PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
7,3/10
3,7 mil
TU PUNTUACIÓN
Un italiano cuenta su historia de amor a una rusa. En una serie de flashbacks, Romano Patroni deja a su mujer para visitar un balneario donde se enamora de una mujer rusa. Regresa a Italia d... Leer todoUn italiano cuenta su historia de amor a una rusa. En una serie de flashbacks, Romano Patroni deja a su mujer para visitar un balneario donde se enamora de una mujer rusa. Regresa a Italia decidido a dejar a su mujer y casarse con su amor.Un italiano cuenta su historia de amor a una rusa. En una serie de flashbacks, Romano Patroni deja a su mujer para visitar un balneario donde se enamora de una mujer rusa. Regresa a Italia decidido a dejar a su mujer y casarse con su amor.
- Dirección
- Guión
- Reparto principal
- Nominado para 1 premio Óscar
- 12 premios y 22 nominaciones en total
Elena Safonova
- Anna Sergeyevna, Governor's Wife
- (as Elena Sofonova)
Innokentiy Smoktunovskiy
- Il Governarore di Sisoev
- (as Innochentij Smoktunovskj)
Yuriy Bogatyryov
- Il Maresciallo
- (as Jury Bogatiriov)
Dmitriy Zolotukhin
- Konstantin
- (as Dimitri Zolothuchin)
Jean-Pierre Bardos
- Ospite sdraiato
- (as J. Pierre Bardos)
Elguja Burduli
- Il cuoco della nave
- (as Elgugia Burduli)
Pierluigi Cervetti
- Il maestro di ginnastica
- (as P. Luigi Cervetti)
Reseñas destacadas
Yes, its story is an old chestnut. There's an excuse for Marcello Mastroianni to tell a story about himself and a Russian woman, and he does it, and there's an aftermath. But the story is so good and so well told (and acted and directed) that the device is like an old friend. This is one of Mikhailkov's best, right up there with Burnt by the Sun. It draws on Heifetz's Lady with a Dog (and Chekhov's short story too, for that matter) and parodies (or pays homage to) Fellini's 8 1/2--both just right for this Italo-Russian piece about Italians and Russians, which I found a pure delight. It revels in both poking fun of and warmly enjoying both Italian and Russian types and moods. For me, there was the additional pleasure of seeing Innokenti Smoktunovsky, who played the title role in Kozintsev's Hamlet, now middle-aged and as fine an actor as ever. Will it ever be released on DVD? It's about time this one is rediscovered.
I consider this movie a masterpiece. The performance of Marcello Mastroianni is simply sublime, one of the best I have ever seen from anyone, anywhere. Yes, the surface plot is about adultery, but the story is much more than that. I think this is a story about a man, an old man near the end of his life, looking back on his playboy, vagabond, good-for-nothing life, regretting it, but not knowing any other way to live. "Mother's lullaby and the Russian mist" is all he remembers about his own life, he says. Watch this old man cry, and it stirs you with all kinds of emotions and thoughts, makes you think about how you should live, that tragedy happens everyday, to every small man who must fend for himself and fail. You tell yourself you will never be like him, you pity him, disrespect him, despise him, but in the end you understand this man in the most profound sense. And you will never be able to forget that Russian mist either. Superb.
for its wise simplicity. for its touching beauty. and for the high Mkhalkov precision to create the details. a film with an impressive cast - Mastroianni is the first violin but not the one - and example of inspired manner to use the Tchekov spirit and the glamor of a century beginning. a film like a puzzle in which each image, performance or scene is charming like a kind of gem, delicate and illustration of art of a master. a special meeting between art of few great actors and an unique director. and the flavor of a Russia who becomes different in contact with Mastroianni - it is not the only meeting , Sunflower is another , but in this case, far by war or Sophia Loren, the story seems be a precious drink in a crystal glass.for me, one of films who, after its end, proofs than it represents one of movies who you search for without know than it exists.
A Russian/Italian co-production sounds like an uneasy marriage of mismatched temperaments, but 'Dark Eyes' is a remarkably cohesive mutual effort offering the best of both worlds: a wonderfully romantic story, a healthy love of laughter and high spirits, and a lingering air of Slavic melancholy. It's being sold as a showcase for the perennial charm of Marcello Mastroianni, but the film has more than just his performance to recommend it. The script, condensed from several tales by Anton Chekhov, has the elegant simplicity of a classic short story, following a charming but buffoonish husband in his pursuit of an attractive young Russian back to her native country, where he discovers a nation of people even crazier than he is. Some of the smaller roles have been drawn for the broadest effect, but under Nikita Mikhalkov's meticulous direction every character emerges as a full blooded human being, with Mastroianni himself offering a sensitive portrait of a man too in love with life to take it seriously. A nagging reservation: the final irony revealed in the epilogue adds one coincidence too many, and comes close to spoiling the already poignant mood. Just pretend it never happened.
10adipocea
There's no really much you can say and analyze about this movie. It's not a movie by itself, it's a piece of art lost in the ocean of mundane cinema of the 20-th century. It's like the great literature, the great paintings of history, impregnated with a mystical and hard to define quality in it's texture. For me this is not simply a "movie", i say it again. Like Nostalghia or Andrei Rubliov of Tarkovsky , here the poetics transcends what we usually call cinema, or a film, because it gets a life on it's own, and becomes independent to critical observation. It's like a tiger in the Siberian forest, that you have to simply admire. A tiger is beautiful because it's a tiger, Oci Ciornie it's beautiful because it is Oci Ciornie. Something divine happened to Mihalkov and to the cast when thy made this piece of art. It was the greatest shame and scandal when the jury at Cannes awarded "Sous le Ciel de Satan" the Palme D'or, but who cares...Time is for the art what is for the wine. The good one gets better, the cheap one gets sour and becomes vinegar.
¿Sabías que...?
- CuriosidadesFinal film of Silvana Mangano.
- Banda sonoraSonata per pianoforte n. 17 in Si bemolle maggiore, K. 570
Composed by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
Performed by Laurent Ferlet
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- How long is Dark Eyes?Con tecnología de Alexa
Detalles
Taquilla
- Recaudación en Estados Unidos y Canadá
- 2.201.428 US$
- Recaudación en todo el mundo
- 2.201.428 US$
- Duración
- 1h 58min(118 min)
- Color
- Mezcla de sonido
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.85 : 1
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