Don Camillo in Moscow explained

Don Camillo in Moscow
Director:Luigi Comencini
Producer:Luigi Comencini
Story:Leo Benvenuti
Screenplay:Piero De Bernardi
Starring:Fernandel, Gino Cervi, Gianni Garko, Graziella Granata
Music:Alessandro Cicognini
Cinematography:Armando Nannuzzi
Editing:Nino Baragli
Runtime:109 minutes
Country:Italy, France, West Germany
Language:Italian, French, Russian

Don Camillo in Moscow (Italian: Il compagno Don Camillo, "Comrade Don Camillo"; French: Don Camillo en Russie, "Don Camillo in Russia") is a 1965 Italian comedy film directed by Luigi Comencini. It was the fifth film in the Don Camillo series.

Plot

After receiving a tractor as a gift from the collective farm (kolkhoz) of a Soviet village on the Don River, Communist mayor Peppone plans to twin Brescello with the unnamed village. After some failed attempts to block the mayor's plan, the anti-Communist Don Camillo ultimately tricks Peppone into including him (under a false name and with forged papers) among the Italian Communist representatives passing through the Iron Curtain to attend the twinning ceremonies. Only Peppone and the other comrades from Brescello know the priest's real identity. During the Russian stay, they face a series of situations that will show them both the political contradictions of Soviet Russia and the normal life of its common people.[1]

Cast

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Don Camillo in Moscow (1965) - IMDb. .