Calafuria Explained

Calafuria
Director:Flavio Calzavara
Producer:Giovanni Addessi
Based On:Calafuria by Delfino Cinelli
Starring:Doris Duranti
Gustav Diessl
Olga Solbelli
Music:Virgilio Doplicher
Cinematography:Gábor Pogány
Editing:Ignazio Ferronetti
Studio:Nazionalcine
Distributor:Nazionalcine
Runtime:81 minutes
Country:Italy

Calafuria is a 1943 Italian drama film directed by Flavio Calzavara and starring Doris Duranti, Gustav Diessl and Olga Solbelli.[1] It is based on the 1929 novel of the same title by Delfino Cinelli.[2] It was shot at the Pisorno Studios in Tirrenia and on location around Florence and Livorno. The film's sets were designed by the art director Italo Cremona.

Synopsis

One night in Florence painter Tommaso rescues a young woman Marta who is being beaten in an alley. He takes her to his uncle's villa in the Calafuria area on the coast near Livorno. Although he discovers about her past as a prostitute he wishes to marry her when she falls pregnant with their child.

His uncle fiercely opposes the marriage and a despairing Marta pretends to have committed suicide off the cliffs of Calafuria. She instead heads to Rome to give birth. Tommaso gives up all thoughts of her and volunteers for military service. He is badly wounded in action in the Second World War and his life is despaired of. However he wakes from surgery to find Marta and his young son there.

Cast

References

  1. Livorno al cinema p.9
  2. Goble p.84

Bibliography