Film Review
Having worked as a screenwriter and assistant director (most notably on
Vittorio De Sica's
I bambini ci
guardano, 1944) Vittorio Cottafavi made a promising directing debut with
this spirited adaptation of a popular stage play by Ugo Betti.
I nostri sogni (a.k.a.
Our Dreams) is a pleasing work but it is
a very different sort of film from the kind that Cottafavi is now best known for - lavish
sword and sandal epics typified by
Le
Legioni di Cleopatra (1960) and
Ercole alla conquista di Atlantide
(1961).
A lively comedy of manners which gleefully pokes fun at the bourgeoisie
whilst championing the virtues of the working class,
I nostri sogni cannily prefigures the rise of Communism in
Italy in the immediate aftermath of
WWII and was in fact released just a few months after the fall of
Mussolini. Vittorio De Sica lent his services, both as
a screenwriter and the lead actor, taking on the role for which he is perhaps
best suited, that of the sympathetic scoundrel.
Here De Sica works well with his gorgeous co-star María Mercader,
a Spanish beauty who would become his second wife in 1968.
Whilst the film offers few surprises, it is imaginatively directed and offers a
satisfying contrast to the gritty neo-realism that was soon to infect
Italian cinema.
© James Travers 2012
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Leo is small-time swindler who ekes out a meagre existence with his
small-time scams, which include peddling razor blades that last
forever. He desperately needs to raise a thousand lira to pay off
his creditors, but his latest moneymaking scam - an attempt to pass
himself off as an advertising whiz - falls flat. Help comes from
an unlikely quarter, from a man named Posci, who works for the business
magnate Signor Tuns. Posci has just given a pair of concert
tickets to one of his most loyal employees, only to learn that the
latter cannot attend the concert because he does not have the correct
wearing apparel. Posci invites Leo to take his employee's place
and escort his daughter Matilde to the concert. Of course Leo
accepts, seeing an easy opportunity to extort further money by trying
to pass himself off as Tuns' wealthy son. Having fallen in love
with Matilde, Leo decides not to rob her family and instead takes her
to the most exclusive restaurant in town. As luck would have it,
Leo is spotted by his creditors and his deception soon begins to
unravel...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.