Director:
Giuseppe De SantisCámara:
Otello MartelliReparto:
Vittorio Gassman, Doris Dowling, Silvana Mangano, Maria Capuzzo, Raf Vallone, Attilio Dottesio, Ermanno Randi, Anna Maestri, Nico Pepe (más)Streaming (1)
Sinopsis(1)
Huyendo de la policía que los persigue por el robo de un collar, Walter (Vittorio Gassman) y su amante Francesca (Doris Dowling) se confunden en la estación del tren con las mujeres que van a recoger el arroz. Francesca hace amistad con la sensual y americanizada Silvana (Silvana Mangano), que es cortejada por Marco (Raf Vallone), un militar destacado en la zona. Las relaciones entre Francesca y Walter se enfrían cuando él demuestra su predilección por Silvana, a la que anima a robar el arroz recién recogido. (Filmin)
(más)Reseñas (1)
Mud wrestling, a MacGuffin in the form of a necklace, beautiful legs, pretty faces, inclinations toward the musical genre and lesbian sex. The team of screenwriters packed all kind of things into their work – which, with the passage of time, seems to have been mainly for marketing purposes – but not much neorealism remained as a result. For a film noir movie that would have elicited the bitter laughter of the original Italian title, Riso amaro (riso = past participle of ridere, to laugh), there are melodramatic moments that are too seriously intended and a preponderance of women who do not control anyone’s destiny, but only passively submit to brute masculine power. Bitter Rice compelled me to see De Santis not as a leading representative of the post-war neorealism school, revealing and changing, but as a pioneer of pink neorealism, which used social issues and leftist ideals only as a front for straightforward commercial entertainment. 65% ()