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Bitterer Reis

Originaltitel: Riso amaro
  • 1949
  • Not Rated
  • 1 Std. 48 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
7,6/10
5306
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Bitterer Reis (1949)
RaubDramaKriminalität

Zwei Kriminelle, die auf der Flucht sind, arbeiten auf einem Reisfeld und beschließen, andere Arbeiter für ihren nächsten Raub zu rekrutieren.Zwei Kriminelle, die auf der Flucht sind, arbeiten auf einem Reisfeld und beschließen, andere Arbeiter für ihren nächsten Raub zu rekrutieren.Zwei Kriminelle, die auf der Flucht sind, arbeiten auf einem Reisfeld und beschließen, andere Arbeiter für ihren nächsten Raub zu rekrutieren.

  • Regie
    • Giuseppe De Santis
  • Drehbuch
    • Giuseppe De Santis
    • Carlo Lizzani
    • Gianni Puccini
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • Vittorio Gassman
    • Doris Dowling
    • Silvana Mangano
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    7,6/10
    5306
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Regie
      • Giuseppe De Santis
    • Drehbuch
      • Giuseppe De Santis
      • Carlo Lizzani
      • Gianni Puccini
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • Vittorio Gassman
      • Doris Dowling
      • Silvana Mangano
    • 27Benutzerrezensionen
    • 31Kritische Rezensionen
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
    • Für 1 Oscar nominiert
      • 2 Nominierungen insgesamt

    Fotos141

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    Topbesetzung23

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    Vittorio Gassman
    Vittorio Gassman
    • Walter
    • (as Vittorio Gassmann)
    Doris Dowling
    Doris Dowling
    • Francesca
    Silvana Mangano
    Silvana Mangano
    • Silvana
    Raf Vallone
    Raf Vallone
    • Marco
    Checco Rissone
    Checco Rissone
    • Aristide
    Nico Pepe
    • Beppe
    Adriana Sivieri
    • Celeste
    Lia Corelli
    • Amelia
    Maria Grazia Francia
    • Gabriella
    Dedi Ristori
    • Anna
    Anna Maestri
    • Irene
    Mariemma Bardi
    • Gianna
    Maria Capuzzo
    • Giulia
    Isabella Marincola
    • Rosa
    • (as Isabella Zennaro)
    Carlo Mazzarella
    Carlo Mazzarella
    • Gianetto
    Ermanno Randi
    • Paolo
    Antonio Nediani
    • Erminio
    Mariano Englen
    • Cesare
    • Regie
      • Giuseppe De Santis
    • Drehbuch
      • Giuseppe De Santis
      • Carlo Lizzani
      • Gianni Puccini
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
    • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

    Benutzerrezensionen27

    7,65.3K
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    9amadeus-10

    Still great after not having seen it since 1949

    First saw Bitter Rice in 1949 and it has haunted me for 51 years. Recently rented it (2000) and it's still compelling. The verrismo genre was new at the time; in 2000 it doesn't have the same impact that it did when Open City, Bicycle Thief, La Strada, et al were all showing at about the same time, and showing us that there was a true, artistic alternative to Hollywood pap.

    The then 18-year old Silvana Mangano's earthy performance will endure forever. My only memory from 1949 was of her working and chanting in the rice fields. And her doing a sensual Lindy with Vittorio Gassman. Those scenes were still compelling, half a century later.
    9clanciai

    Primitive basics in the rice fields in struggles between right and wrong, love and loyalties.

    I had heard very much about this film and particularly about Silvana Mangano's very sexy presence before finally seeing it, and was rather disappointed. Silvana is like a young Ingrid Bergman but already fallen in advance in the trap of Italian neorealistic temptation to vulgarity - she is outrageously vulgar, although innocent, while the other actress, Doris Dowling's acting, is so much better. Vittorio Gassman is very young here and gives a virtuoso performance as the villain, while Raf Vallone, vying with him in villainy, turns out ultimately sympathetic after all. The strength of the film is in its dramatic quality, the drama is almost operatic in constantly more striking effects, and all the scenes in the rice magazine are a joy to behold for the cineast. The film is slightly outdated today, the working conditions and routines of the rice field workers are a bit obsolete in their leftist proletarian tendencies, but it's a great drama and film. Silvana Mangano was only 19 at the time, this film made her a star forever, but with time it becomes more obvious that it is Doris Dowling's film more than hers.
    7bkrauser-81-311064

    Against the Grain

    There's something about the way actress Doris Dowling stares piercingly into the eyes of the men and women who temporarily populate the Po Valley of northern Italy. Hardly a shrinking violet, the shrewdness she innately possesses drips from her sweated brow and subtle scowl. She's equal parts Barbara Stanwyck in Double Indeminity (1944) and Vivien Leigh in Streetcar (1951); both the criminal and the victim.

    Bitter Rice concerns the tragic entanglements of four people, two men and two women during the much celebrated time of the northern rice harvest circa 1949. Walter (Gassman) and Francesca (Dowling) are fugitives hiding from the fuzz with a thicket of stolen jewels. They find respite among the gaggle of women working the harvest and decide to stay just long enough to elude capture and steal a few bags of rice. The craven Walter finds himself attracted to a youthful rice weeder named Silvana (Mangano) who glamorizes trinkets of American largess including and especially pop music. As such, she immediately becomes drawn to Walter's bad-boy persona. Meanwhile Marco (Vallone) a disaffected war veteran attempts to court Silvana but finds conflict from all angles.

    The film is a jumble of compromised pastiche, referencing everything from pre-code crime and social problem films to stage musicals adapted to the screen. Yet it's all translated with neo-realist cinematography and wing-clipped melancholia. The love triangle for instance leaves the impression of a screwball comedy yet any humor or sexual tension is muted when compared to the paranoia shared by our two criminal leads. That very real tension is subsequently switched out with flashes of turf-war bravado pre-dating the American "teen" movies of the decade to come. There's an argument to be made that this quixotic mix of sensibilities amplifies the pettiness with which our characters seem doomed to repeat again and again. What's a girls obsession with American bubblegum when compared to the troubles of an army of harvesters working in the heat?

    Yet the way the movie gives equal weight to the melodrama as to the characterization keeps this film just out of place for the time; like bran of the grain just slightly askew. While constantly reminding its audience of the space, the time and the politics of the day, we don't see the characters as we should - tragic and vulnerable. Instead we see them petty, vain, and oafish; oblivious to their effect on the strangers that they harvest rice with. By combining the moral and economic difficulties of post-war Italy with western-style myopia there's certainly a pep to the plot but no characters to really root for.

    This tug-o-war between Italian neo-realism and Hollywood glitz and melodrama reaches its boiling point during the climax, which pits the four against each other in a slaughterhouse, under the cover of night. It's a mesmerizing scene that is brimming with symbolism, pathos, artful audience manipulation and suspense. Considered as a marriage of form and technique, the climax is a marvel though seen as a corruption, the film hammers home a deeply anti-consumerist message. One that not only highlights the seductive and prevalent nature of American-style capitalism but can even be seen as a commentary on Italy's 1948 General Election (which was seen by the west as a Cold War tipping point).

    Yet taken out of its political and historical context, Bitter Rice is at its heart a pulpy rural drama. One that can't help but be compared to films like The Big Sleep (1946) and lauded as the film that got Silvana Mangano on the fast track to international stardom. Yet despite its limitations, the image of Doris Dowling's fierce, icy glare is burned into memory and should be etched into cinematic consciousness in the same way Mangano's erotic boogie-woogie is.
    Doylenf

    Passion in the rice fields and plenty of steamy melodrama...

    In BITTER RICE, Silvana Mangano is reminiscent of a minor-league Anna Magnani, only younger and prettier with the accent on her bosom in BITTER RICE. She's earthy and sensual--as is the film--once described by the NY Times "as earthy and elemental as any picture you are likely to see."

    And it is elemental, the story of misguided passions among four people in the rice fields of Northern Italy and there's no subtlety in the telling. It gets off to a rather slow start while developing the characters played by Silvana Mangano, Raf Vallone, Doris Dowling and Vittorio Gassmann. Only Vallone, as an army sergeant, is a "good guy" among a band of thieves destined to face tragic consequences of their unbridled lust and fatal attraction. He resembles an Italian version of the young Burt Lancaster.

    Along the way, there are some interesting scenes of workers in the rice fields and their work habits, enhanced by moments whereby they chant and sing what they are supposed to be thinking as a sort of counterpoint to the action unfolding in the story.

    Done in the popular neo-realistic manner prevalent during post-World War II in Italy, it tells a convoluted tale that, in the end, only tells us that crime does not pay. The story heads toward a stormy conclusion in a slaughter house, engrossing right up until the fabricated final moments for Mangano, a fitting conclusion to a steamy melodrama.

    Interesting to see American actress Doris Dowling in this Italian film and giving one of the best performances as a woman who stands up to the cunning and perverse heroine with some threats of her own. Too bad her film career in the U.S. never fully developed.
    9wvisser-leusden

    a true Italian classic

    Although its mold of 1949 appears somewhat melodramatic today, the black and white 'Riso Amaro' (= Italian for 'Bitter Rice') surely ranks among the classics in film history.

    This very Italian product by Guiseppe de Santis shows a pretty ordinary crime story, excellently interwoven with an impressive decor of harsh season labor in the rice-fields of Northern Italy. The thousands of women, up to their ankles in the water, breaking their backs in the burning sun to earn a few bucks, make a truly great setting.

    'Riso Amaro' has been labeled as 'neo-realism'. Another issue worth mentioning is its female lead Silvana Mangano, ex miss Rome. To the standards of 1949 miss Mangano's performance in this film was shocking. This earned 'Riso Amaro' a lot of publicity, in particular in strongly Roman Catholic Italy.

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    • Wissenswertes
      Bitterer Reis (1949) was a product of the Italian neorealism style. The Italian title of the film is based on a pun; since the Italian word riso can mean either "rice" or "laughter," riso amaro can be taken to mean either "bitter laughter" or "bitter rice."
    • Verbindungen
      Edited into Bellissimo: Immagini del cinema italiano (1985)

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    Details

    Ändern
    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • 27. Oktober 1950 (Westdeutschland)
    • Herkunftsland
      • Italien
    • Sprache
      • Italienisch
    • Auch bekannt als
      • Bitter Rice
    • Drehorte
      • Cascina Selve, Salasco, Vercelli, Piedmont, Italien
    • Produktionsfirma
      • Lux Film
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    Box Office

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    • Budget
      • 70.000.000 ITL (geschätzt)
    Weitere Informationen zur Box Office finden Sie auf IMDbPro.

    Technische Daten

    Ändern
    • Laufzeit
      • 1 Std. 48 Min.(108 min)
    • Farbe
      • Black and White
    • Seitenverhältnis
      • 1.33 : 1

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