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The Most Beautiful Wife

The Most Beautiful Wife (1970)

March. 12,1970
|
7.1
| Drama Crime

A 16-year-old Sicilian becomes the target of a mafia-hit man after refusing to go through with her prearranged marriage.

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SunnyHello
1970/03/12

Nice effects though.

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Acensbart
1970/03/13

Excellent but underrated film

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Voxitype
1970/03/14

Good films always raise compelling questions, whether the format is fiction or documentary fact.

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Fleur
1970/03/15

Actress is magnificent and exudes a hypnotic screen presence in this affecting drama.

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Bezenby
1970/03/16

Damiano Damiani created Euro-crime films, but his films come from a different angle, set in conditions of absolute reality and full of real people making real choices. No fast guns solve problems here. I've really come to appreciate films like The Case is Closed, Forget About It and Day of the Owl. Don't get me wrong - I love a car chase and a gun battle, but Damiani's films have there place up there too.Fifteen (or fourteen) year-old Ornella Mutti here plays Francesco, a peasant girl who draws the eye of local mob hood Vito. Vito looks up the local Mafia don, who has just been arrested along with most of his cronies. The don wants to work with Vito as Vito was kidnapped and beaten by a rival mob, but never opened his mouth. The don advises Vito to get married and Vito has chosen Francesco.After seeing off another suitor with intimidation, Vito woos Francesco, and a wedding seems to be on the horizon. It's also about this time that Vito starts acting like a total dick, and finds himself surprised that Francesco isn't the kind of girl who is going to take any of his crap. She shames him in front of his mates, jilts him at the altar, and even worse, the rival gang ridicule Vito using the information that a peasant girl stood him up at the altar. Vito of course then resorts to kidnapping and raping Francesco as a show of power, and is once again surprised to find she goes straight to the police and accuses him of rape.This is Sicily however, and people there fear reprisal from the Mafia. The townsfolk turn on Francesco and even her family do not want to speak to the police. Francesco finds herself alone in trying to bring Vito to justice...alone apart from that rival Mafia gang...It's possible that Damiani is making some sort of statement about the sexual revolution with this one. We know Francesco is in the right, and yet the women of the village attack a teenage girl who agrees with her. Francesco speaks with a woman who was in a similar situation but married her rapist because that's what was expected of her. A local priest blames her parents for being uneducated and not hiding the act of sex from her. Even her parents do not want to go against the established rules and class system. Only the young seem to empathise as Francesco rebels against the town, and still I'm simplifying the outcome of this on the characters of the film.This was Ornella Mutti's first film and it's amazing to see how she plays Francesco - a naïve teenage girl who believes in love but will not let that stand in the way of justice, or her being an individual. Her dogged attempts to bring Francesco to court are mixed with the emotions of a teenage crush as she constantly gives Vito a chance to repent, which also give way to pure rage as he constantly treats her like a child.Also outstanding are two actors I thought were just bit part players -- Gaetano Cimarosa as Francesco's cowardly father, and Enzo Andronico (from many a giallo) as the slimy lawyer trying to keep Vito in check. Don't miss this one - Ennio Morricone manages to create another emotional soundtrack that adds to the atmosphere.

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D_vd_B
1970/03/17

Most other comments are right on the spot.Excellent movie, good acting and marvellous music.There are a few things i'd like to add. Sometimes, this film slows down a bit, but never long enough to It's not a genre movie at all, but if you would want to tag it, I'd give it a thriller label.The main trouble with films like this is that it so hard to 'like' them. Not that this one is pure depressing, but you'll get to see a desperate world on the bottom of the mafia and the place where it has its roots. And it isn't like the godfather.My final verdict is an 8 out of 10. There is nothing wrong with this movie, but it hasn't the 100% perfection for a higher score. Still, very gripping and plain good.

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lazarillo
1970/03/18

Ornella Muti has always been an interesting actress. Like a lot of her Italian contemporaries--Eleanora Giorgi, Jenny Tamburi, Gloria Guida--she has been in a lot of "exploitative" roles and movies (in one movie of hers I saw, for instance, her character willingly loses her virginity to her own father), but unlike these other actresses she has also managed to turn in a lot of superb roles in more highbrow art films, and her career has thus lasted a lot longer. On the other hand, her courage in choosing film roles has also allowed her to endure a lot longer than a lot of American actresses who never want to risk doing anything that might be exploitative and as a result never do anything really interesting either. The director Damiano Damiani is the same way--he's done art films like this, on one hand, but some the most exploitative trash imaginable (like "Amityville Horror 2"), on the other, but his films are rarely less than interesting.This movie based on true story is about a young Sicilian girl (Muti) who is raped by the son of a Mafia don who is trying to force her to marry him by taking her virginity, but she instead goes to the police, which is something women just didn't do at the time (and something only a few brave souls in Sicily ever did to the Mafia). Muti is really good, which isn't that surprising perhaps, but so is her future husband, Alessio Oranio, who plays the mafioso, and who I had always pegged as a talentless pretty-boy. It may seem hard to believe the androgenously handsome Oranio would have to rape anyone (although it seemed to be his specialty for some reason--he also raped Jane Birkin in "May Morning", a drugged Elke Summer in "Lisa and the Devil", and Femi Benussi, kind of, in "The Killer Must Kill Again."). It's made clear in this movie, however, that the abduction and rape is a matter of pride, not sex, after this beautiful but poor peasant girl spurns the wealthy and vain young man's proposal of marriage.I don't want to give away too much more of the plot, but it is a well-directed and well-acted and ultimately very powerful film. It's not one of Muti's more exploitative roles (she was only fourteen at the time), but she had plenty of those too. Check this one out for sure.

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bensonmum2
1970/03/19

The Most Beautiful Wife is the kind of movie I usually avoid. I usually don't go for these overly depressing tales. But The Most Beautiful Wife is oddly compelling and drew me in from the start. The film is based on a true story and deals with the barbaric treatment of women (who am I kidding, these are girls) at the hands of their future husbands. Rape was an acceptable means of forcing a marriage. No other man would want the woman as she was no longer a virgin.But as depressing as the subject matter may be, director Damiano Damiani and cinematographer Franco Di Giacomo created an incredibly lovely film with The Most Beautiful Wife. The contrast between the green, lush farm lands and the crumbling city scenes is pleasing. And Ennio Morricone's score is what I've come to expect - a work of genius. It suits the film perfectly.Ornella Muti gives a terrific performance in the title role. And when you consider that this was her first film and that she was only 14 years old, it makes all the more amazing. As the whole film is centered around her and as she is the focal point of almost every scene, it's imperative that her performance be believable if The Most Beautiful Wife has a chance at all to work. She pulls it off flawlessly. I doubt an actress twice her age with years of experience could have done any better. It's an impressive piece of work.

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