retired American professor (Burt Lancaster) lives a solitary life in a luxurious palazzo in Rome. He is confronted by a vulgar Italian marchesa (Silvana Mangano) and her companions: her lover (Helmut Berger), her daughter (Claudia Marsani) and her daughter's boyfriend (Stefano Patrizi) and is forced to rent to them an apartment on the upper floor of his palazzo. From this point his quiet routine is turned into chaos by his tenants' machinations, and everybody's life takes an unexpected but inevitable turn.
Cast
- Burt Lancaster (The Professor)
- Helmut Berger (Konrad Huebel)
- Silvana Mangano (Marquise Bianca Brumonti)
- Claudia Marsani (Lietta Brumonti)
- Stefano Patrizi (Stefano)
- Elvira Cortese (Erminia)
- Philippe Hersent (Porter)
- Guy Tréjan (Antiquario)
- Jean-Pierre Zola (Blanchard)
- Umberto Raho
- Enzo Fiermonte (Police chief)
- Romolo Valli (Michelli)
- Dominique Sanda (Professor's mother [in flashbacks, uncredited])
- Claudia Cardinale (Professor's wife [in flashbacks, uncredited])
Cultural references
- The professor is a collector of conversation piece 18th century English paintings. Arthur Devis is mentioned.
- In the film, the cult song by Iva Zanicchi Testarda Io is heard. The aria "Vorrei spiegarvi, oh Dio!", and the Sinfonia Concertante, K. 364, both by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart are heard.
- The film refers to Golpe Borghese, Red Brigades and terrorism acts in the History of the Italian Republic in the earliest 70s. Konrad (Helmut Berger) fought in Berlin at May 1968.
- Lietta (Claudia Marsani) recites a poem that is attributed to W. H. Auden, "There's no sex life in the grave".
- The film is a critique of the world of the Jet set following Federico Fellini's La Dolce Vita.Template:Citation needed
Awards
- Italian National Syndicate of Film Journalists Nastro d'Argento
- Winner: Best Director (Regista del Miglior Film Italiano) – Luchino Visconti
- Winner: Best Cinematography (Migliore Fotografia) – Pasqualino De Santis
- Winner: Best New Actress (Migliore Attrice Esordiente) – Claudia Marsani
- Winner: Best Producer (Migliore Produttore Italiano)
- Winner: Best Production Design (Migliore Scenografia) – Mario Garbuglia
- David di Donatello
- Winner: Best Film
- Winner: Best Foreign Actor (Migliore Attore Straniero) – Burt Lancaster
- Japan Academy Prize
- Winner: Best Foreign Film
- Seminci, Valladolid Film Festival, Spain
- Winner: Best Film