Malavita (1951 film) explained

Malavita
Director:Rate Furlan
Producer:Anna D'Agostino
Starring:Jacqueline Pierreux
Aldo Nicodemi
Franco Silva
Music:Rate Furlan
Cinematography:Giuseppe Caracciolo
Editing:Jolanda Benvenuti
Studio:Melody Film
Distributor:Variety Distribution
Runtime:95 minutes
Country:Italy
Language:Italian

Malavita is a 1951 Italian crime melodrama film directed by Rate Furlan and starring Jacqueline Pierreux, Aldo Nicodemi and Franco Silva. It was shot at the Sud Film Studios in Naples.[1]

Synopsis

In Naples a young man from a good family is drawn into a crime gang by the alluring Lidia. During a raid on a foreign cargo ship in the city's port his police officer brother is killed and the blame laid on him by Lidia. Joining the gang, despite himself he is forced to plunder a foreign ship that arrived in the port of Naples with a rich cargo, Mario, Renato's brother and finance sergeant, is on duty at the port, Lidia is used by the gang as a decoy to distract Mario, on the evening of the blow while the bandits are preparing to plunder the ship, Renato unaware surprises Mario and Lidia together in intimate attitudes, the two brothers get into a fight, Renato shoots on his brother without hitting him, but also shoots Lidia hitting Mario mortally.

Lidia accuses Renato of killing his brother out of jealousy. Renato, however, feeling responsible for the death of his brother, constitutes himself and will be sentenced to life imprisonment. After some time Lidia, her lover and the rest of the gang are involved in a shooting with the police forces, on the verge of death taken by remorse, Lidia confesses that she is responsible for the murder of the sergeant, definitively exonerating Renato.

Cast

Bibliography

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Notes and References

  1. Chiti & Poppi p.218