Mistress of the Mountains
Directed byFernando Cerchio
Written byLeonardo Benvenuti
Fernando Cerchio
Giovanni Guareschi
Giorgio Venturini
Giancarlo Vigorelli
Produced byGiorgio Venturini
StarringVivi Gioi
Adriano Rimoldi
Camillo Pilotto
CinematographyArturo Gallea
Edited byRolando Benedetti
Music byGiovanni Fusco
Production
company
Artisti Associati
Distributed byVariety Distribution
Release date
18 September 1950
Running time
90 minutes
CountryItaly
LanguageItalian

Mistress of the Mountains (Italian: Gente così) is a 1950 Italian drama film directed by Fernando Cerchio and starring Vivi Gioi, Adriano Rimoldi and Camillo Pilotto.[1]

Plot

In a small town in upper Lombardy near the Swiss border, smuggling is considered legal and Don Candido intervenes in the endless discussions on business, trying to restore peace. A new elementary teacher arrives in the village, a woman with modern ideas who comes into conflict with the mentality of the inhabitants of the village. During a difficult construction of the dam, a smuggler arrives with whom the young teacher falls in love. When the young man flees to Milan, the woman follows him, only to turn back when she realizes she is pregnant. Surprised by the financial police, the smuggler falls into a ravine. Don Candido just has time to unite them in marriage, just before the young man dies.[2]

Cast

  • Vivi Gioi as Teresa, la maestrina
  • Adriano Rimoldi as Giàn, il contrabbandiere
  • Camillo Pilotto as Don Candido, arciprete
  • Renato De Carmine as Il biondino
  • Marisa Mari as La biondina
  • Saro Urzì as sindaco Giusà
  • Alberto Archetti as Un consigliere
  • Arrigo Peri as Segretario
  • Nicola La Torre as Consigliere III
  • Augusto Favi
  • Raffaello Niccoli as Vecchio Operaio
  • Raf Pindi as Nelli
  • Lena Zoppegni as La bidella
  • Egisto Olivieri as Consigliere II
  • Luigi Tosi
  • Giuliana Rivera

References

  1. Monaco p.208
  2. Mistress of the Mountains (1950) - IMDb, retrieved 2022-05-02

Bibliography

  • James Monaco. The Encyclopedia of Film. Perigee Books, 1991.


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