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Love and Anger

Original title: Amore e rabbia
  • 1969
  • 1h 42m
IMDb RATING
5.8/10
906
YOUR RATING
Nino Castelnuovo in Love and Anger (1969)
FrenchDrama

Five short stories with contemporary settings. In New York, people are indifferent to derelicts sleeping on sidewalks, to a woman's assault in front of an apartment building, and to a couple... Read allFive short stories with contemporary settings. In New York, people are indifferent to derelicts sleeping on sidewalks, to a woman's assault in front of an apartment building, and to a couple injured in a car crash. A man, stripped of his identity, dies in bed with actors expressi... Read allFive short stories with contemporary settings. In New York, people are indifferent to derelicts sleeping on sidewalks, to a woman's assault in front of an apartment building, and to a couple injured in a car crash. A man, stripped of his identity, dies in bed with actors expressing his agony. A cheerful, innocent young man walking a city street in a time of war pays a... Read all

  • Directors
    • Marco Bellocchio
    • Bernardo Bertolucci
    • Jean-Luc Godard
  • Writers
    • Puccio Pucci
    • Piero Badalassi
    • Jean-Luc Godard
  • Stars
    • Tom Baker
    • Julian Beck
    • Jim Anderson
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.8/10
    906
    YOUR RATING
    • Directors
      • Marco Bellocchio
      • Bernardo Bertolucci
      • Jean-Luc Godard
    • Writers
      • Puccio Pucci
      • Piero Badalassi
      • Jean-Luc Godard
    • Stars
      • Tom Baker
      • Julian Beck
      • Jim Anderson
    • 9User reviews
    • 18Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 nomination total

    Photos10

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    Top Cast18

    Edit
    Tom Baker
      Julian Beck
      Julian Beck
      • Dying Man
      • (segment "Agonia")
      Jim Anderson
        Judith Malina
        Judith Malina
          Giulio Cesare Castello
          • Priest
          • (segment "Agonia")
          Adriano Aprà
          • Clerk
          • (segment "Agonia")
          Fernaldo Di Giammatteo
            Petra Vogt
              Ninetto Davoli
              Ninetto Davoli
              • Riccetto
              • (segment "La sequenza del fiore di carta")
              Rochelle Barbini
              • The little girl
              • (segment "La sequenza del fiore di carta")
              Aldo Puglisi
              Aldo Puglisi
              • Dio
              • (segment "La sequenza del fiore di carta")
              • (voice)
              Christine Guého
              • The Actress
              • (segment "L'amore")
              Nino Castelnuovo
              Nino Castelnuovo
              • The Director
              • (segment "L'amore")
              Marco Bellocchio
              Marco Bellocchio
              • Lecturer
              • (segment "Discutiamo discutiamo")
              Romano Costa
              • Clerk
              • (segment "Agonia")
              • (uncredited)
              Catherine Jourdan
              Catherine Jourdan
              • Spectator #1
              • (segment "L'amore")
              • (uncredited)
              Paolo Pozzesi
              • Spectator #2
              • (segment "L'amore")
              • (uncredited)
              Milena Vukotic
              Milena Vukotic
              • Nurse
              • (segment "Agonia")
              • (uncredited)
              • Directors
                • Marco Bellocchio
                • Bernardo Bertolucci
                • Jean-Luc Godard
              • Writers
                • Puccio Pucci
                • Piero Badalassi
                • Jean-Luc Godard
              • All cast & crew
              • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

              User reviews9

              5.8906
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              Featured reviews

              8RNQ

              History isn't dated

              Comments have complained that this portmanteau film is dated. It would be better to say it registers a crucial political, cultural, and cinematic moment. Marco Bellocchio's short film works best to my thinking. His "Discutiamo, discutiamo" (Let's Talk; We're Talking; or maybe Talk and Talk, if you're inclined to be bored) is a dramatic imitation by students of the university movements of the late 1960s, and includes real differences of opinion (it starts with a lecture on Croce's aesthetics; later there's an attempt to set a Croce paperback on fire), and opinions worth remembering once existed. "La lotta continua" (class struggle), authoritarian schooling in ruling class values, the small percentage of youths of poor families in university--sure, that's so passé.

              And for Bertolucci there's Julian Beck as Artaud; for Pasolini, dialectic around the pleasure of Ninetto Davoli. Even Godard's go-gauche, lordly treating every opinion as a quotation, letting all the wind out of what might be concern--or Amore. (See better Bellocchio's "La Cina è vicina" for a fashionable leftism.) The Rabbia or righteous wrath of the title is mostly also left to viewers back then or now, and maybe it didn't get rooted.
              dbdumonteil

              The more it's avant-garde ,the more it's dated.

              One of these countless pseudo cinema vérité works which throve in the sixties in the wake of Godard and the events of 1968.This one is for highbrows ,die-hards.The rest of us can taketo their heel,or else they will yawn their head off.

              Segment one is "l'indifference" :the beginning is some kind of illustration of Phil Ochs's song "outside of a small circle of friends"(1967);but soon enough is enough and when the reluctant driver appears ,it totally fails to convince.

              Segment two is the most "avant-garde" ,so to speak ,of the lot: a dreadful pot-pourri of OM,Christian religion,group psychology(?).Some equivalent of one of Yoko Ono's pieces of work circa late sixties.

              Segment three is Pasolini's contibution to this bill of fare:his favorite actor ,Ninetto Davoli,is wandering (dancing?)in the streets ,hoding a big paper flower(that's the title of the short).Let He who Hath understanding see the meaning.

              Segment four is Godard's "l'amour".There are two sides:the political one,which focuses on Cuba,and some kind of self-criticism:his dogma ,his refusal to consider the movie as a story:at least here he says that it's not because you 've seen a lot of movies that you know the cinema;and that the seventh art is like maths before Euclide;and he goes not as far as to say that the nouvelle vague was Euclide.Modest,for a change.That does not make his segment interesting for all that.

              Segment five takes place in an Italian university where student exchanges trivia about the Bourgeoisie's stranglehold on the culture.Plus ça change..

              The precedent user complains about the different languages that they used in the different segments:now English,now Italian ,now French,even German;it's all in the cinema vérité game!

              If you want to see a beautiful contemporary political movie that will not give you a headache ,take Luigi Comencini's "lo scopone scientifico" instead.
              snucker

              interesting and spotty set of films...for art cinema fans only.

              spotty collection of shorts by 5 directors. some are intriguing, others are just plain tedious. let's go through them in order.

              the first short is a merging of two stories about women being violated. they're two different narratives that are combined to tell the story of a woman in danger and then being saved. the first one starts off with a man chasing a woman through the city with lots of shots of indifferent people in their appartments doing their everyday thing. there are several shots of appartment buildings that gives a sense that this women is utterly helpless, she is lost in a world of concrete buildings that don't give any heed to her cries for help. cut to a different story about a guy trying to rescue a woman from a car accident, which seems like it was from another american tv show.

              the second one is one by bertolocchi (spelling?) and is the most tedious of them all. weird artsy dancing, montage poses and strange noises emitting from these dancers. at first you think this place is a weird therapy session cuz the dancers look like they were pulled off hte street and they sit in a circle chanting something. then they do these weird moves with lots of moaning and groaning and incoherent mutterings. i think the segment of this session is called agony, so i guess these people are doing artsy interpretations of agony. then an old man comes a long, who's dying and all these people start dancing around him. this one runs on for about 20 minutes...20 minutes i'll never get back.

              the third one is one about a man running through the streets. various shots of streets with various political images superimposed on top. i don't know what a lot of these images are, but i deduct they're about the vietnam war and other various political wars around the world. then occasionally, this man has a huge flower in his hands and he starts to dance in the streets to this happy dated italien pop music. it's these scenes that put a smile on my face cuz it's just so rediculous and fun to watch.

              the 4th short film is by Jean luc godard. i've seen many godard films and this is a very typical godard film. you've got a couple...the girl is jewish and the guy is arabic. he kisses her, carass her naked body and talks in a way only godard characters do...a mixture of musings on love and politics. intercut with another couple who talk about the film that they're in. saying things like...."what's that over there?" "why, i think it's the opening of a film..." "i think they're gonna break up..." "if they break up, the film will be over..." etc. i have a general understanding of what godard's references and what he is talking about, so it doesn't feel as tedious to me as it would to others. but still......those who don't have a bit of academic background in film...you'd most likely like to keep away from this.

              the last film is one about a debate going on in a university as a group of marxist students interupt a class to debate about marxist ideology and general anarchy against the university system. these students want a marxist revolution and a overthrow of the general university system. the dean, proffessor and the students in the class call for reform from inside the system. and there goes on a debate between change within the system vs. overthrowing the system. this discussion actually captivated me, despite the fact that this is pretty dated politics. this film being released in 1969, this is obviously a depiction of the kinds of political debates between students and institutions around 1968. where university students basically rioted and demostrated for a fairer university system and rejected old institutions while embracing marxism. for those who have an interest in the political demostrations of 1968 in europe, this film documents this point in time pretty well. it's clear that the film maker is on the side of the marxist students with the final shot of the film.

              so what can you say over all about this collection of short films? overall, it's mostly a political film, especially with the last three stories and the credits rolling with the sound of dull thuds of foam bats beating people symbolizing police brutality. i think this film has a very specific film audience...either young students in the late 1960s (this audience obviously no longer exists), people who have an interest in any of the directors here or people who are interested in the history of 1968 and want to see an artistic representation of it. to everyone else, you've been warned. it's a collection of artsy political films you'd probably wouldn't want to watch.
              5jotix100

              I love you madly

              This film is an attempt by five different directors to present their take on the theme of "Love and Anger". Five well regarded film personalities were gathered to offer their views in a disjointed attempt to make sense of theme. Alas, what comes out on the screen is, at best, a boring display by some of these men, who have done much better work, to try to interest us with their mostly leftist views without convincing us. As DB Dumontiel commented in this pages, the more modern the five creators wanted to be, the more dated their contributions become.

              Of the five segments shown, Carlo Lizzani's "L'indifferenza" is the only one that makes any sense. Filmed totally in New York, without an Italian dialog, it clearly illustrates one of the big problems in our society, and a phenomenon in our bigger cities where people totally ignore situations that claim for human intervention, as in the case of the selfish driver in this piece who tells the cops he doesn't want to get involved, and succeeds in doing so.

              The Bertolucci vignette is a heavy critique on religion, as he directs the New York based theater group headed by Julian Beck and Judith Malina and members of their eclectic group performing a ritual as a church higher up is dying. The Passolini contribution shows a young actor, Ninetto Davoli, cavorting on Rome's Via Nazionale while over imposed pictures of legendary leftist icons like Che Guevara appear over the action in the film. The Godard piece, is pretentious, at best, and the last piece, by Marco Bellocchio, shows a university class as they discuss nothing.

              This film might have appeared as revolutionary when it was released, but viewing it today, the only thing it elicits from the viewer is boredom and surprise in realizing that even great directors like the ones participating in this film can lay an egg without really trying.
              1rbbdagge

              Just terrible, absolutely terrible

              How can a film with sets by Bertolucci, JLG and Pasolini, amongst others, be so incredibly bad? I have spent a lifetime watching thousands of films from across the globe, and this junk easily fits into the top 3 Worst Films of All Time category. Indifference has nothing new to add after the first 15 seconds; Bertolucci's Agonia is just embarrassing to watch; Pasolini's contribution is pointless; JLG's Amore is beyond pretentious (to be expected, perhaps) and, as I actually tried to follow the student debate on Marxism, capitalism and Vietnam etc., I soon realised that they were saying nothing whatsoever. Perhaps - just perhaps - the directors had basic ideas about each set, but the execution is appalling. Of the directors, Bertolucci easily wins the WTF Award and should have been sent to prison in El Salvador as a prize.

              Who knows - perhaps this film is the reason Pasolini was shot?

              I am shocked that a serious film company would let this content be released - surely someone actually looked at it before it was distributed? But if they did, how could they not demand a total re-make? I really had to struggle to finish this film - the only thing that kept me sitting there was the hope that the next segment would be better. Which clearly was not the case.

              I want my money back.

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              Related interests

              Jean-Pierre Léaud in The 400 Blows (1959)
              French
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              Drama

              Storyline

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              Did you know

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              • Trivia
                A segment directed by Valerio Zurlini was edited out of the film and developed into Black Jesus (1968).
              • Connections
                Referenced in In the Shade of the Conformist (2011)

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              FAQ13

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              Details

              Edit
              • Release date
                • May 29, 1969 (Italy)
              • Countries of origin
                • Italy
                • France
              • Languages
                • French
                • Italian
                • English
                • German
              • Also known as
                • Liebe und Zorn
              • Production companies
                • Castoro
                • Italnoleggio Cinematografico
                • Anouchka Films
              • See more company credits at IMDbPro

              Tech specs

              Edit
              • Runtime
                • 1h 42m(102 min)
              • Color
                • Color
              • Aspect ratio
                • 2.35 : 1

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