Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaWar drama inspired by real life events of the Italian partisan Otello Pighin.War drama inspired by real life events of the Italian partisan Otello Pighin.War drama inspired by real life events of the Italian partisan Otello Pighin.
- Direção
- Roteiristas
- Artistas
- Prêmios
- 2 vitórias e 1 indicação no total
Cesarino Miceli Picardi
- Capitano Rolli
- (as Cesare Miceli Picardi)
Giuseppe Soriani
- Alvise Conte Pena
- (as Giuseppe Sormani)
Franco Graziosi
- Quadro Aldrigui
- (não creditado)
Giorgio Tonini
- Il tipografo Zonta
- (não creditado)
- Direção
- Roteiristas
- Elenco e equipe completos
- Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro
Avaliações em destaque
Few films manage to stage ideological tension with such clarity and persistence as this 1963 production. Set entirely within the occupied Italian territory during the Second World War, it avoids the tropes of military cinema-no armed conflict, no battlefield maneuvers, no visceral combat sequences. Instead, it confines itself to the rooms where ideas are tested and compromised, to the hallways where trust decays, and to the dialogues that carry more weight than any bullet. The film concerns itself with the architecture of resistance-not its myth, but its machinery: ideological, procedural, and deeply human.
What distinguishes this work is its treatment of the anti-fascist Resistance not as a unified moral force, but as a precarious coalition held together by necessity. The film presents, with remarkable lucidity, the internal dynamics of the CLN: a political rainbow stretching from monarchist conservatives to communists, from liberal democrats to Christian democrats. These weren't ideological allies in peacetime, and their collaboration during the occupation was less a convergence than a collision in slow motion. The film explores these tensions not abstractly but through structured, often extended, dialogues where strategies must be negotiated, egos contained, and the primacy of the collective affirmed-always tenuously-over personal conviction.
This is perhaps the film's greatest accomplishment: making visible the invisible scaffolding of resistance. Hierarchical yet fragmented, the CLN is shown not as a central command, but as a network of localized cells, each with its own priorities and frictions, bound together more by urgency than ideology. Regional authority clashes with central directives; field operatives debate the ethics of sabotage versus symbolic action; orders come down from Milan, but they arrive altered in Venice. The sense of organizational fragility is constant, and the viewer comes to understand that the real threat to the Resistance is not always external repression, but internal incoherence. And yet, through all this, the structure holds-barely.
The film reflects this tension in its formal structure. Scenes are composed with a rigorous spatial economy. Interiors dominate-small rooms, narrow staircases, dim corridors-spaces that compress and focus attention. The dialogue-heavy script is delivered with a tone that leans into the theatrical, and rightly so: the film's drama is verbal, conceptual, procedural. Characters do not emote so much as argue, not out of coldness but because the stakes of every ideological position have immediate practical implications. Every scene is a kind of tribunal, and the viewer is often placed in the position of silent participant in these deliberations.
Performances are restrained but never flat. The central figure carries the weight of duty with stoic intensity, but it is in the ensemble that the film finds its real voice. Each supporting character reflects a shade of the ideological spectrum, and each confrontation, alliance, or betrayal becomes a node in the film's map of political tension. The presence of a very young Raffaella Carrà, in a minor but notable role, offers a brief moment of levity in hindsight-her future stardom casts an unexpected shadow backward, reminding us that every historical narrative contains within it these curious footnotes, collisions of fame and obscurity, of futures unwritten.
The direction is precise, concerned less with atmosphere than with structure. The camera remains mostly observational, allowing conversations to unfold in real time, rarely interrupted by intrusive editing or score. This patience reflects the procedural rhythm of clandestine political activity-slow, cautious, cumulative. It's a film that trusts its audience to listen, to track arguments, to understand that ideology, in this context, is not a backdrop but the plot itself.
At times, the film's intellectualism risks becoming insular. It does not always succeed in rendering its conceptual stakes emotionally resonant. Viewers looking for psychological intimacy may find the characters too emblematic, their human dimensions subordinated to their political function. But this abstraction is also part of the film's commitment to its subject. Resistance here is not a matter of individual heroism; it is a collective act of navigation through moral, strategic, and ideological impasses.
What lingers most after viewing is the sense of fragility-of an operation always on the verge of disintegration, sustained only by a shared, if not always coherent, opposition to fascism. The film captures the quiet desperation of working within a coalition that was never meant to last beyond the war, and yet must function with precision in the face of repression. It does not dramatize the Resistance-it documents its contradictions.
In that sense, the film is not concerned with spectacle, but with anatomy. It invites the viewer not to feel the Resistance, but to understand it. And that, in the context of Italian cinema of the early 1960s, is an act of unusual-and admirable-discipline.
The film's very title, "Il terrorista," is a deliberate provocation. In the historical context of occupied Italy, no partisan referred to themselves in those terms. "Terrorist" was the label applied by fascist and Nazi propaganda to criminalize and delegitimize resistance activity. To name the protagonist as such is to force the viewer into an uncomfortable space, to interrogate the semantics of power. It invites the question: who decides what constitutes legitimate violence? And under what conditions does resistance become indistinguishable from terrorism in the eyes of power?
Had the film been titled "Il partigiano," it would have aligned itself with the postwar mythos of national redemption, the moral clarity of the Republic's foundational narrative. But "Il terrorista" fractures that clarity. It doesn't challenge the legitimacy of the Resistance; rather, it demands that we acknowledge the cost of that legitimacy-the moral ambiguity, the violent means, the internal disputes, the ideological dissonance. It strips away the consolatory aspect of national memory and restores to the partisan not just dignity, but danger.
This title gains further significance within the political optics of Italy in 1963. The early Sixties marked the beginning of the organic center-left governments, where the Socialist Party entered into alliance with the Christian Democrats. This alliance sought to stabilize the Republic through a politics of consensus and moderation. In such a context, the memory of the Resistance was increasingly tamed, institutionalized, and repackaged as a shared heritage. This film, by contrast, acts as a counter-memory. It reintroduces conflict into what had become sanitized narrative terrain.
Moreover, the film's timing anticipates the semantic crises of the coming decade. Italy was on the cusp of the "anni di piombo," a period when political violence would return-not in the name of anti-fascist resistance, but through new forms of militancy whose relationship to the legacy of the CLN would be hotly contested. By choosing to call its protagonist "the terrorist," the film not only revisits the past but eerily foreshadows the rhetorical battles of the future.
In this way, the film is not simply about the Resistance-it is about the politics of remembering the Resistance. It interrogates language, exposes fractures in collective memory, and resists the impulse to mythologize. It offers no comfort, but it offers clarity-a rare and necessary act in both cinema and history.
What distinguishes this work is its treatment of the anti-fascist Resistance not as a unified moral force, but as a precarious coalition held together by necessity. The film presents, with remarkable lucidity, the internal dynamics of the CLN: a political rainbow stretching from monarchist conservatives to communists, from liberal democrats to Christian democrats. These weren't ideological allies in peacetime, and their collaboration during the occupation was less a convergence than a collision in slow motion. The film explores these tensions not abstractly but through structured, often extended, dialogues where strategies must be negotiated, egos contained, and the primacy of the collective affirmed-always tenuously-over personal conviction.
This is perhaps the film's greatest accomplishment: making visible the invisible scaffolding of resistance. Hierarchical yet fragmented, the CLN is shown not as a central command, but as a network of localized cells, each with its own priorities and frictions, bound together more by urgency than ideology. Regional authority clashes with central directives; field operatives debate the ethics of sabotage versus symbolic action; orders come down from Milan, but they arrive altered in Venice. The sense of organizational fragility is constant, and the viewer comes to understand that the real threat to the Resistance is not always external repression, but internal incoherence. And yet, through all this, the structure holds-barely.
The film reflects this tension in its formal structure. Scenes are composed with a rigorous spatial economy. Interiors dominate-small rooms, narrow staircases, dim corridors-spaces that compress and focus attention. The dialogue-heavy script is delivered with a tone that leans into the theatrical, and rightly so: the film's drama is verbal, conceptual, procedural. Characters do not emote so much as argue, not out of coldness but because the stakes of every ideological position have immediate practical implications. Every scene is a kind of tribunal, and the viewer is often placed in the position of silent participant in these deliberations.
Performances are restrained but never flat. The central figure carries the weight of duty with stoic intensity, but it is in the ensemble that the film finds its real voice. Each supporting character reflects a shade of the ideological spectrum, and each confrontation, alliance, or betrayal becomes a node in the film's map of political tension. The presence of a very young Raffaella Carrà, in a minor but notable role, offers a brief moment of levity in hindsight-her future stardom casts an unexpected shadow backward, reminding us that every historical narrative contains within it these curious footnotes, collisions of fame and obscurity, of futures unwritten.
The direction is precise, concerned less with atmosphere than with structure. The camera remains mostly observational, allowing conversations to unfold in real time, rarely interrupted by intrusive editing or score. This patience reflects the procedural rhythm of clandestine political activity-slow, cautious, cumulative. It's a film that trusts its audience to listen, to track arguments, to understand that ideology, in this context, is not a backdrop but the plot itself.
At times, the film's intellectualism risks becoming insular. It does not always succeed in rendering its conceptual stakes emotionally resonant. Viewers looking for psychological intimacy may find the characters too emblematic, their human dimensions subordinated to their political function. But this abstraction is also part of the film's commitment to its subject. Resistance here is not a matter of individual heroism; it is a collective act of navigation through moral, strategic, and ideological impasses.
What lingers most after viewing is the sense of fragility-of an operation always on the verge of disintegration, sustained only by a shared, if not always coherent, opposition to fascism. The film captures the quiet desperation of working within a coalition that was never meant to last beyond the war, and yet must function with precision in the face of repression. It does not dramatize the Resistance-it documents its contradictions.
In that sense, the film is not concerned with spectacle, but with anatomy. It invites the viewer not to feel the Resistance, but to understand it. And that, in the context of Italian cinema of the early 1960s, is an act of unusual-and admirable-discipline.
The film's very title, "Il terrorista," is a deliberate provocation. In the historical context of occupied Italy, no partisan referred to themselves in those terms. "Terrorist" was the label applied by fascist and Nazi propaganda to criminalize and delegitimize resistance activity. To name the protagonist as such is to force the viewer into an uncomfortable space, to interrogate the semantics of power. It invites the question: who decides what constitutes legitimate violence? And under what conditions does resistance become indistinguishable from terrorism in the eyes of power?
Had the film been titled "Il partigiano," it would have aligned itself with the postwar mythos of national redemption, the moral clarity of the Republic's foundational narrative. But "Il terrorista" fractures that clarity. It doesn't challenge the legitimacy of the Resistance; rather, it demands that we acknowledge the cost of that legitimacy-the moral ambiguity, the violent means, the internal disputes, the ideological dissonance. It strips away the consolatory aspect of national memory and restores to the partisan not just dignity, but danger.
This title gains further significance within the political optics of Italy in 1963. The early Sixties marked the beginning of the organic center-left governments, where the Socialist Party entered into alliance with the Christian Democrats. This alliance sought to stabilize the Republic through a politics of consensus and moderation. In such a context, the memory of the Resistance was increasingly tamed, institutionalized, and repackaged as a shared heritage. This film, by contrast, acts as a counter-memory. It reintroduces conflict into what had become sanitized narrative terrain.
Moreover, the film's timing anticipates the semantic crises of the coming decade. Italy was on the cusp of the "anni di piombo," a period when political violence would return-not in the name of anti-fascist resistance, but through new forms of militancy whose relationship to the legacy of the CLN would be hotly contested. By choosing to call its protagonist "the terrorist," the film not only revisits the past but eerily foreshadows the rhetorical battles of the future.
In this way, the film is not simply about the Resistance-it is about the politics of remembering the Resistance. It interrogates language, exposes fractures in collective memory, and resists the impulse to mythologize. It offers no comfort, but it offers clarity-a rare and necessary act in both cinema and history.
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesItalian censorship visa # 41276 delivered on 30-9-1963.
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Detalhes
- Data de lançamento
- Países de origem
- Central de atendimento oficial
- Idiomas
- Também conhecido como
- The Terrorist
- Empresas de produção
- Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro
- Tempo de duração1 hora 35 minutos
- Cor
- Mixagem de som
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By what name was Il terrorista (1963) officially released in Canada in English?
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