Amore e rabbia (Love and Anger) is a 1969 Italian-French anthology film that includes five films directed by five Italian directors and one French director. It premiered at the 19th Berlin International Film Festival in 1969.[1]

Amore e rabbia
-Love and Anger-
A poster bearing the film's English title: Love and Anger
Directed byMarco Bellocchio
(segment "Discutiamo, discutiamo")
Bernardo Bertolucci
(segment "Agonia")
Jean-Luc Godard
(segment "L'amore")
Carlo Lizzani
(segment "L'indifferenza")
Pier Paolo Pasolini
(segment "La sequenza del fiore di carta")
Elda Tattoli
(segment "Discutiamo, discutiamo")")
Written byPier Paolo Pasolini
Mauro Bolognini
Marco Bellocchio
Bernardo Bertolucci
Carlo Lizzani
Jean-Luc Godard
StarringMarco Bellocchio
Ninetto Davoli
Julian Beck
Nino Castelnuovo
CinematographyAlain Levent
Sandro Marconi
Edited byNino Baragli
Franco Fraticelli
Music byGiovanni Fusco
Release date
  • 1969 (1969)
Running time
102 minutes
CountriesItaly
France
LanguagesItalian, French, English, German

Plot

edit

The film is composed of episodes that deal with some of the themes present in Jesus' parables and anecdotes of the canonical gospels. These issues, however, are reproduced in the present from their directors.

Segments

edit

Indifference

edit

A man is suffering from road, badly injured. Passers do not deign to look at him, and continue walking on their way. The episode is taken from Jesus' parable of the Good Samaritan.

Agony

edit

A bishop is ill and about to die. Before he dies, the man has a vision of God, who tells him that his life has been misspent. The bishop realizes that he spent his life not properly respecting the gospel, but now it is too late.

The sequence of the paper flower

edit

A beautiful smiling guy's walking on the streets of a city, bringing with him a large poppy paper. The boy is the goodness and innocence of youth, which is soon cut short by human wickedness. Indeed, while the merry boy is walking, the episode shows the evil done by man during the Second World War. At the end of the story, the boy is struck by lightning from the sky and dies, guilty of having been in his life a happy person and a good neighbor.

Love

edit

A woman and a man're arguing with each other. They represent democracy and the people's revolution that can not get along, although their ideas are similar.

We tell, tell

edit

A group of young guys occupies a university. Young people are fighters student revolution of the Sixties, and now that they have in hand the building, the guys begin to argue among themselves, bringing new ideas and changes. However, they do nothing but talk nonsense, not changing anything in society.

Cast

edit

Discutiamo, discutiamo directed by Marco Bellocchio and Elda Tattoli

Agonia directed by Bernardo Bertolucci

L'Amore directed by Jean-Luc Godard

L'indifferenza directed by Carlo Lizzani

La sequenza del fiore di carta directed by Pier Paolo Pasolini

References

edit
  1. ^ "IMDB.com: Awards for Amore e rabbia". IMDb. Retrieved 6 March 2010.
edit