Even though Italian music was on the wane circa 1967-1968, Italian movies were everywhere to be seen. It's hard to fathom how popular Italian flicks were unless one looks at the movie-sections of newspapers. The so-called spaghetti-western were shown by the dozen; Italian light-comedies like those with Catherine Spaak had their sound-track loaded with summer-hits were a must... and adult-comedies where 'cornuto' was the word abounded too. Silly comedians like Lando Buzzanca, Franco & Ciccio filled movie houses all over the country.
Particularly as of mid-1967, starting with Rita Pavone's 'Rita o mosquito', and Gigliola Cinquetti's 'Dio come ti amo' there were quite a few new Italian musicals - known as 'musicarelli' in Italy - usually based on songs that had been hits.
24 November 1966 - 'Viagem ao mundo dos prazeres' or 'Canzoni nel mondo' was a documentary filmed by Vittorio de Sica and released in 1963. It was almost 3 years old when released here. One could see Peppino di Capri, who actually had visited Brazil in 1962... plus Gilbert Becaud, Juliette Greco and marvelous Mina who never visited us...
19 February 1967 - Brazilian actress Norma Benguel was doing quite well in Italy, this time she's the leading lady in 'Vigarice à italiana' (Una bella grinta) with Renato Salvatori.
19 June 1967 - Lina Wertmüller's 'Rita la zanzara' (Rita, o mosquito) was a vehicle for rock star Rita Pavone which had taken Brazil by storm in 1964, but had been low-key for the last 2 years.
26 July 1967 - Wednesday - Maybe spurred by the success of 'Rita o mosquito' Fama Filmes did something unsual: it released a black-and-white musical film. 'Dio come ti amo' starring Italian teenage singer Gigliola Cinquetti and US actor Mark Damon opens at Cine Rivoli, Goiás, Sammarone, Aladin, Cinemar (in Santo Amaro), Amazonas & Patriarca. This tear-jerker would play in and around Sao Paulo for years to come. It became something of a phenomenon: on top of being played every single week-end on suburbia for at least 5 straight years the E.P. featuring 'Dio come ti amo' (1966) and 'Non ho l'età' (1964) went back up the charts and stayed there for almos 10 years.
'Nel cielo passano le nuvole che vanno verso il mare, sembrano fazzoletti bianchi che salutano il nostro amore... Dio come ti amo, non è possibile avere fra le braccia tanta felicità...' There goes the lyrics of such a melodic song that conquered so many million hearts all over the world...
magazine 'O Cruzeiro' 3rd February 1968, shows a lady waiting in front of a cinema showing 'Dio come ti amo'.
24 December 1967 - Italians also had their 'beach movies'. Actually Italians had twice as many beach-movies than Americans. Sometimes I think they shot those movies just to insert their summer hits in the sound-tracks. You would be watching these movies and listen to Rita Pavone, Edoardo Vianello, Bobby Solo, Adriano Celentano, you name-it in the background. 'Brotos ao sol' (Diciottenni al sole) was actually 5 years late for it was released in 1962. It had various rock hits on the sound track like Gianni Morandi's 'Go kart twist'.
8 January 1968 - the fatal year of 1968 starts all fine with 'Non stuzzicate la zanzara' (Não brinque com o mosquito) Do not tease the mosquito - Pavone rocks the screen again now with a little help from Giulietta Masina, Giancarlo Giannini & Peppino de Filippo. Even though the plot is inferior to 'Rita o mosquito', the musical numbers are more sophisticated.
8 February 1970 - this tear-jerker would never go away... 'Dio come ti amo' had been showing continuously around the country ever since it premiere on 26 July 1967.
19 April 1970 - 'Rome adventure' aka 'Candelabro Italiano' was back 7 years later. This travelogue had sparked an invasion of Italian pop music in Brazil back on 25 March 1963 spearhead by 'Al di là' sung by Emilio Pericoli. We were in 1970 but looking at the films playing it felt like 1963, 1965 and 1967.
OESP cinema columnist Rubem Biafora has second thoughts about 'Rome adventure' saying the flick had been mercileslly attacked by the 'pseudo-engagé' aka 'false vestal' intelligentsia but it was actually 'a beautiful ouvre' which had the merit to introduce lovely Suzanne Pleshette to the world.
24 December 1967 - Italians also had their 'beach movies'. Actually Italians had twice as many beach-movies than Americans. Sometimes I think they shot those movies just to insert their summer hits in the sound-tracks. You would be watching these movies and listen to Rita Pavone, Edoardo Vianello, Bobby Solo, Adriano Celentano, you name-it in the background. 'Brotos ao sol' (Diciottenni al sole) was actually 5 years late for it was released in 1962. It had various rock hits on the sound track like Gianni Morandi's 'Go kart twist'.
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8 January 1968 - the fatal year of 1968 starts all fine with 'Non stuzzicate la zanzara' (Não brinque com o mosquito) Do not tease the mosquito - Pavone rocks the screen again now with a little help from Giulietta Masina, Giancarlo Giannini & Peppino de Filippo. Even though the plot is inferior to 'Rita o mosquito', the musical numbers are more sophisticated.
RCA Italiana's 'Little Rita nel West'
15 July 1968 - Just when you thought it was safe to go the movies without having to be pestered by Django, Ringo, Sartana, Joe Dynamite etc. here comes 'Little Rita nel West' (Rita no West)...
Rita Pavone's 3rd movie in 13 months. It coincided with the spaghetti-western overkill. There were dozens of Italian westerns being shown at cinemas all around Brazil. 'Vou... mato e volto' (Vado, l'ammazzo e torno) that some Brazilians tongue-in-cheek called 'Vou no mato e volto' was one of the most popular so far.
14 July 1968 - 'Vado, ammazzo e volto' became 'Vou, mato e volto' or like people used to make fun of it: 'Vou no mato e volto' meaning: 'I will go into the bush and come back' really meaning 'I will take a shit and back'.
13 October 1968 - Even though Italian music was on the wane by 1968, Italian movies still reigned supreme, especially spaghetti-westerns, comedies and now the so-called musicarelli. Italian rock singer-cum-balladeer Gianni Morandi had a big hit in late 1964 with 'In ginocchio da te' which later became a hugely popular musicarello in Italy but it was never released here. Morandi's follow-up hit 'Non son degno di te' (Não mereço você or 'I'm not worth of you') was shot in 1965 and released here 3 years later when Fama Filmes realized after the receipts gained from 'Dio come ti amo' that there was a market for Italian tear-jerkers among Brazilian youth. Young Brazilians apparently didn't rock so much as they cried their eyes out hidden in the darkness of a movie-theatre. Actress Laura Efrikian was Gianni Morandi's wife when they shot both films.
The ad says: 'A mesma doçura! O mesmo encanto de 'Dio come ti amo'; which translates as: The same sweetness! The same loveliness of 'Dio come ti amo'... What to expect from a 'rock' movie which is called 'I'm not worth of you'?
13 October 1968 - Even though Italian music was on the wane by 1968, Italian movies still reigned supreme, especially spaghetti-westerns, comedies and now the so-called musicarelli. Italian rock singer-cum-balladeer Gianni Morandi had a big hit in late 1964 with 'In ginocchio da te' which later became a hugely popular musicarello in Italy but it was never released here. Morandi's follow-up hit 'Non son degno di te' (Não mereço você or 'I'm not worth of you') was shot in 1965 and released here 3 years later when Fama Filmes realized after the receipts gained from 'Dio come ti amo' that there was a market for Italian tear-jerkers among Brazilian youth. Young Brazilians apparently didn't rock so much as they cried their eyes out hidden in the darkness of a movie-theatre. Actress Laura Efrikian was Gianni Morandi's wife when they shot both films.
The ad says: 'A mesma doçura! O mesmo encanto de 'Dio come ti amo'; which translates as: The same sweetness! The same loveliness of 'Dio come ti amo'... What to expect from a 'rock' movie which is called 'I'm not worth of you'?
Gianni Morandi's 3rd film based on his hits: 1. 'In ginocchio da te' in 1964; 2. 'Non son degno di te' (1965); 3. 'Se non avessi più te' (1965) and 4. 'Mi vedrai tornare' in 1966, whidh in Brazil was titled 'Voltarei a teus braços' (I'll return to your arms).
29 December 1968 - and to finally close a tragic year for Democracy in Brazil - for on 13 December 1968 the Military Dictatorship that had abolished free-speech in the country issued the infamous AI-5 (Institutional Act no. 5) which plunged the country in complete darkness and backwardness. Well, to close 1968 which saw so many spaghetti-westerns how about 'Buckaroo' ('A Whinchester que não perdoa' or 'The Winchester that never forgives')!
4 January 1970 - It's hard to think an old timer like Claudio Villa could still draw crowds to the theatres to watch something like 'Non pensare a me' (Não pense em mim) the title of the song Mr. Villa won San Remo Festival in 1967; yes, the same Festival in which Luigi Tenco shot himself in the head because the felt he had been overlooked by the members of the jury. What a circus!
2nd November 1969 - Spanish director Miguel Iglesias' 'Dio come ti amo' became a phenomenon in Brazil. It would be playing somewhere somehow any time of the year since its release on 26 July 1967. So if you add the 22 weeks in 1967 plus 52 weeks in 1968 and 47 weeks in 1969 you will come to the staggering amount of 121 weeks of continuous showing of 'Dio come ti amo' in some cinema or other in the city.
29 December 1968 - and to finally close a tragic year for Democracy in Brazil - for on 13 December 1968 the Military Dictatorship that had abolished free-speech in the country issued the infamous AI-5 (Institutional Act no. 5) which plunged the country in complete darkness and backwardness. Well, to close 1968 which saw so many spaghetti-westerns how about 'Buckaroo' ('A Whinchester que não perdoa' or 'The Winchester that never forgives')!
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2nd November 1969 - Spanish director Miguel Iglesias' 'Dio come ti amo' became a phenomenon in Brazil. It would be playing somewhere somehow any time of the year since its release on 26 July 1967. So if you add the 22 weeks in 1967 plus 52 weeks in 1968 and 47 weeks in 1969 you will come to the staggering amount of 121 weeks of continuous showing of 'Dio come ti amo' in some cinema or other in the city.
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8 February 1970 - this tear-jerker would never go away... 'Dio come ti amo' had been showing continuously around the country ever since it premiere on 26 July 1967.
23 March 1970 - Brazilian actress Florinda Bolkan was the new sensation at the Italian cinema playing a lesbian in 'Una ragazza piuttosto complicata' translated as 'Momentos eroticos' (Erotic moments). Brazilians weren't sure if they loved or hated Miss Bolkan as they have a tendency to hate those who become successful abroad ever since Carmen Miranda became a sensation in Hollywood in the early 1940s. Brazilians wouldn't forgive Miss Miranda for having played 2nd fiddle to Alice Faye and having portrayed Latin Americans bombshells. Brazilians think they are WASPS (white-Anglo-Saxon-Protestants) so they hate to see themselves portrayed as 'dark-coloured-people-who-speak-English-with-a-heavy-accent'... Brazilians are a joke... a pitiful joke, actually.
19 April 1970 - 'Rome adventure' aka 'Candelabro Italiano' was back 7 years later. This travelogue had sparked an invasion of Italian pop music in Brazil back on 25 March 1963 spearhead by 'Al di là' sung by Emilio Pericoli. We were in 1970 but looking at the films playing it felt like 1963, 1965 and 1967.
OESP cinema columnist Rubem Biafora has second thoughts about 'Rome adventure' saying the flick had been mercileslly attacked by the 'pseudo-engagé' aka 'false vestal' intelligentsia but it was actually 'a beautiful ouvre' which had the merit to introduce lovely Suzanne Pleshette to the world.