This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. Find sources: "Adua and Her Friends" – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (June 2019) (Learn how and when to remove this message) |
Adua and Her Friends (Adua e le compagne) | |
---|---|
Directed by | Antonio Pietrangeli |
Written by | Ruggero Maccari, Antonio Pietrangeli, Ettore Scola, Tullio Pinelli |
Produced by | Moris Ergas [it] |
Starring | Sandra Milo, Marcello Mastroianni, Simone Signoret |
Cinematography | Armando Nannuzzi |
Edited by | Eraldo Da Roma |
Music by | Piero Piccioni |
Distributed by | Titanus |
Release date |
|
Running time | 106 minutes |
Country | Italy |
Language | Italian |
Adua and Her Friends (Italian: Adua e le compagne), also known as Hungry For Love, is a 1960 Italian film directed by Antonio Pietrangeli with a collaborative screenplay by the film's director together with Ruggero Maccari, Ettore Scola and Tullio Pinelli. The movie is about four prostitutes who start a restaurant after their brothel is shut down by the Merlin law, which made brothels illegal in Italy.
Plot
In 1958, the Merlin law made brothels illegal in Italy. Adua, Lolita, Marilina and Milly are four prostitutes whose brothel in Rome is shut down. Under Adua's leadership, they pool their savings, two million lire apiece, to open a restaurant on the outskirts, which will be a cover for an illegal brothel. They rent a run-down building and hire workmen to fix it up but, when they apply for a permit to open the restaurant, their application is rejected because of their history of prostitution. One of Adua's former customers, Ercoli, agrees to buy the building and use his connections to get the permit in his name, in return for a rent of one million lire a month.
The restaurant turns out to be unexpectedly successful, and the women effectively abandon their plans to offer sexual services and start to lead respectable lives. Marilina brings her young son to live with her and Milly falls in love and plans to marry. But the restaurant doesn't earn as much as they could make as a brothel, and they can't pay Ercoli his rent. Ercoli gives them an ultimatum: start working as prostitutes again, and pay him his rent, or he will kick them out in 24 hours. When Ercoli returns, Adua refuses to pay and humiliates him, and he leaves. In revenge, he has them all arrested for prostitution. Their pictures appear in the newspapers and their respectable lives are destroyed. Adua, who has sworn never to suffer the fate of a worn-out old prostitute, ends up working in the streets again. In the final scene, on a dismal rainy night, she is rejected in favor of a younger woman.
Cast
- Simone Signoret: Adua Giovannetti
- Sandra Milo: Lolita
- Emmanuelle Riva: Marilina
- Gina Rovere [it]: Milly
- Claudio Gora: Ercoli
- Ivo Garrani: Avvocato
- Gianrico Tedeschi: Stefano
- Antonio Rais: Emilio
- Duilio D'Amore: Frate Michele
- Valeria Fabrizi: Fosca la bionda
- Luciana Gilli: Dora
- Enzo Maggio: Calypso
- Domenico Modugno: Himself
- Marcello Mastroianni: Piero Silvagni
Sources
- Salvatori, Alessandra. "Adua e le compagne – Recensione DVD – scheda, trailer, foto, dvd". RECENSIONE DVD Adua e le compagne. Archived from the original on April 27, 2006. Retrieved January 14, 2006.
External links
This article related to an Italian comedy film of the 1960s is a stub. You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it. |
- 1960 films
- 1960 comedy films
- Italian black-and-white films
- Commedia all'italiana
- Films directed by Antonio Pietrangeli
- 1960s Italian-language films
- Films set in Rome
- Films shot in Rome
- Films about prostitution in Italy
- Films with screenplays by Ruggero Maccari
- Italian comedy films
- 1960s Italian films
- Films scored by Piero Piccioni
- 1960s Italian comedy film stubs