ÉVALUATION IMDb
7,2/10
8,4 k
MA NOTE
Karen, une jeune femme de la Baltique, épouse Antonio, un pêcheur pour échapper à un camp de prisonniers, mais la vie dans le village d'Antonio, Stromboli, menacé par le volcan, est difficil... Tout lireKaren, une jeune femme de la Baltique, épouse Antonio, un pêcheur pour échapper à un camp de prisonniers, mais la vie dans le village d'Antonio, Stromboli, menacé par le volcan, est difficile et Karen ne parvient pas à s'y faire.Karen, une jeune femme de la Baltique, épouse Antonio, un pêcheur pour échapper à un camp de prisonniers, mais la vie dans le village d'Antonio, Stromboli, menacé par le volcan, est difficile et Karen ne parvient pas à s'y faire.
- Prix
- 2 victoires et 1 nomination au total
Histoire
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesDuring production of this film, Ingrid Bergman entered into an extra-marital affair with Roberto Rossellini and became pregnant, the two eventually getting married and having three children. The resulting scandal in America effectively blacklisted her from the North American movie market and she was even condemned by politicians and religious figures. She was finally forgiven and welcomed back to America upon the success of Anastasia (1956), but her Hollywood career was temporarily ended by this movie.
- GaffesWhen the police officer is typing the report, he does not strike nearly enough keys to produce the amount of information shown on the paper.
- Générique farfeluOpening credits: "I was found of them that sought me not; I was made manifest unto them that asked not after me." (New Testament, St. Paul's letter to the Romans, Chapter 10, Verse 20)
- Autres versionsSeveral running times exist. The main difference between the 81 min. US version and the 105 min. Italian version was in the ending, with religious themes cut out.
- ConnexionsEdited into Histoire(s) du cinéma: Une histoire seule (1989)
Commentaire en vedette
"La terra e dura qui." Ingrid Bergman is a powerhouse in this film (perhaps out of love and devotion to the director), but she still can't match the power of the menacing volcano on this remote island off the coast of Italy. Bergman plays a prisoner of war with a checkered past stuck in a women's camp, who marries a Strombolian in order to provide herself with the security she needs. Trouble awaits her, and the first sign we get of that is when she starts to complain of being cold on the boat that is taking her to her new life. What she finds is not up to her high Continental standards, and her attitudes towards the locals and the place itself diminish her already low stature as an outsider. It is less the people however, than the general character of the place that turns her off. The volcano, unnamed by the villagers, always awaits in the background, and setting itself becomes one of the main characters (thus the importance of the title), a force to be reckoned with, much like her character.
Although this film is not noir in any way, and Rossellini himself would probably turn in his grave for hearing me say this, Bergman's character certainly does not hesitate in using her female "wiles" to get what she wants and needs. She survived a world war on what we take are wits and flexible morals, so she will also make it through this and I love her for it.
She even attempts to seduce the local priest by cooing "I knew you were the only person who could help me." Having that attempt fail, she tries with the village lighthouse keeper seen at right, and I don't even have to explain the power of her touch. As she asks for help to escape from the village, she softly touches his foot with hers, and creates an unbelievably palpable feeling of erotic energy, something unheard of in mainstream movies today. I know, that's such a cliché, but it's true.
Anyway, I won't discuss the ending, which angered me as a modern woman (even Bergman didn't seem to be buying it), but I will say that the film impressed me with its use of setting comprising plot, character, mise-en-scene, and theme. The film IS setting. It's also worth it just to see the non-actors performing a yearly tuna fishing ritual that dates back to the Phoenecians. Rossellini films are never just stories, they are historical documents. And I love him for that.
cococravescinema.blogspot.com
Although this film is not noir in any way, and Rossellini himself would probably turn in his grave for hearing me say this, Bergman's character certainly does not hesitate in using her female "wiles" to get what she wants and needs. She survived a world war on what we take are wits and flexible morals, so she will also make it through this and I love her for it.
She even attempts to seduce the local priest by cooing "I knew you were the only person who could help me." Having that attempt fail, she tries with the village lighthouse keeper seen at right, and I don't even have to explain the power of her touch. As she asks for help to escape from the village, she softly touches his foot with hers, and creates an unbelievably palpable feeling of erotic energy, something unheard of in mainstream movies today. I know, that's such a cliché, but it's true.
Anyway, I won't discuss the ending, which angered me as a modern woman (even Bergman didn't seem to be buying it), but I will say that the film impressed me with its use of setting comprising plot, character, mise-en-scene, and theme. The film IS setting. It's also worth it just to see the non-actors performing a yearly tuna fishing ritual that dates back to the Phoenecians. Rossellini films are never just stories, they are historical documents. And I love him for that.
cococravescinema.blogspot.com
- bowlofsoul23
- 3 avr. 2006
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Détails
Box-office
- Budget
- 1 000 000 $ US (estimation)
- Brut – à l'échelle mondiale
- 17 532 $ US
- Durée1 heure 47 minutes
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 1.37 : 1
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By what name was Stromboli (Terra di Dio) (1950) officially released in India in English?
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