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Addio giovinezza! (1927) Online

Addio giovinezza! (1927) Online
Original Title :
Addio giovinezza!
Genre :
Movie / Drama
Year :
1927
Directror :
Augusto Genina
Cast :
Walter Slezak,Elena Sangro,Augusto Bandini
Writer :
Sandro Camasio,Luciano Doria
Type :
Movie
Rating :
6.0/10
Addio giovinezza! (1927) Online

Credited cast:
Walter Slezak Walter Slezak - Mario
Elena Sangro Elena Sangro - Elena
Rest of cast listed alphabetically:
Augusto Bandini Augusto Bandini - Leone
Carla Bartheel Carla Bartheel
Carmen Boni Carmen Boni - Dorina, a seamstress
Lya Christy Lya Christy - (as Lya Christa)
Piero Cocco Piero Cocco - Carlo
Mario Dale Mario Dale
Gemma De Ferrari Gemma De Ferrari - Mario's mother
Attila Ricci Attila Ricci - Mario's father


User reviews

Fecage

Fecage

This was one of the key movies of the late Italian silent period, which is not as well-known as many of the spectacles of the mid-teens which had brought Italian cinema its international recognition.

Based on a 1911 play by Camasio and Oxilia, this version by Augusto Genina is actually the third made of the work. The first was in 1913. The second, in 1918, was also directed by Augusto Genina. A 1940 version by Ferdinando M. Poggioli also achieved some acclaim.

The movie is about a student in Turin during the 1920s (moved up from the earlier versions) and his love for a a seamstress. The student, Mario, is played by Walter Slezak; the girl Dorina by Carmen Boni. The femme fatale Elena (Elena Sangro) threatens the relationship. When school days end, seen here as a kind of transitory idyll, it is "farewell to youth" as the title states, and a melancholy goodbye to youthful romances as well to allow new lives to take form.

Much of the film is done in interior settings that suggest the piece's theatrical origins. There are some interesting exteriors as well of the Turin area. It is an interesting piece of some genuine psychological insight and well performed by the principal actors.
Wel

Wel

Herr Augusto Genina was a prolific Italian Silent film director almost from the beginning of the new invention. This gave him the opportunity to direct films of every genre, even direct the same film again ( in different years ), yet at times, his directing could be very ambivalent. Still, for any worthy silent film fan, he will always be the person who directed "Prix De Beauté" (1930), that early pseudo-talkie film starring the great actress, Frau Louise Brooks.

Although "Prix De Beaute" could be a very complicated subject in itself, this Herr Graf will try to focus his aristocratic attention on another Herr Genina's film. It happens that recently, "Addio Giovinezza!" ( Goodbye To Youth! ) (1927), was shown in the Schloss theater.

This film was a kind of initiation film; the story from a successful play by Herr Sandro Camasio und Herr Nino Oxilia ( who had directed his own film version in 1913 ). It depicts the life of young student, Herr Mario, a model son from a Turin family, who, besides his studies, from time to time will be in love with a seamstress; Frau Dorina, the daughter of his housekeeper, with all three living on a top floor of his home, separated only by a door. Such an idyllic love story will be put in peril when an idle bourgeois Fraulein appears; Frau Elena, for whom Mario is simply an enjoyable way to pass time.

So, it would seem there's nothing new under the silent film sun. Certainly, it's the same old love-triangle story about troublesome relationships, with a University, hormones, youthfulness and sexiness as its background in a somewhat tired attempt to depict again the process of maturity. Unfortunately, Herr Genina's direction fails due to his much too conventional and predictable approach of the subject.

The most interesting aspect of the film about the daily life of Frau Dorina and Herr Mario is their lodging; a credible indoor scenario in contrast with the typical dullness of the student Mario's life, as old fashioned as Herr Erasmus himself. The leading actresses, Frau Carmen Boni and Elena Sangro gave their characters personality, while Herr Walter Slezak as Mario, a mostly insensitive character, gave the three-some scenes in the film that were delightful. However, this was hardly enough for a film lacking any artistic ambition ( due probably to its dependence on the original theater play ).

And now, if you'll allow me, I must temporarily take my leave because this German Count must try to remember if he was ever a youngster?.

Herr Graf Ferdinand Von Galitzien http://ferdinandvongalitzien.blogspot.com/