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Umberto D. 1952 123movies

Umberto D. 1952 123movies

Jan. 20, 195291 Min.
Your rating: 0
8 1 vote

Synopsis

Watch: Umberto D. 1952 123movies, Full Movie Online – Umberto Ferrari, aged government-pensioner, attends a street demonstration held by his fellow pensioners. The police dispense the crowd and Umberto returns to his cheap furnished room which he shares with his dog Flick. Umberto’s lone friend is Maria, servant of the boarding house. She is a simple girl who is pregnant by one of two soldiers and neither will admit to being the father. When Umberto’s landlady Antonia demands the rent owed her and threatens eviction if she is not paid, Umberto tries desperately to raise the money by selling his books and watch. He is too proud to beg in the streets and can not get a loan from any of his acquaintances. He contracts a sore throat, is admitted to a hospital and this puts a delay on his financial difficulty. Discharged, he finds that his dog is gone and, following a frantic search, locates him in the city dog pound. His room has been taken over by the landlady and the now-homeless Unberto determines to find a place for his beloved dog, and then kill himself. Unsuccessful, he resolves that his dog must die with him and he stands in the path of a train, with his dog in his arms..
Plot: When elderly pensioner Umberto Domenico Ferrari returns to his boarding house from a protest calling for a hike in old-age pensions, his landlady demands her 15,000-lire rent by the end of the month or he and his small dog will be turned out onto the street. Unable to get the money in time, Umberto fakes illness to get sent to a hospital, giving his beloved dog to the landlady’s pregnant and abandoned maid for temporary safekeeping.
Smart Tags: #dog #old_man #rent #landlady #pension #hospital #poverty #maid #train #pensioner #italian_neorealism #hunger #rome_italy #park #non_professional_actor #man_dog_relationship #loneliness #homelessness #dignity #pregnancy #despair


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Ratings:

8.2/10 Votes: 26,157
97% | RottenTomatoes
92/100 | MetaCritic
N/A Votes: 531 Popularity: 7.628 | TMDB

Reviews:

Neo-realist classic
This movie from director Vittoria de Sica is a heartbreaking story of a destitute pensioner named Umberto Ferrari and his pet dog. The pensioner cannot bring himself to tell anyone of his difficult existence or to ask for help. Set in post-war Italy of the 1940’s and 50’s, the neo-realist movies of this period with their on-location shooting show the grinding poverty of many people at the time. With this vivid background, we see some very tender moments in the story that illustrate the bond between the man and his dog. We also get a sense of the mood in Rome at the start as police break up a protest by pensioners fighting for a decent income. Other scenes take the viewer into a hospital where patients recite the Rosary from their beds, have lunch at a pasta diner and go home to a walk-up apartment. With Umberto pitted against his cold-hearted landlady, we see how his life is made almost unbearable. In fact, the movie is very sensitive in its depiction of this man, one of many elderly people who were by themselves with little money. In this case, the elderly man, played by Carlo Battista, has a reason for living because of his canine companion. De Sica used amateur actors and Battista was a university professor in Florence who has captured the essence of his character. De Sica made his mark as the foremost director of the neo-realist school of cinema and as an accomplished character actor in his own right. I noticed the dedication to Umberto DeSica, who was apparently his father. In this film, DeSica has certainly produced an outstanding work of art about the plight of one aged citizen in a particular time and place. Thanks to TCM for its recent showing this neo-realist classic.
Review By: barryrd
Unbreakable Bonds
Who among us doesn’t fear that one day he or she will meet the fate of Umberto D., a pensioner who discovers that he can’t scrape together enough money in order to live? A retiree, such as myself, doesn’t have to reside in ravaged, dehumanized, postwar Rome to witness the dreaded nightmare of outliving his or her finances and, even worse, the worry about our dog’s fate if we are no longer able to provide the homes that they need? So why do I love this film so much when it causes me so much personal trepidation about my own future–and that of my precious best friend?

Aside from a very talented Napoleone, who plays the dog Flike for all but two dog scenes and manages to steal the show in the process, the two main human actors, Carlo Battisti and Maria Pia Casilio, both remarkably appearing as amateurs, are superb, which is a triumph in itself for the film’s accomplished director, Vittorio de Sica. The photography of post-World War II Rome by G.R. Aldo, combined with the highly dramatic music of prolific film composer Alessandro Cicognini, completes the recipe for an outstanding cinematic success that has withstood the test of time. The striking image of Maria standing at the window as Umberto departs in the tram will remain with me for the rest of my life. This film is not only about the relationship of a man and his faithful little dog but about the love between Maria and Umberto in a world that seems to be totally void of compassion.

There are too many memorable scenes in this film to describe in one review, but the one segment that leaves an indelible mark on me is the instance when little Flike, for good reason, momentarily loses faith in his human companion, but I won’t reveal any other information about the scene. If that situation alone doesn’t deeply move you, I don’t know what will.

One doesn’t have to be in an advanced stage of life, such as myself, in order to fall in love with this movie. Umberto D’s plight is one that should resonate with moviegoers of all ages and economic conditions. Hardship to the point of desperation could happen to any of us at any time. I have learned from adversity that nothing is ever guaranteed, so appreciate all that you have today, don’t forget to kiss your precious, little doggie goodnight, and never lose your best friend’s trust, not even for a brief moment in time. It will break your heart.

Review By: frankwiener

Other Information:

Original Title Umberto D.
Release Date 1952-01-20
Release Year 1952

Original Language it
Runtime 1 hr 29 min (89 min)
Budget 0
Revenue 0
Status Released
Rated Not Rated
Genre Drama
Director Vittorio De Sica
Writer Cesare Zavattini
Actors Carlo Battisti, Maria Pia Casilio, Lina Gennari
Country Italy
Awards Nominated for 1 Oscar. 3 wins & 2 nominations total
Production Company N/A
Website N/A


Technical Information:

Sound Mix Mono (RCA Sound System)
Aspect Ratio 1.37 : 1
Camera N/A
Laboratory DuPont-Gevaert (color), S.P.E.S., Roma, Italy (negative editing)
Film Length 2,408 m (Italy), 2,410 m
Negative Format 35 mm (DuPont/Gevaert)
Cinematographic Process Spherical
Printed Film Format 35 mm

Umberto D. 1952 123movies
Umberto D. 1952 123movies
Umberto D. 1952 123movies
Umberto D. 1952 123movies
Umberto D. 1952 123movies
Umberto D. 1952 123movies
Original title Umberto D.
TMDb Rating 7.875 531 votes

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