- Source: The Seven Cervi Brothers
The Seven Cervi Brothers (Italian: I sette fratelli Cervi) is a 1968 Italian drama film directed by Gianni Puccini. The film recounts the last days of life during the resistance of the anti-fascist Cervi Brothers. The director Puccini died a few months after the end of production. The film was long blocked by the Italian censorship.
Plot
Aldo Cervi, who distanced himself from Catholicism after meeting the Communist Ferrari in the prison of Reggio Emilia, became a promoter, among his six brothers, of resistance to Fascism. He met the actress of a traveling theater, Lucia Sarzi, who is actually a member of the clandestine anti-fascist movement, Aldo binds himself politically to his ideas. From this meeting, the Cervi brothers get the impulse to participate even more actively in the fight. While his parents host former Allies prisoners in their house, hunted by the nazifascists, Aldo goes to the mountains, with a group of other partisans. Back home momentarily, he is captured with his brothers by the fascists. At the end of December 1943, in the Reggio Emilia shooting range, the execution of the seven brothers and Quarto Camurri takes place.
Cast
Gian Maria Volonté: Aldo Cervi
Lisa Gastoni: Lucia Sarzi
Carla Gravina: Verina
Riccardo Cucciolla: Gelindo Cervi
Don Backy: Agostino Cervi
Renzo Montagnani: Ferdinando Cervi
Serge Reggiani: Ferrari
Oleg Zhakov (credited as Oleg Jakov): Alcide Cervi
Andrea Checchi: Italian Communist Party member
Duilio Del Prete: Dante Castellucci
Gabriella Pallotta: wife of Agostino Cervi
References
External links
The Seven Cervi Brothers at IMDb
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Gianni Puccini
- Lisa Gastoni
- Carla Gravina
- Armando Migliari
- The Seven Cervi Brothers
- Cervi Brothers
- Lisa Gastoni
- Carla Gravina
- Renzo Montagnani
- Gian Maria Volonté
- Don Backy
- List of war films and TV specials set between 1914 and 1945
- Serge Reggiani
- List of World War II films (1950–1989)