The Anonymous Venetian (1970)
Directed by Enrico Maria Salerno
Genres - Drama, Romance |
Sub-Genres - Marriage Drama, Melodrama, Romantic Drama |
Run Time - 91 min. |
Countries - Italy |
MPAA Rating - PG
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Synopsis by Robert Firsching
Busy actor Enrico Maria Salerno made his directorial debut with this predictable tearjerker using a cast better known to fans of Italian horror than to its target audience. Salerno's script, co-written with Giuseppe Berto, features genre veterans Tony Musante and Florinda Bolkan as an estranged couple reunited for a day. They wander around Venice reminiscing about the ups and downs of their marriage, wondering what drove them apart. As might be expected, their memories bring them back together, but the husband's terminal illness turns the sweet reunion into a mawkish Love Story clone. Stelvio Cipriani's overwrought score only compounds the film's soap-opera feel, but at least there are some lovely shots of Venice by cinematographer Marcello Gatto.
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Keywords
husband-and-wife, memories, musician, train [locomotive], Allies, concentration-camp, conductor [music], death, disease, escape-proof, estrangement, love, prison, reunion, terminal-illness, tunnel