- Source: Mussolini and I
Mussolini and I (alternately titled Mussolini: The Decline and Fall of Il Duce) is a 1985 made-for-television docudrama film directed by Alberto Negrin. It chronicles the strained relationship between Italy's fascist dictator Benito Mussolini and his son-in-law and foreign minister, Count Galeazzo Ciano, based on Ciano's diaries. Made in English as an Italian-French-German-Swiss-Spanish-US co-production, with Bob Hoskins, Anthony Hopkins and Susan Sarandon in the leading roles, it first aired on Rai Uno on 15 April 1985 in a 130-minute version. On 8 September 1985, it premiered in the USA on HBO in an extended four-hour version.
All filming was done in Italy, including northern Italy's Gargnano, Merano, Bolzano, Verona, and in central Italy, Rome and L'Aquila. Filming was also done at the well known Villa Torlonia and Palazzo Venezia. It was released on a 2 disc DVD in August 2003. It is divided into four segments for a total of 240 minutes and was released by Koch Entertainment.
Plot
The film starts just before World War II and shows the political and personal side of Benito Mussolini's fall from power and his death and the end of the war. It delves into his relationship with his son in-law, daughter, wife, mistress, and Hitler.
Production
Locations used included Mussolini's former residences Villa Torlonia and Villa Feltrinelli. The film reunited Hoskins and Hopkins after they had played Othello and Iago for the BBC Television Shakespeare series a few years earlier. Its Italian shoot overlapped with the filming (in Yugoslavia) of Mussolini: The Untold Story starring George C. Scott: when asked about the rival series by a journalist, Scott called Hopkins "the best English-speaking actor today". Hopkins's fee was reported in the press as $450,000.
Reception
John J. O'Connor, reviewing for The New York Times, wrote that the script "keeps reducing historical issues to the dimensions of a kitchen drama. These particular kitchens just happen to be in magnificent Italian palazzos". He described Hoskins as "all done up in elaborate makeup with no place to go except to look terribly unhappy but determined to stick it out to the end", but praised the other leading performances and the production values.
Cast
Bob Hoskins as Benito Mussolini, dictator of Fascist Italy
Susan Sarandon as Edda Ciano, Mussolini's daughter
Anthony Hopkins as Galeazzo Ciano, 2nd Count of Cortellazzo and Buccari, Mussolini's son-in-law
Annie Girardot as Rachele Mussolini, Mussolini's wife
Barbara De Rossi as Claretta Petacci, Mussolini's mistress
Massimo Dapporto as Vittorio Mussolini, Mussolini's son
Vittorio Mezzogiorno as Alessandro Pavolini, friend of Galeazzo's and leader of the Republican Fascist Party
Kurt Raab as Adolf Hitler, dictator of Nazi Germany
Marne Maitland as King Victor Emmanuel III
Hans-Dieter Asner as Joachim von Ribbentrop, Foreign Minister of the Third Reich
Carlheinz Heitmann as Karl Wolff, Military Governor and Supreme SS and Police Leader of Northern Italy
Harald Dietl as Otto Skorzeny, led Operation Oak to rescue Mussolini from Campo Imperatore
Dietlinde Turban as Frau Beetz, born as Hildegard Burkhardt: she was a German intelligence agent who visited Galeazzo in prison and tried to help him
Ted Rusoff as Francesco Saverio Nitti
David-George Brown as Giuseppe Castellano
Gianni Pulone as Enzo Galbiati
Stefano De Sando as Dino Grandi
Luciano Baglioni as Carlo Scorza
Franco Meroni as Giuseppe Bottai
Leslie Thomas as Emilio De Bono
Piero Palermini as Roberto Farinacci
Robert Sommer as Giacomo Suardo
Franco Mazzieri as Giovanni Marinelli
Ulrich Engst as Major Otto-Harald Mors
Franco Fabrizi as Quinto Navarra
References
External links
Mussolini and I at IMDb
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Benito Mussolini
- The Pope and Mussolini
- Galeazzo Ciano
- Fasisme
- Perang Dunia I
- Blok Poros
- Kerajaan Italia (1861–1946)
- Nicola Badalucco
- Partai Fasis Nasional
- Duce
- Mussolini and I
- Alessandra Mussolini
- Edda Mussolini
- Benito Mussolini
- Death of Benito Mussolini
- Amore (Alessandra Mussolini album)
- Bruno Mussolini
- Anna Maria Mussolini
- Galeazzo Ciano
- Victor Emmanuel III