Posted: Mon Mar 21, 2011 4:57 am
There are of course countless Italian movies.
One of the most popular here is a 1958 comedy directed by Dino Risi, Venezia, La luna e Tu (Venice, The Moon and You), in typically 50s colors and with two big local stars, Alberto Sordi and Nino Manfredi, trying to speak with a Venetian accent with intentionally dreadful results.
Anonimo Veneziano (The Anonymous Venetian) was a huge box-office hit in Italy in the early 70s - the famous music score certanly helped. The stars of this weepy were also very famous back then - Tony Musante and Florinda Bolkan.
Because of the city's peculiar atmosphere, many giallos and thrillers were shot there. The best is probably Antonio Bido's Solamente Nero, with Lino Capolicchio of The Garden of the Finzi Continis fame; but there's also Aldo Lado's Chi L'Ha Vista Morire (Who Saw Her Die) with George Lazemby, which is more famous than really good, or also Ugo Liberatore's Nero Veneziano (Damned in Venice), a gothic story starring child star Renato Cestie'.
Another big commercial hit - which I'm sure must have been shown in Greece, too, at the time - is an early-80s erotic movie directed by a maestro of this kind of cinema, Tinto Brass, who was born in Venice and knew the city very well and whose wife, Carla known as Tinta, was a Cipriani, the family who still owns the Harry's Bar, a Venice institution and Hemingway's favorite drinking spot. Anyway, the title of the movie is La Chiave (The Key), it stars Stefania Sandrelli and a former Oscar nominee, Frank Finlay; it has some quite explicit sex scenes so maybe it's not what you are looking for - but Venice is there in all its glory.
One of the most popular here is a 1958 comedy directed by Dino Risi, Venezia, La luna e Tu (Venice, The Moon and You), in typically 50s colors and with two big local stars, Alberto Sordi and Nino Manfredi, trying to speak with a Venetian accent with intentionally dreadful results.
Anonimo Veneziano (The Anonymous Venetian) was a huge box-office hit in Italy in the early 70s - the famous music score certanly helped. The stars of this weepy were also very famous back then - Tony Musante and Florinda Bolkan.
Because of the city's peculiar atmosphere, many giallos and thrillers were shot there. The best is probably Antonio Bido's Solamente Nero, with Lino Capolicchio of The Garden of the Finzi Continis fame; but there's also Aldo Lado's Chi L'Ha Vista Morire (Who Saw Her Die) with George Lazemby, which is more famous than really good, or also Ugo Liberatore's Nero Veneziano (Damned in Venice), a gothic story starring child star Renato Cestie'.
Another big commercial hit - which I'm sure must have been shown in Greece, too, at the time - is an early-80s erotic movie directed by a maestro of this kind of cinema, Tinto Brass, who was born in Venice and knew the city very well and whose wife, Carla known as Tinta, was a Cipriani, the family who still owns the Harry's Bar, a Venice institution and Hemingway's favorite drinking spot. Anyway, the title of the movie is La Chiave (The Key), it stars Stefania Sandrelli and a former Oscar nominee, Frank Finlay; it has some quite explicit sex scenes so maybe it's not what you are looking for - but Venice is there in all its glory.