Menu
Apparel
Baby
Beauty
Books
Classical Music
DVD
Digital Music
Electronics
Gourmet Food
Personal Health Care
Jewelry
Kitchen & Housewares
Magazines
Miscellaneous
Music
Musical Instruments
Music Tracks
Office Products
Outdoor Living
PC Hardware
Photo
Restaurants
Software
Sporting Goods
Tools & Hardware
Toys
VHS
Video (DVD & VHS)
VideoGames
Wireless
Wireless Accessories
Information
Payment Methods
Shipping
Safe Shopping
Contact Us

 

Tarfumes.com - Stromboli

Stromboli

Manufacturer: Connoisseur Video
Starring: Ingrid Bergman, Mario Vitale, Renzo Cesana, Mario Sponzo, Gaetano Famularo
Directed By: Roberto Rossellini
Average Customer Rating: Average rating of 4.0/5Average rating of 4.0/5Average rating of 4.0/5Average rating of 4.0/5Average rating of 4.0/5



Audience Rating: NR (Not Rated)
Binding: VHS Tape
EAN: 9786303593500
Format: Black & White
ISBN: 630359350X
Label: Connoisseur Video
Manufacturer: Connoisseur Video
Number Of Items: 1
Publisher: Connoisseur Video
Release Date: 1991-11-26
Running Time: 81
Studio: Connoisseur Video
Theatrical Release Date: 1950-02-15

Related Items

Editorial Reviews:



Spotlight customer reviews:

Customer Rating: Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5
Summary: A great film with a spiritual message for pharisees and agnostics
Comment:
This is, since I saw it last night, one of my favorite 10 films ever. It has such an emotional, passionate spiritual charge that seems to be about to erupt any time inside you. The story gets you from the start; you will grow to understand all the characters here. If you énd up hating the townfolk (the pharisees of the story) you will surely have missed the whole point, for this is a story of love and sacrifice, exactly what The Lord Jesus was all about. For, also, Ingrid Bergman grows to accept God's will by aknowledging that she can't fight "the world" by herself, thus her heartwrenching cry out to 'Dio' at the end of the film. Ms. Bergman is in the best of her career here, the role just suits her person perfectly. Pay attention to her facial expressions while contemplating how the fishermen catch the tune, how really vulnerable she looks. How well mr. Rossellini has captured her evolution from carnal superiority and selfishness to spiritual realization of herself. Her climb up the volcano extenuates the last of her physical strenght making her rely only of whatever seems to hang on those beautiful stars in the night sky. She gives herself up to God, that God she resisted to believe or rely on. But the existence of that God will afect you only if you make the great leap of faith first. And she seems to make it. A glorious moment in the history of film. A work of art. Her clim up the volcano is one of the most emotionally charged moments in the history of film.

I hope someday Criterion gives the right treatment to this gorgeous movie (even only for the wonderful Sicilian settings is worth watching -it reminds me of Antonioni's La'ventura-). I wathced a cheap Region 2 edition which is a sacrilege to the quality of this film.


Customer Rating: Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5
Summary: One of Bergman's best films
Comment: This film has been under-rated over the years! Forget the fact that Ingrid Bergman and director Roberto Rossellini had just fallen in love and that the scandal [the love affair and then their beautiful baby, Robertino]caused her to be exiled from the USA. The film would have been rated a masterpiece today, but was about twenty years ahead of its time.It's not meant to be a story, but an account of how one woman comes to terms with the life she has chosen, as a result of marrying an Italian from a refugee camp. Karin marries Antonio because she can't get a visa to Argentina. Then she discovers what his home is like: a rugged, black, volcanic island far to the north of Sicily. Their house is in a bad state of repair, to put it mildly. At first she rails against this situation, declaring proudly that she is "from a different class". Bergman acts out her part here brilliantly and almost makes us hate her - briefly. She then desperately tries to be accepted and to make the house a home, but is thwarted by the islanders. The women say she is "not modest" and, when she asks the local loose woman to help her sew a skirt, she's really in trouble. Her husband beats her. She then tries another tack: she attempts to use seductive tactics on the local priest and then on the lighthouse keeper. Again, her acting is brilliant and throughout it all she looks stunningly beautiful. One can only conclude that this was because she was actually in love with the man who was filming her- Roberto Rossellini.
Determined to escape, she climbs the volcano, but realises her attempt to get to Ginostra, on the other side, is hopeless. That final scene is so powerful, I cannot describe it. Everyone should see this film. Who needs modern cinema, when you can have this?
Ingrid Bergman stated that she was going to retire from acting after making this one. Thank God she did not! She would have been lost without her work and we would have been so much the poorer without her films.

Mary [one of Ingrid's greatest fans - as if that were not obvious!]


Customer Rating: Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5
Summary: Doesn't quite erupt
Comment: The then-scandalous affair between the star and director of "Stromboli" was what set it apart from their other films. Love and the volcano erupted -- but the box office didn't. "Stromboli" clearly aspires to be a mystical, enriching film, but the plodding dialogue and meandering pace bog it down.

Karin (Ingrid Bergman) is a Czech refugee living in a camp, desperate to escape but unable to. She finds her doorway out when she meets the Italian soldier Antonio (Mario Vitale), who asks her to marry him. Karin doesn't love him back, but she agrees to get out of there. Bingo, that's what they do. They are married, and Karin leaves.

But Antonio comes from the island of Stromboli, a volcanic place occupied mostly by hardy tuna fishermen. And in some ways, it is as much a prison for her as the refugee camp. The village is backward and isolated, the people unfriendly, the mindsets narrow and Antonio seems like a stranger. Karin's desperation starts to grow, especially when she learns she is pregnant.

Rossellini's style was one of neo-realism, as much realism as a film can have while still being fictional. "Stromboli" was filmed on location (in ridiculously primitive surroundings), with most of the cast made up of local fishermen that Rossellini recruited for his movie. Bergman even had to climb the volcano and live in a shack with no electricity and plumbing.

The stark, bleak shots of the island and its tiny village are amazing, breathtaking. They help convey the black-and-white simplicity and roughness of life there. But Rossellini's peculiar filming methods take away from the bleakness of it. He improvised as he went, with no fixed script, and the resulting scenes feel poorly thought-out (Bergman gets upset over and over and over). However, this wasn't entirely Rossellini's fault; the Hollywood studio got its hedge clippers on "Stromboli," stripping away much of the atmosphere and quite a bit of the plotline.

Bergman's outstanding acting skills are what elevate the film above "mediocre." With her subtlely expressive face and eyes, she draws in our sympathy and understanding for Karin in a very trying situation, even though the character is a deeply underdeveloped one. At times, she is revealed to be also a bit selfish and manipulative. Mario Vitale does a fair job as Bergman's tradition-bound, rather close-minded husband, who has little idea of her suffering.

"Stromboli" is far from a masterpiece, but it's not a dud either. Bergman and the island are stunning, but the choppy, wandering storyline takes away from what could have been truly breathtaking.


Customer Rating: Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5
Summary: A spiritual film
Comment: Stromboli is one of my favorite films. It contains many themes; love, rootlessnes, acceptance of one's fate, the power of nature, man/woman's relationship to God/the universe. The whole film is situated in a very gritty post-war reality. I found this movie,in it's own quiet, understated way, a very spiritual film.

I loved the ending. Great.


Customer Rating: Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5
Summary: An Appreciation of 'Stromboli'
Comment: There are few cinema couples as sadly mismatched as Karin (Ingrid Bergman) and her Italian husband Antonio (Mario Vitale) and the Italian island of Stromboli looks much better in Nanni Moretti's 'Caro Diario.' No sex, not even sincere displays of affection and a village full of black-clad women who despise Karin, the new girl in town. Ugh! Why even see this movie? Well, have you seen Ingrid Bergman when she was so young and beautiful - perhaps in 'Notorious' with Cary Grant? Then you know you can spend an hour looking at her and it will seem like a minute. She speaks Italian without the hand gestures and she decorates the home she shares with Antonio with things that remind her of Lithuania (her homeland in the movie.) Antonio tears everything down and puts the pictures of his black-clad relatives back up on the dresser with a statue of the Virgin. Could any couple have more to drive them apart than these two? Rossellini doesn't bother to show much of their personal conflicts. He concentrates his camera on Karin. This is what makes the movie worth watching. Karin is selfish and opportunistic (I think the scene where she tries to charm a helpful priest is a real acting challenge) but of course, she desperately wants to leave Stromboli ... you would, too. Antonio, her husband, is a man who speaks in a dialect she doesn't even fully comprehend. He is a fisherman and he has been a war prisoner for long enough to want to be home again and stay home. Too bad it is an island that rains fire on its inhabitants when the volcano erupts. Too bad for Karin that there are few residents in the town and they are all fishermen. Yes, the movie plods. But the direction and dialogue are perfect for the story and the setting. What makes the movie a treasure is the scene when the fishermen make their big catch of tuna. It is wonderful and illuminates the entire film.


Buy it now at Amazon.com!

 
Copyright © 2000-2004 Tarfumes.com. All rights reserved.
powered by My Amazon Store Manager v 2.0, © Stringer Software Solutions