2022-02-28

Two Women - Wikipedia

Two Women - Wikipedia

Two Women

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Two Women
TwoWomenPoster.jpg
Italian theatrical release poster
ItalianLa ciociara
Directed byVittorio De Sica
Screenplay by
Based onTwo Women
by Alberto Moravia
Produced byCarlo Ponti
Starring
CinematographyGábor Pogány
Edited byAdriana Novelli
Music byArmando Trovajoli
Production
companies
  • Compagnia Cinematografica Champion
  • Les Films Marceau
  • Cocinor
  • Société Générale de Cinématographie
Distributed by
  • Titanus (Italy)
  • Cocinor-Marceau (France)
Release dates
  • 22 December 1960 (Milan premiere)
  • 23 December 1960 (Italy)
  • 17 May 1961 (France)
Running time
100 minutes
Countries
  • Italy
  • France
Languages
  • Italian
  • German
Box office
  • $7.2 million (US and Canada)[1]
  • $30 million (worldwide)[2]
  • 2,024,049 admissions (France)[3]
  • 9,662,000 admissions (Italy)[4]

Two Women (ItalianLa ciociara [la tʃoˈtʃaːra], rough literal translation "The Woman from Ciociaria") is a 1960 war drama film directed by Vittorio De Sica from a screenplay by Cesare Zavattini and De Sica, based on the novel of the same name by Alberto Moravia. The film stars Sophia LorenJean-Paul BelmondoEleonora Brown and Raf Vallone. It tells the story of a woman trying to protect her young daughter from the horrors of war. The story is fictional, but based on actual events of 1944 in Rome and rural Lazio, during the Marocchinate.[5]

Loren's performance received critical acclaim, earning her an Academy Award for Best Actress, among other accolades.

Plot[edit]

Cesira (Loren) is a widowed shopkeeper, raising her devoutly religious twelve-year-old daughter, Rosetta (Brown), in Rome during World War II. Following the bombing of Rome, mother and daughter flee to Cesira's native Ciociaria, a rural, mountainous province of central Italy. The night before they go, Cesira sleeps with Giovanni (Vallone), a coal dealer in her neighbourhood, who agrees to look after her store in her absence.

After they arrive at Ciociaria, Cesira attracts the attention of Michele (Belmondo), a young local intellectual with communist sympathies. Rosetta sees Michele as a father figure and develops a strong bond with him. Michele is later taken prisoner by German soldiers, who force him to act as a guide through the mountainous terrain.

After the Allies capture Rome, in June 1944, Cesira and Rosetta decide to head back to that city. On the way, the two are gang-raped inside a church by a group of Moroccan Goumiers – soldiers attached to the invading Allied Armies in Italy. Rosetta is traumatized, becoming detached and distant from her mother and no longer an innocent child.

When the two manage to find shelter at a neighbouring village, Rosetta disappears during the night, sending Cesira into a panic. She thinks Rosetta has gone to look for Michele, but later finds out that Michele was killed by the Germans. Rosetta returns, having been out with an older boy, who has given her silk stockings, despite her youth. Cesira is outraged and upset, slapping and spanking Rosetta for her behavior, but Rosetta remains unresponsive, emotionally distant. When Cesira informs Rosetta of Michele's death, Rosetta begins to cry like the little girl she had been prior to the rape. The film ends with Cesira comforting the child.

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