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Sunday, December 15, 2024

LA FORTUNA DI ESSERE DONNA / WHAT A WOMAN! (1956)

Italian director Alessandro Blasetti had already paired Sophia Loren & Marcello Mastroianni in a couple of films when they squeezed in this third, made on the cusp of Loren’s upcoming Hollywood debut.  Maybe that explains why this one feels like a rush job.*   Mastroianni’s something of a free-lance paparazzo (the term not actually in use before another Mastroianni film, LA DOLCE VITA/’60) who happens to snap a shot of Loren fixing her stockings after grabbing a ride with an all too grabby driver.  And when the sexy pic lands on a Rome magazine cover, her life goes topsy-turvy with offers for representation, publicity shoots, modeling, movie roles . . . the works.  Does Marcello stand a chance against a smooth operator like Charles Boyer, a classy agent rep who happens to be a Count.*  (Secret: he also happens to be married.)  That’s about it for plot, but the stars are good company, Blasetti has a way with big party scenes (check out the Maria Callas lookalike at Loren’s first fancy reception), and also has an amusing way of tackling Sophia as a character by treating her as if she weren’t on location, but was the location.  ‘Where are we shooting tomorrow?  Oh, yeah, Loren . . . bring all the lenses.’   Inconsequential, but fun.

DOUBLE-BILL:  *One of the previous films, TOO BAD SHE’S BAD/’54, with taxi-driver Marcello joining Sophia’s trio of grifters just to be near her, is darn good.  OR:  To see Blasetti at his best, try the heartfelt pre-Neo-Realist FOUR STEP IN THE CLOUDS/4 PASSI FRA LE NUVOLE/’42 which was remade to reasonable effect as A WALK IN THE CLOUDS/’95 with Keanu Reeves & Anthony Quinn.

ATTENTION MUST BE PAID:  *In standard Cinecittà Studio style, all dialogue dubbed/looped in post-production, largely with their own voices.  But alas, not Boyer so we don’t get to hear if his Italian is as indecipherable as his English.

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