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Big Deal on Madonna Street

Original title: I soliti ignoti
  • 1958
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 46m
IMDb RATING
7.9/10
12K
YOUR RATING
Marcello Mastroianni, Vittorio Gassman, Renato Salvatori, and Totò in Big Deal on Madonna Street (1958)
CaperComedyCrime

A motley quintet of inept small-time thieves attempt the burglary of a local pawnshop in this Italian farce.A motley quintet of inept small-time thieves attempt the burglary of a local pawnshop in this Italian farce.A motley quintet of inept small-time thieves attempt the burglary of a local pawnshop in this Italian farce.

  • Director
    • Mario Monicelli
  • Writers
    • Agenore Incrocci
    • Furio Scarpelli
    • Suso Cecchi D'Amico
  • Stars
    • Vittorio Gassman
    • Marcello Mastroianni
    • Renato Salvatori
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.9/10
    12K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Mario Monicelli
    • Writers
      • Agenore Incrocci
      • Furio Scarpelli
      • Suso Cecchi D'Amico
    • Stars
      • Vittorio Gassman
      • Marcello Mastroianni
      • Renato Salvatori
    • 38User reviews
    • 39Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 1 Oscar
      • 4 wins & 5 nominations total

    Photos138

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    Top cast30

    Edit
    Vittorio Gassman
    Vittorio Gassman
    • Giuseppe 'Peppe er Pantera' Baiocchi
    Marcello Mastroianni
    Marcello Mastroianni
    • Tiberio Braschi
    Renato Salvatori
    Renato Salvatori
    • Mario Angeletti
    Totò
    Totò
    • Dante Cruciani
    Memmo Carotenuto
    Memmo Carotenuto
    • Cosimo Proietti
    Rossana Rory
    Rossana Rory
    • Norma
    Carla Gravina
    Carla Gravina
    • Nicoletta
    Claudia Cardinale
    Claudia Cardinale
    • Carmelina Nicosia
    Carlo Pisacane
    Carlo Pisacane
    • Pierluigi 'Capannelle'
    Tiberio Murgia
    Tiberio Murgia
    • Michele 'Ferribotte' Nicosia
    Gina Rovere
    Gina Rovere
    • Teresa
    Gina Amendola
    • Mario's 'Madre'
    Elvira Tonelli
    • Assunta
    Elena Fabrizi
    • Signora Ada
    • (as Elisa Fabrizi)
    Pasquale Misiano
    • Massimo
    Renato Terra
    Renato Terra
    • Eladio
    Aldo Trifiletti
    • Fernando
    Nino Marchetti
    • Luigi
    • Director
      • Mario Monicelli
    • Writers
      • Agenore Incrocci
      • Furio Scarpelli
      • Suso Cecchi D'Amico
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews38

    7.912.2K
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    10

    Featured reviews

    9lee_eisenberg

    Italy's clumsy heist

    One day, there's gonna have to be a festival for heist-themed movies. "The Killing", "Topkapi", "The Italian Job", "The Bank Job" and the Ocean franchise are obvious entries, but Mario Monicelli's Academy Award-nominated "Big Deal on Madonna Street" ("I soliti ignoti" in the original Italian) also needs to be in there. Unlike most of the heist-themed movies - either lighthearted comedies or film noirs - this one is a farce. Basically, all sorts of mishaps befall the criminals in the process of the planning and execution. Talk about commedia dell'arte!

    This strikes me as one movie that they had a lot of fun filming, and I highly recommend it. Don't listen to anyone who's not interested in watching old movies/black and white movies/foreign movies. If ever there were one of those movies that you have to see, it's this one. It's a mamma mia of the best type!
    10rolee-1

    A tender look at some incompetent incorrigibles

    One character approaches another to get him to take the rap for a crime. But he can't do it, so he suggests someone else. The third character can't do it either. Soon a half dozen people are in search of someone to take the rap. They eventually decide that they need someone without a previous criminal record. But none of them knows anyone without a criminal record.

    I had no idea it was going to be a comedy when I first started watching it. By the end I was laughing out loud. It's a little slow, but many Italian movies are a little slow and caper films usually build slowly. But it is thoroughly enjoyable with some gags that I've never seen anywhere else in film. Cosimo's bank heist was very amusing.

    If you've just recently watched The Bicycle Thief, and are depressed by the bleakness of life shown there, this movie is the perfect antidote. It shows the lighter side of people who are down on their luck.
    10aeolianknight

    The Break-in of the Century

    I had seen "I Soliti Ignoti" a long time ago and I can't say that I remembered it well. But thanks the the Criterion Collection I came across it on DVD and have to say that it's one of the funniest films that I have ever seen.

    A bunch of amateurish bunglers believing themselves to be capable thieves attempt a break-in of hilarious proportions. Gassman shines as Peppe the improvised leader of the pack, as these "Usual Suspects" move from one mishap to another.

    Miss. Cardinale adds some real eye candy, as usual.

    SEE IT!!!!!!!
    8rmax304823

    Very funny caper movie.

    An ensemble movie with multiple minor stories built around the main theme of a big heist on Madonna Street. Half a dozen or so hapless crooks decide to apply "scientific methods" to their plan to sneak through coal chutes and over rooftops into a vacant apartment. They will then use a car jack to break through a wall into the office next door where a fortune is stashed away in a safe. That's about as far as medical discretion will allow me to go in revealing the plot.

    There have been many carefully planned caper movies, before and after this one, like "The Asphalt Jungle." Some have even been turned into comedies, like Woody Allan's "Small Time Crooks." But this was one of the first I'm aware of that turned the caper movie into a ridiculous farce.

    I think I'll give one example of the kind of gags you can expect, to illustrate the style. To get to the vacant apartment the thieves must tiptoe across a skylight in the middle of the night and climb through a window on the other side. They are slipping along the metal framework, cursing each other, when suddenly blinding lights go on in the room underneath them and they must throw themselves flat on the glass to avoid detection. A young couple enter the room below and begin a loud argument about whether she really loves him and whether he's been unfaithful to her. The accusations are shouted back and forth, while 10 feet above them the immobilized gang alternately doze and gesture impatiently at one another as their carefully plotted timetable is all shot to hell.

    Well, alright, one more. One of the gang, a master photographer, Marcello Maistroianni, is assigned to make a movie of the opening of the safe, shooting from across the rooftops through an open window, so the combination will be registered on film. The gang watch the resulting film and moan while pairs of underpants on a clothesline drift across the office window and there are inserts of the photographer's baby crying. At the moment the combination is to be revealed the film stutters and slips off its sprockets.

    I can't help it. Stop me before I describe more. Okay -- last one. Two men have an argument in which a knife is produced. They fling angry insults back and forth, and one of them departs, slamming the wooden door behind him. The remaining man sneers at the door and hurls the knife at it. The knife doesn't stick, it bounces off.

    It's really impossible to recommend this too highly. What a lot of fun.
    stannotuttibene

    Who are these guys anyway?

    As is typical in most Italian comedies, Monicelli has taken a cup of post war Italy realism and stirred in a cup of scenes from the human condition along with a dash of physical comedy which makes 'Big Deal On Madonna Street' a bittersweet cake we all can enjoy.

    Like DeSica and Visconti, Monicelli uses post war Italy as the atmosphere in which these characters find themselves trying to eke out their lives. The recurring Italian film maker's theme of man against a complicated, bureaucratic life is no more evident than here. Throughout the film, the characters impressively quote Italian law by chapter and verse however this does not help them as they all have spent time in jail. The absurdity of knowledge without benefit of improvement is a another theme used. As Toto waxes eloquently regarding the sundry ways to break into a safe (one which the film goer is led to believe he knows nothing about), these men attempt to gain knowledge which they believe will deliver the big score. However even with knowing the apartment is empty, the type of safe the valuables are in and the way to gain access to the safe, their plan is flawed by their inability to execute what seems to them to be a fool proof blue print for success.

    While Monicelli's themes ring as clear as the bell that has Peppe il pantera (Gassman) on the canvas, the characterizations of this band of misfits are classic. A stuttering, would be fighter (Gassman), and an out-of-work photographer who has sold his camera to survive (Mastroianni)lead the crew. The scenes played between Gassman's 'everything's easy' attitude and Mastroianni's inquisitiveness provide the viewer with hilarious cat and mouse verbal trade-offs.

    In the end, 'Big Deal On Madonna Street' strikes a chord for viewers because we have all felt, at times, completely helpless by the absurdity of life and our pursuit for 'the prize' that we perceive will deliver us from our situation. However like this crew at the end of the film, we wake up every morning and realize that it's back to work to grind out another day.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      This movie turned actress Claudia Cardinale into a major star of Italian cinema. During the production, she was 20 years old and secretly pregnant with her first child.
    • Goofs
      The thieves should know enough to wear gloves to hide their fingerprints. However, the main comedic beat of the movie is how the band is composed of incompetent thieves who are way over their heads, except for veteran Dante Cruciani who doesn't take part in the actual robbery.
    • Quotes

      Capannelle: Tell me, do you know a guy called Mario who lives around here?

      Boy playing soccer: There are a thousand Marios around here.

      Capannelle: Yes, but this one is a thief.

      Boy playing soccer: There are still a thousand.

    • Connections
      Edited into Lo schermo a tre punte (1995)

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    FAQ16

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • October 2, 1958 (Italy)
    • Country of origin
      • Italy
    • Language
      • Italian
    • Also known as
      • Obično nepoznati lopovi
    • Filming locations
      • Rome, Lazio, Italy
    • Production companies
      • Cinecittà
      • Lux Film
      • Vides Cinematografica
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 46 minutes
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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