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asalingerreference uploaded a new video
(3 months ago)

Poignant Italian masterpiece from Luigi Comencini, released in 1966, and among the best films to emerge from Cinecettà and the Golden Age of Italia...
more
Poignant Italian masterpiece from Luigi Comencini, released in 1966, and among the best films to emerge from Cinecettà and the Golden Age of Italian cinema. The wife of an overworked and aloof ambassador dies, leaving his two sons Milo and Andrea to cope with her death alone. The oldest is Andrea whose brave front convinces his father that he is unaffected by his mother's death. Playmate and protector of the younger brother Milo, he is often blamed when mischief goes wrong. Only when tragedy strikes does his father recognize Andrea's true feelings.
From an erudite IMDB review: "When you will watch Incompreso, and I know you will, something will happen to your heart : at some point, you will feel it cracking and you won't be able to help it. And then it will crack some more. Near the unforgettable conclusion, it will fall on the ground in thousands of little pieces. But unlike so many other melodramas, this one refrains from using one single cheap trick. I mean it. It never tricks the spectator into crying. The crying comes only too naturally, with no strings attached or pulled.
Luigi Comencini's Incompreso is the most intense, the most powerful, the most poignant melodrama ever put to screen. And ever means ever. Straight from the heart, straight to the heart, without one single cheap trick. Why use artificial tricks that treat spectators like puppets, while simple reality is enough to reach to their heart? Childhood is the best of times, childhood is the worse of times : both are equally true at the same time and there is nothing we can do to change this."
[I do not own the rights to this film, and it is uploaded for educational and entertainment purposes only. As far as I know it has not seen a DVD release in any country.]
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asalingerreference uploaded a new video
(3 months ago)

Poignant Italian masterpiece from Luigi Comencini, released in 1966, and among the best films to emerge from Cinecettà and the Golden Age of Italia...
more
Poignant Italian masterpiece from Luigi Comencini, released in 1966, and among the best films to emerge from Cinecettà and the Golden Age of Italian cinema. The wife of an overworked and aloof ambassador dies, leaving his two sons Milo and Andrea to cope with her death alone. The oldest is Andrea whose brave front convinces his father that he is unaffected by his mother's death. Playmate and protector of the younger brother Milo, he is often blamed when mischief goes wrong. Only when tragedy strikes does his father recognize Andrea's true feelings.
From an erudite IMDB review: "When you will watch Incompreso, and I know you will, something will happen to your heart : at some point, you will feel it cracking and you won't be able to help it. And then it will crack some more. Near the unforgettable conclusion, it will fall on the ground in thousands of little pieces. But unlike so many other melodramas, this one refrains from using one single cheap trick. I mean it. It never tricks the spectator into crying. The crying comes only too naturally, with no strings attached or pulled.
Luigi Comencini's Incompreso is the most intense, the most powerful, the most poignant melodrama ever put to screen. And ever means ever. Straight from the heart, straight to the heart, without one single cheap trick. Why use artificial tricks that treat spectators like puppets, while simple reality is enough to reach to their heart? Childhood is the best of times, childhood is the worse of times : both are equally true at the same time and there is nothing we can do to change this."
[I do not own the rights to this film, and it is uploaded for educational and entertainment purposes only. As far as I know it has not seen a DVD release in any country.]
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asalingerreference uploaded a new video
(3 months ago)

Poignant Italian masterpiece from Luigi Comencini, released in 1966, and among the best films to emerge from Cinecettà and the Golden Age of Italia...
more
Poignant Italian masterpiece from Luigi Comencini, released in 1966, and among the best films to emerge from Cinecettà and the Golden Age of Italian cinema. The wife of an overworked and aloof ambassador dies, leaving his two sons Milo and Andrea to cope with her death alone. The oldest is Andrea whose brave front convinces his father that he is unaffected by his mother's death. Playmate and protector of the younger brother Milo, he is often blamed when mischief goes wrong. Only when tragedy strikes does his father recognize Andrea's true feelings.
From an erudite IMDB review: "When you will watch Incompreso, and I know you will, something will happen to your heart : at some point, you will feel it cracking and you won't be able to help it. And then it will crack some more. Near the unforgettable conclusion, it will fall on the ground in thousands of little pieces. But unlike so many other melodramas, this one refrains from using one single cheap trick. I mean it. It never tricks the spectator into crying. The crying comes only too naturally, with no strings attached or pulled.
Luigi Comencini's Incompreso is the most intense, the most powerful, the most poignant melodrama ever put to screen. And ever means ever. Straight from the heart, straight to the heart, without one single cheap trick. Why use artificial tricks that treat spectators like puppets, while simple reality is enough to reach to their heart? Childhood is the best of times, childhood is the worse of times : both are equally true at the same time and there is nothing we can do to change this."
[I do not own the rights to this film, and it is uploaded for educational and entertainment purposes only. As far as I know it has not seen a DVD release in any country.]
less
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asalingerreference uploaded a new video
(3 months ago)

Poignant Italian masterpiece from Luigi Comencini, released in 1966, and among the best films to emerge from Cinecettà and the Golden Age of Italia...
more
Poignant Italian masterpiece from Luigi Comencini, released in 1966, and among the best films to emerge from Cinecettà and the Golden Age of Italian cinema. The wife of an overworked and aloof ambassador dies, leaving his two sons Milo and Andrea to cope with her death alone. The oldest is Andrea whose brave front convinces his father that he is unaffected by his mother's death. Playmate and protector of the younger brother Milo, he is often blamed when mischief goes wrong. Only when tragedy strikes does his father recognize Andrea's true feelings.
From an erudite IMDB review: "When you will watch Incompreso, and I know you will, something will happen to your heart : at some point, you will feel it cracking and you won't be able to help it. And then it will crack some more. Near the unforgettable conclusion, it will fall on the ground in thousands of little pieces. But unlike so many other melodramas, this one refrains from using one single cheap trick. I mean it. It never tricks the spectator into crying. The crying comes only too naturally, with no strings attached or pulled.
Luigi Comencini's Incompreso is the most intense, the most powerful, the most poignant melodrama ever put to screen. And ever means ever. Straight from the heart, straight to the heart, without one single cheap trick. Why use artificial tricks that treat spectators like puppets, while simple reality is enough to reach to their heart? Childhood is the best of times, childhood is the worse of times : both are equally true at the same time and there is nothing we can do to change this."
[I do not own the rights to this film, and it is uploaded for educational and entertainment purposes only. As far as I know it has not seen a DVD release in any country.]
less
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asalingerreference uploaded a new video
(3 months ago)

Poignant Italian masterpiece from Luigi Comencini, released in 1966, and among the best films to emerge from Cinecettà and the Golden Age of Italia...
more
Poignant Italian masterpiece from Luigi Comencini, released in 1966, and among the best films to emerge from Cinecettà and the Golden Age of Italian cinema. The wife of an overworked and aloof ambassador dies, leaving his two sons Milo and Andrea to cope with her death alone. The oldest is Andrea whose brave front convinces his father that he is unaffected by his mother's death. Playmate and protector of the younger brother Milo, he is often blamed when mischief goes wrong. Only when tragedy strikes does his father recognize Andrea's true feelings.
From an erudite IMDB review: "When you will watch Incompreso, and I know you will, something will happen to your heart : at some point, you will feel it cracking and you won't be able to help it. And then it will crack some more. Near the unforgettable conclusion, it will fall on the ground in thousands of little pieces. But unlike so many other melodramas, this one refrains from using one single cheap trick. I mean it. It never tricks the spectator into crying. The crying comes only too naturally, with no strings attached or pulled.
Luigi Comencini's Incompreso is the most intense, the most powerful, the most poignant melodrama ever put to screen. And ever means ever. Straight from the heart, straight to the heart, without one single cheap trick. Why use artificial tricks that treat spectators like puppets, while simple reality is enough to reach to their heart? Childhood is the best of times, childhood is the worse of times : both are equally true at the same time and there is nothing we can do to change this."
[I do not own the rights to this film, and it is uploaded for educational and entertainment purposes only. As far as I know it has not seen a DVD release in any country.]
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ME ENCANTO LA PELICULA