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Vincere

Italy, France

2009

128 Min
Color, Black and White
1.85:1
German, Italian
  • Currently 3.7/5 Stars.
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DIR Marco Bellocchio

EXEC Olivia Sleiter

PROD Mario Gianani

SCR Marco Bellocchio, Daniela Ceselli

DP Daniele Ciprì

CAST Giovanna Mezzogiorno, Filippo Timi, Fausto Russo Alesi, Michela Cescon, Piergiorgio Bellocchio, Corrado Invernizzi, Paolo Pierobon, Fabrizio Costella

ED Francesca Calvelli

PROD DES Marco Dentici

MUSIC Carlo Crivelli

SOUND Gaetano Carito

Cannes (In Competition), Toronto (Masters), Telluride (The 'Show'), London (Film on the Square), New York, AFI, São Paulo, Transilvania (Supernova)

Synopsis

Milan 1914. Mussolini is a socialist union organizer loudly asserting God nonexistence. He meets the beautiful Ida Dasler. She is attracted to the demagogue and his larger-than-life personality. When Ida sells all her possessions to fund her lover’s newspaper, the rise of fascism is set into play. Ida has a son, Benito, and a still-missing marriage certificate but soon she learns her husband has married Rachele Guidi. From then on, Mussoini distances himself from Ida and ensures she and her son are kept away. At first subjected to near house arrest at her sister’s home, Ida is then thrown into an insane asylum where she furiously write to Mussolini, the Pope and others demanding her marriage to be recognized.

Director

Marco-bellocchio

Marco Bellocchio

Born in Piacenza in 1939 from a family of the upper middle-class, he attended the Liceo of the Barnabite Fathers; in 1959 he abandoned his studies in philosophy at the Catholic University in Milan and enrolled at the Centro Sperimentale di Cinematografia (The National Film School in Rom). Then, in London, he followed courses in cinema at the Slade School of Fine Arts, graduating with a thesis on Antonioni and Bresson. He made his debut in full-length films with Fist in His Pocket (I pugni in tasca) (1965), considered one of the best first works in the history of the Italian cinema. In this great film, the rebellious tendency of the young is skilfully expressed in terms of revolt against family and normality, through the story of a young man who decides to exterminate two members of his own family. His next film, China is Near (La Cina è vicina) (1967), marked a turn towards comedy, in the clash between bourgeois hypocrisy and the vain ambition of the fake revolutionaries… read more

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Diego Maia

3Aug10

Bellocchio usa seu cinema para resgatar e revisar uma história semiesquecida (com ecos de A Troca e Dançando no Escuro, mas bem melhor do que o último) e usa o Cinema como um mecanismo de catarse poderoso (não lembro de Chaplin tão bem reutilizado como aqui). E, no meio disso tudo, Giovanna Mezzogiorno monstruosa.

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Emerson

25Jul10

wonderful movie

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Matt Zugenbuehler

7May10

brilliant film.

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Camilla

17Mar10

Great, great film. Almost futurist in the explosive beginning, the second part has a slower pace, but great in every sense. Mezzogiorno is always great, Timi is just amazing in his double-role (you know he stutters in real life, right?), and Bellocchio just keeps getting better!

Fans

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Articles

Our roundup of essays and articles on this film.

"Greenberg," "Runaways," "Dragon Tattoo," "Vincere" and More

By David Hudson on March 19, 2010
"Sad, funny, and acutely self-conscious, Noah Baumbach's Greenberg is unafraid to project a downbeat worldview or feature an impossible protagonist," writes J Hoberman in the Voice. "I'd be hard put
read article
111209fests184

Fests and Events: New Italian Cinema, Alain Resnais, Lisandro Alonso, Koji Wakamatsu

By David Hudson on November 12, 2009
Updated through 11/13. "The Italian political landscape frequently makes our own look flat as a Kansas cornfield. Unsurprisingly, then, that the 13th edition of San Francisco Film Society's New Italian
read article
Nyffvincere184

The Auteurs Daily: Toronto and NYFF. Vincere

By David Hudson on October 14, 2009
"Less a biography on the early life of Fascist leader Benito Mussolini than a dissection into creating (and sustaining) a cult of personality," writes Acquarello, "Marco Bellocchio's Vincere is a textured
read article
Telluridebar184

The Auteurs Daily: Telluride Lineup

By David Hudson on September 3, 2009
The Telluride Film Festival, opening tomorrow and running through Labor Day, has unveiled the lineup for this year's 36th edition. Here's what we know so far about each of the films screening over
read article

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