Showing posts with label Silvana Mangano. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Silvana Mangano. Show all posts

17 November 2022

Riso amaro/Bitter Rice (1949)

The Italian melodrama Riso amaro/Bitter Rice (1949) was a product of the Neo-Realism movement of the 1940s. The film was written and directed by Giuseppe De Santis and produced by Dino De Laurentiis for Lux Film. Bitter Rice was a commercial success in both Europe and America, thanks to the ‘shockingly’ sexy performance of Silvana Mangano, dressed in hotpants. The film also starred Raf Vallone, American actress Doris Dowling and a young Vittorio Gassman. The four become involved in a complex plot involving robbery, love, and murder.

Silvana Mangano in Riso amaro
Dutch postcard by Filmverhuurkantoor Centrafilm, Dordrecht. Photo: Lux Film Rome. Silvana Mangano in Riso amaro/Bitter Rice (Giuseppe de Santis, 1949).

Vittorio Gassman and Silvano Mangano in Riso Amaro (1949)
Dutch postcard by Centrafilm, Dordrecht. Photo: Vittorio Gassman and Silvana Mangano in Riso amaro/Bitter Rice (Giuseppe de Santis, 1949). Collection: Geoffrey Donaldson Institute.

Silvana Mangano in Riso Amaro (1949)
Dutch postcard by Centrafilm, Dordrecht. Photo: Silvana Mangano in Riso amaro/Bitter Rice (Giuseppe de Santis, 1949). Collection: Geoffrey Donaldson Institute.

Doris Dowling and Raf Vallone in Riso Amaro (1949)
Dutch postcard by Centrafilm, Dordrecht. Photo: Doris Dowling and Raf Vallone in Riso amaro/Bitter Rice (Giuseppe de Santis, 1949). Collection: Geoffrey Donaldson Institute.

Doris Dowling and Raf Vallone in Riso amaro (Bitter Rice)
Dutch postcard by Centrafilm, Dordrecht. Photo: Lux. Doris Dowling and Raf Vallone in Riso amaro/Bitter Rice (Giuseppe de Santis, 1949).

Is Riso amaro a Neo-Realist film?


At the time, Neo-Realism was about only 7 years old. Films like Roma Citta Aperta by Roberto Rossellini had taken the world by storm and overwhelmed international audiences and festival juries. But the Neo-Realist films quickly changed in character and Riso amaro/Bitter Rice lead to a dispute among film critics about the sexualisation of the lead character and the melodramatic presence of death and suicide in the film.

At IMDb, Debblyst explains: “Neo-Realist principles (i.e. no stars, mix of professional and non-professional actors, location-only shooting, rejection of ‘beauty’/classicism/romanticism, stressing on ‘ordinary’ people and ‘real-life’ themes) were being stretched: stars were joining in (including international ones, like Ingrid Bergman, or starlets like American Doris Dowling here), productions got bigger and more expensive, crews more professional, equipment more sophisticated, ‘ordinary’ people were being replaced by Olympic beauties (or do ordinary people EVER look like Silvana Mangano or Vittorio Gassman?), ‘ordinary’ characters were getting very complex, and real life was being traded by elaborate, far from realistic drama.”

Riso amaro begins at the start of the rice-planting season in northern Italy. Trying to escape the law, two small-time criminals, Francesca (Doris Dowling) and Walter (Vittorio Gassman), hide amongst the crowds of female workers heading to the rice fields of the Po Valley.

While attempting to board the train for the fields, the pair runs into Silvana (Silvana Mangano), a voluptuous peasant rice worker. Francesca boards the train with her, in an effort to avoid the police. Silvana introduces her to the planter's way of life. Francesca does not have a work permit, and struggles with the other ‘illegals’ to find a place in the rice fields. After initial resistance from documented workers and bosses, the scabs are allowed a place in the fields.

In the fields, Silvana and Francesca meet a soon-to-be-discharged soldier, Marco (Raf Vallone), who unsuccessfully tries to attract Silvana's interest. Toward the end of the working season, Walter arrives at the fields, intending to steal a large quantity of rice. Excited by his criminal lifestyle, Silvana becomes attracted to Walter. She causes a diversion to help him carry out the heist, but Francesca and Marco manage to stop Walter and his accomplices.

Francesca and Silvana face each other, armed with pistols; Francesca confronts Silvana and explains that she has been manipulated by Walter. In response, Silvana turns her gun toward Walter and murders him. Soon afterwards, her guilt leads her to commit suicide. As the other rice workers depart, they pay tribute to her by sprinkling rice upon her body.

Silvana Mangano
German collectors card. Photo: Lux / Schorchtfilm. Silvana Mangano in Riso amaro/Bitter Rice (Giuseppe de Santis, 1949).

Silvana Mangano in Riso amaro
Belgian postcard by Nieuwe Merksemsche Chocolaterie, Merksem. Photo: Lux Film Rome. Silvana Mangano in Riso amaro/Bitter Rice (Giuseppe de Santis, 1949).

Silvana Mangano
German postcard by Netter's Star Verlag, Berlin. Photo: Lux Film Rome. Silvana Mangano in Riso amaro/Bitter Rice (Giuseppe de Santis, 1949).

Silvana Mangano in Riso Amaro (1949))
Spanish postcard by Archivo Bermejo, 1953. Photo: Lux Films / Rey Soria. Silvana Mangano in Riso amaro/Bitter Rice (Giuseppe de Santis, 1949).

Silvana Mangano in Riso Amaro (1949)
Spanish postcard, 1953. Photo: Lux Films / Rey Soria. Silvana Mangano in Riso amaro/Bitter Rice (Giuseppe de Santis, 1949).

Is Riso amaro merely a shocker?


The Italian title of the film, Riso amaro, is based on a pun. The Italian word ‘riso’ can mean either ‘rice’ or ‘laughter’, 'riso amaro' can be taken to mean either ‘bitter laughter’ or ‘bitter rice’.

Lucia Bosé was the director's first choice for the role of Silvana. It wasn't until he met former Miss Rome Silvana Mangano by chance that he decided to cast her in the film. In the film, Silvana chews gum and dances the boogie-woogie in an American way in the film. With her character’s downfall director Giuseppe De Santis seems to have intended to show his condemnation of the products of American capitalism.

Ironically it was Silvana who made the film one of the biggest box office hits of Neo-Realism cinema. To the standards of 1949, Mangano's performance in the film was shocking. Her hotpants and voluptuous figure earned Riso amaro a lot of publicity, in particular in strongly Roman Catholic Italy. But Riso amaro has more qualities than just being a shocker.

W. Visser at IMDb: “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 Giuseppe 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.”

The film was selected as one of 100 Italian films to be saved, a collection of films that "changed the collective memory of the country between 1942 and 1978". The collection was established by the Venice Film Festival in collaboration with Cinecittà and curated by Fabio Ferzetti, with input from Gianni Amelio and other Italian film critics. Many of the films selected represent the ‘Golden Age’ of Italian cinema, which was manifested in the Neorealism movement.

Silvana Mangano in Riso amaro (1949)
Belgian postcard by Nieuwe Merksemsche Chocolaterie, Merksem. Photo: Lux Film, Rome. Silvana Mangano in Riso Amaro/Bitter Rice (Giuseppe de Santis, 1949).

Doris Dowling in Riso Amaro (1949)
Belgian postcard by Nieuwe Merksemsche Chocolaterie S.P.R.L., Merksem (Anvers). Photo: Lux Film, Rome. Doris Dowling in Riso amaro/Bitter Rice (Giuseppe de Santis, 1949).

Doris Dowling and Raf Vallone in Riso Amaro (1949)
Belgian postcard by Nieuwe Merksemsche Chocolaterie S.P.R.L., Merksem (Anvers). Photo: Doris Dowling and Raf Vallone in Riso amaro/Bitter Rice (Giuseppe de Santis, 1949).

Silvana Mangano in Riso Amaro (1949))
Italian postcard by Ed. B. B. - V. Photo: publicity still for Riso Amaro/Bitter Rice (Giuseppe De Santis, 1949). Caption: Il canto allevia il lavoro (Singing alleviates work).

Silvana Mangano in Riso Amaro (1949)
Italian postcard by Ed. B. B. - V., no. 72087. Photos: publicity stills for Riso Amaro/Bitter Rice (Giuseppe De Santis, 1949). Caption: Saluti dalla Risaia (greetings from the paddy fields).

Silvana Mangano in Riso Amaro (1949)
British card by International Exchange, Glasgow. Silvana Mangano in Riso Amaro/Bitter Rice (Giuseppe De Santis, 1949).

Sources: W. Visser (IMDb), Debbylyst (IMDb), Wikipedia and IMDb.

04 July 2016

Silvana Mangano

Beautiful Italian film star Silvana Mangano (1930-1989) will forever be remembered as the sexy rice picker in Riso amaro/Bitter Rice (1949), and as Tadzio's elegant mother in Morte a Venezia/Death in Venice (1971). She worked four times with maestro Luchino Visconti, and three times with another major director, Pier Paolo Pasolini.

Silvana Mangano in Riso Amaro (1949)
Dutch postcard by Centrafilm, Dordrecht. Silvana Mangano in Riso amaro/Bitter Rice (Giuseppe de Santis, 1949). Collection: Geoffrey Donaldson Instituut.

Silvana Mangano in Riso amaro
Dutch postcard by Filmverhuurkantoor Centrafilm, Dordrecht. Silvana Mangano in Riso amaro/Bitter Rice (Giuseppe de Santis, 1949).

Silvana Mangano
Dutch postcard by DRC, no. F 196. Photo: Lux Film.

Silvana Mangano in Anna (1951)
West-German postcard by Kunst und Bild, Berlin, no. A 737. Photo: Ponti De Laurentiis / Schorchtfilm. Silvana Mangano in Anna (Alberto Lattuada, 1951).

Silvana Mangano in Anna (1951)
West-German postcard by Kolibri-Verlag, no. 651. Photo: Lux-Schorchtfilm. Silvana Mangano in Anna (Alberto Lattuada, 1951).

Silvana Mangano
Italian postcard by Bromostampa, Milano (Milan), no. 37. Silvana Mangano in Ulisse/Ulysses (Mario Camerini, 1954), produced by Silvana's husband, Dino De Laurentiis.

Shocking Hotpants


Silvana Mangano was born in Rome in 1930 to an Italian father, a Sicilian train conductor, and an English mother. Her brother was sound technician Roy Mangano and her sisters are one-time actresses Patrizia Mangano and Natascia Mangano. Silvana grew up in poverty caused by the Second World War.

Trained for seven years as a dancer by Zhia Ruskaya, she was supporting herself as a model. At 16, she won the Miss Rome beauty contest in 1946 and got a small role in the opera adaptation L'Elisir d'amore/Elixir of Love (Mario Costa, 1948) with Tito Gobbi. She was also nominated for the Miss Italia contest in 1947, which Lucia Bosé won.

Mangano's earliest connection with filmmaking occurred through her romantic relationship with actor Marcello Mastroianni. Mangano started to play small roles in films like Il delitto di Giovanni Episcopo/Flesh Will Surrender (Alberto Lattuada, 1947), Gli uomini sono nemici/Crossroads of Passion (1948, Ettore Giannini) with French diva Viviane Romance, and Black Magic (Gregory Ratoff, 1949) starring Orson Welles.

She had her breakthrough with the neo-realistic crime story Riso amaro/Bitter Rice (Giuseppe De Santis, 1949), situated in the rice fields along the Po river in Northern Italy. Mangano played the voluptuous rice picker Silvana, who falls for the criminal Walter (Vittorio Gassman) and his presumed wealth.

The thousands of female rice workers, up to their ankles in the water, breaking their backs in the burning sun to earn a few bucks, make an impressive decor. To the standards of 1949s Roman Catholic Italy Mangano's performance in hotpants was shocking. This earned Riso Amaro a lot of publicity and earned Mangano a contract with the Lux company.

Silvana Mangano in Riso Amaro (1949)
Spanish postcard, 1953. Photo: Lux Films / Rey Soria. Silvana Mangano in Riso Amaro/Bitter Rice (Giuseppe De Santis, 1949).

Silvana Mangano in Riso amaro
Belgian card offered by Nieuwe Merksemsche Chocolaterie SPRL, Merksem (Antwerp). Photo: Lux- Film, Roma. Silvana Mangano as the rice picker Silvana in Riso amaro/ Bitter Rice (Giuseppe De Santis, 1949), released in Flanders and the Netherlands as Bittere Rijst.

Silvana Mangano
Belgian postcard by Nieuwe Merksemsche Chocolaterie, Merksem. Photo: Lux Film Rome. Silvana Mangano in Riso Amaro/Bitter Rice (1949).

Silvana Mangano in Riso Amaro (1949)
Belgian collectors card by Fotoprim, Brussels, for De Beukelaer, Antwerp, no A 15. Photo: Lux Film. Silvana Mangano in Riso Amaro/Bitter Rice (Giuseppe De Santis, 1949).

Silvana Mangano in Anna (1952)
Italian postcard by Rotalfoto, Milano, no. 130. Photo: Ponti - De Laurentiis. Silvana Mangano in Anna (Alberto Lattuada, 1951).

Silvana Mangano
Italian postcard by Bromostampa, Milano, no. 354.

Pig-fancying Enchantress


Though Silvana Mangano never scaled the heights of her competitors Sophia Loren and Gina Lollobrigida, she was a popular European film star in the 1950s and 1960s.

Lux produced her subsequent films such as Anna (Alberto Lattuada, 1951) with Raf Vallone, and Ulisse/Ulysses (Mario Camerini, 1954), an adaptation of Homer's second epic featuring Kirk Douglas. Mangano played both Ulysses' faithful wife Penelope and the pig-fancying enchantress Circe.

In 1949, she had married producer Dino De Laurentiis who controlled her career and launched her as the leading lady of international co-productions such as Mambo (Robert Rossen, 1954) with Michael Rennie, This Angry Age/Le barrage sur le Pacifique (René Clément, 1958) with Anthony Perkins, and 5 Branded Woman/Jovanka e le altre (Martin Ritt, 1960) with Jeanne Moreau.

Silvana Mangano
Italian postcard by Bromofoto, Milano, no. 275.

Silvana Mangano in Anna (1951)
Dutch postcard by Takken / 't Sticht, no. 822. Photo: Standaardfilm / Lux. Silvana Mangano in Anna (Alberto Lattuada, 1951).

Silvana Mangano
Dutch postcard, no. 34. Photo: Standard-Films. Silvana Mangano as Circe/Penelope in Ulisse/Ulysses (1954).

Silvana Mangano
Italian postcard by Rotalfoto, Milano (Milan), no. 230.

Silvana Mangano
Dutch postcard, no. 857. Photo: Luxardo.

Silvana Mangano
Italian postcard by Bromofoto, Milano. Photo: Lux Film. Mangano holds up a kitschy copy of a man's portrait (ca. 1635) by Dutch painter Rembrandt van Rijn, now at the Mauritshuis at the Hague.

Visconti and Pasolini


In 1967, Silvana Mangano starred in the anthology film Le streghe/The Witches (1967). The five episodes were directed by Mauro Bolognini, Vittorio De Sica, Pier Paolo Pasolini, Franco Rossi and Luchino Visconti.

Visconti shot the quite cynical and biographical episode La strega bruciata viva/The Witch Burned Alive, and he later cast her again as Tadzio's (Björn Andrésen) aristocratic mother in Morte a Venezia/Death in Venice (Luchino Visconti, 1971), modeled on Visconti's own mother.

She also played the cunning Cosima von Bülow in Ludwig (Luchino Visconti, 1972), and the hysterical marchesa Brumonti in Gruppo di famiglia in un interno/Conversation Piece (Luchino Visconti, 1974) opposite Burt Lancaster.

Mangano also performed in three films by Pasolini: as Jocaste in Edipo re/Oedipus Rex (Pier Paolo Pasolini, 1967), an updated version of the Greek tragedy by Sophocles; as Lucia, the mother in Teorema/Theorem (Pier Paolo Pasolini, 1968) with Terence Stamp, and as the Holy Virgin - a small, uncredited role - in Il Decameron/The Decameron (Pier Paolo Pasolini, 1971).

Silvana Mangano
French postcard by Editions P.I., no. 159.

Silvana Mangano
French postcard by Editions P.I., Paris, offered by Les Carbones Korès, no. 618.

Silvana Mangano
French postcard by Editions P.I., Paris, no. 743.

Silvana Mangano in Mambo (1954)
Italian postcard by B.F.F. Edit., no. 3044. Photo: Ponti-De Laurentiis / Paramount. Silvana Mangano in Mambo (Robert Rossen, 1954).

Silvana Mangano in This Angry Age (1957)
Italian postcard by Turismofoto, no. 8. Silvana Mangano in This Angry Age (René Clément, 1957).

Silvana Mangano in La tempesta (1958)
West-German postcard. Photo: G.B. Poletto / Ufa. Silvana Mangano in La tempesta/Tempest (Alberto Lattuada, 1958).

Tapestries


In the 1980s, Silvana Mangano's life took a bad turn. In 1981 her son, Federico De Laurentiis was killed in an Alaskan air crash.

In 1983 she separated from Dino De Laurentiis, though they did not divorce. She dedicated her time to making tapestries, alternating her domicile between Madrid and Paris.

She did not perform in films anymore, except for Dune (David Lynch, 1984) and Oci ciornie/Dark Eyes (Nikita Mikhalkov, 1987), in which she played Romano's (Marcello Mastroianni) wife. Mangano began divorce proceedings in 1988.

Silvana Mangano, who had always been a strong smoker, died of lung cancer in 1989, in a hospital in Madrid. She was only 59. Silvana Mangano had four children with Dino De Laurentiis: Veronica, Raffaella, Francesca, and the deceased Federico.

Veronica's daughter Giada De Laurentiis is the host of Everyday Italian and Giada at Home on the Food Network. Raffaella coproduced with her father on Mangano's penultimate film, Dune (1984). Following her death, she was interred at Pawling Cemetery in Pawling, Dutchess County, New York.

Silvana Mangano)
Italian postcard by Bromostampa, Milano in the series 'Hobby'.

Silvana Mangano
Italian postcard by Ferrania. Photo: Dino De Laurentiis Cinematografica.

Silvana Mangano
Italian postcard by Rotalfoto, Milano, no. 101. Photo: Ponti-De Laurentiis.

Silvana Mangano
Italian postcard by Rotalfoto, Milano, no. 840. Might perhaps have been for the episode La strega bruciata viva by Luchino Visconti in the episode film Le streghe (1967).

Silvana Mangano and Björn Andresen in Morte a Venezia (1971)
French publicity leaflet. Silvana Mangano and Björn Andresen in Death in Venice/Morte a Venezia/Mort à Venise (Luchino Visconti, 1971), starring Dirk Bogarde. Dress designed by Piero Tosi.


Scene from Riso amaro/Bitter Rice (1949). Source: boct2007 (YouTube).


Scene from Anna (1951). Although it was sung by Flo Sandon, Silvana Mangano was credited on the record label of 'El Negro Zumbón'.  Source: jack11anbar (YouTube).

Sources: Hal Erickson (AllMovie), Wikipedia, and IMDb.

This post was last updated on 26 June 2021.