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Rocco and His Brothers

Rocco and His Brothers (Italian: Rocco e i suoi fratelli) is a 1960 drama film directed by Luchino Visconti and starring Alain Delon, Annie Girardot, Renato Salvatori, Katina Paxinou, Roger Hanin, Paolo Stoppa, and Claudia Cardinale in one of her early roles. Set in 1960 Milan, it tells the story of a migrant family from southern Italy and its disintegration in the society of the industrial north.

Rocco and His Brothers
Italian theatrical release poster
ItalianRocco e i suoi fratelli
Directed byLuchino Visconti
Screenplay byLuchino Visconti
Suso Cecchi D'Amico
Pasquale Festa Campanile
Massimo Franciosa
Enrico Medioli
Story bySuso Cecchi d'Amico
Luchino Visconti
Vasco Pratolini
Based onIl ponte della Ghisolfa
by Giovanni Testori
Produced byGoffredo Lombardo
Starring
CinematographyGiuseppe Rotunno
Edited byMario Serandrei
Music byNino Rota
Production
company
Distributed by
Release dates
  • 6 September 1960 (1960-09-06) (Venice Film Festival)
  • 7 October 1960 (1960-10-07) (Italy)
  • 10 March 1961 (1961-03-10) (France)
Running time
177 minutes
Country
LanguageItalian
Box office
  • 2,173,480 admissions (France)[2]
  • $11,328 gross (Italy)[3]

The film's title is a combination of the title of Thomas Mann's novel Joseph and His Brothers and Rocco Scotellaro, an Italian poet who described the feelings of the peasants of southern Italy.[4] The screenplay, co-written by Visconti, is inspired by an episode from the novel Il ponte della Ghisolfa by Giovanni Testori.

A co-production between Italian studio Titanus and French production company Les Films Marceau,[1] Rocco and His Brothers suffered from multiple controversies and setbacks in its pre-release period.[5] It received a lukewarm response from Italian critics, but was more positively-received internationally, winning several accolades including the Special Jury Prize at the 21st Venice International Film Festival. Retrospective reviews were more positive, and the film is now highly-regarded in the canon of Italian cinema.[6]

Plot

After the death of his father, Rocco Parondi, one of the five sons of a poor rural Italian family, travels north from Lucania to join his older brother Vincenzo in Milan, led by the matriarch Rosaria. She is the "hand to which the five fingers belong," and she has a powerful influence on her sons. Presented in five distinct sections, the film weaves the story of the five brothers Vincenzo, Simone, Rocco, Ciro and Luca Parondi as each of them adapts to his new life in the city.

Vincenzo, the eldest brother, is already living in Milan when his mother and brothers come to join him expecting to move in with him. An initial scene ensues between the Parondi family and Vincenzo's fiancée Ginetta's family, and the whole Parondi family moves in together. Despite early friction between Rosaria and Ginetta, he soon gets married and starts a family of his own. After settling down, Vincenzo doesn't interact much with the Parondi brothers.

Simone, the second brother, struggles to adapt to urban life. He becomes attracted to a prostitute named Nadia, who urges him to pursue a career in boxing, which his mother also encourages, as a fast way to reach fame and wealth. Nadia, after initially pursuing Vincenzo only to find him happy in his new family life, turns her interest to Simone. Simone falls in love with Nadia and demands far more than a casual relationship, but she rejects him.

Rocco, the third brother, leaves to complete military service in Turin and meets Nadia, who has just been released from prison for prostitution. His innocence and purity of heart ignites her to give up her way of life and enter an exclusive relationship with him. When Simone learns of this, he attacks Nadia and Rocco with a gang of friends and rapes Nadia to "teach Rocco a lesson". Rocco subsequently sacrifices his relationship with Nadia, telling her that he did not realize how much their relationship hurt his brother. Rocco insists that Nadia return to Simone, and she reluctantly complies.

Ciro, the second-youngest brother, perhaps by observing the trials of Simone and Rocco, decides to learn from their mistakes and mimic his brother Vincenzo. Unlike Vincenzo, Ciro still lives with his mother and participates in family matters. To that end, Ciro finds steady work in Milan at an automobile factory and becomes engaged to a local woman from a good family.

Rocco often acts to preserve the well-being of family members at some cost to his own happiness. He continues a boxing career without enjoying it to provide for his family and he covers for Simone in a myriad of ways, such as returning an expensive brooch that Simone stole from Rocco's boss. After Simone loses the ability to compete as a boxer, because of his obsession with Nadia, his alcoholism, and dissolute lifestyle, Rocco agrees to sign a long term boxing contract in order to pay back money that Simone squandered and cannot repay. While Rocco fights and wins a championship bout, Simone kills Nadia in a jealous rage when she returns to prostitution and refuses to return to him.

As the family celebrates Rocco's victory, he shares an anecdote about masons, who, at the start of erecting a building, sacrifice a brick by throwing it into the shadow of the first passerby to ensure the structure will be sound and endure. Rocco's own habit of sacrificing his money and well-being can be likewise analogized, as attempts to preserve his family after their upheaval from country life. Simone arrives at the apartment and confesses to Nadia's murder. Despite his anguish, Rocco tries to protect Simone, but Ciro refuses to go along and leaves to turn Simone in to the police.

The youngest brother, Luca, does little but watch quietly in the background most of the time. By the end of the film he wants to return with Rocco to the south, despite spending the least time in southern Italy before the family moved to Milan. In one of the last scenes Ciro speaks to Luca outside his factory and tells him that Rocco won't return there, though he might, but will not find the south the same under the pressure of inevitable progress, and, though many people fear a changing world, he does not and believes that Luca will benefit from the changes.

Cast

Sources:[1]

Production

Rocco and His Brothers was filmed in Milan during the Spring of 1960. Locations included Piazza del Duomo, the Milan Cathedral, and the Milano Centrale railway station. Other scenes were shot in Rome, Bellagio, and Civitavecchia. Renato Salvatori (Simone) and Annie Girardot (Nadia) romantically eloped during filming, and married two years later.

The production was beset by multiple setbacks. Luchino Visconti was denied multiple filming permits to locations that had been previously approved, and production was shut down on the orders after provincial premier Adrio Casati learned that the climactic murder scene would be filmed in a large recreational area in Idroscalo.[5] Casati claimed it was due to an "inopportune resemblance to reality" of the scene to be shot to the recent murder of a young prostitute in the area. Visconti was forced to move shooting to Lazio, with the scene instead filmed at Lago di Fondi.

During post-production, Visconti re-dubbed and re-edited the film to change the characters' names from "Pafundi" to "Parondi." A local judge with the same name had threatened to sue the producers, under the mistaken belief that the film was about him.[5]

Reception

Box office

The film was the 27th most popular film of the year in France.[7] It sold 10,220,365 tickets in Italy.

Critical response

For The New York Times, Bosley Crowther, gave the film a positive review and appreciated the direction of the film and acting.

"A fine Italian film to stand alongside the American classic, The Grapes of Wrath, opened last night ...It is Luchino Visconti's Rocco and His Brothers (Rocco e i suoi fratelli), and it comes here garlanded with laurels that are quite as appropriate in this context as they are richly deserved...Signor Visconti has clearly conceived his film and that is what his brilliant handling of events and characters makes one feel. There's a blending of strong emotionalism and realism to such an extent that the margins of each become fuzzy and indistinguishable...Alain Delon as the sweet and loyal Rocco...is touchingly pliant and expressive, but it is Renato Salvatori...who fills the screen with the anguish of a tortured and stricken character. His raw and restless performance is overpowering and unforgettable...[and the] French actress Annie Girardot is likewise striking as the piteous prostitute..."[8]

Variety lauded the drama, and wrote "With all its faults, this is one of the top achievements of the year in Italy...Scripting shows numerous hands at work, yet all is pulled together by Visconti's dynamic and generally tasteful direction. Occasionally, as in the near-final revelation to the family of Simone's crime, the action gets out of hand and comes close to melodrama. Yet the impact of the main story line, aided by the sensitive, expertly guided playing of Alain Delon as Rocco, Annie Girardot as the prostitute, and Renato Salvatori as Simone, is great. Katina Paxinou at times is perfect, at others she is allowed to act too theatrically and off-key."[9]

Stanley Kauffmann of The New Republic wrote to him Rocco and His Brothers was "distended, sententious, ostentatiously frank, fundamentally trite, and thematically unsuccessful".[10]

Retrospective reviews

When the film was released in DVD format, critic Glenn Erickson wrote "A major pleasure of Rocco and His Brothers is simply seeing its portrait of life in working-class Milan in 1960. Beautifully directed in the housing projects and streets of the city, this is a prime example of a film which will accrue historical interest simply because it shows so much of how people lived and what places looked like (now) 40 years ago."[11]

Martin Scorsese lists the film on his "39 foreign films to see before you die."[12][13] Francis Ford Coppola cited Rocco and His Brothers as an inspiration for The Godfather (1972).[14][15] In 2008, Roger Ebert added Rocco to his Great Movies list.[16]

Censorship

On October 27, twenty days after the premiere, the film's release was blocked and the negative seized after Domenico Tardini, the Cardinal Secretary of State, requested that Italian officials take action against "certain destructive films". They demanded that four scenes, including the murder of Nadia, be cut or the film would be confiscated and the producer prosecuted. After negotiations, Goffredo Lombardo agreed to darken the critical scenes within the film with filters; two of these darkened scenes were later omitted entirely.[17] Visconti was never informed of these changes. The deleted scenes were later restored for home video releases.[5]

Awards and nominations

Award Year Category Nominee(s) Result
BAFTA Awards 1962 Best Film From Any Source Nominated
Best Foreign Actress Annie Girardot Nominated
Bodil Award 1962 Best European Film Luchino Visconti Won
Cahiers du Cinéma 1961 Top 10 List 4th place
David di Donatello 1961 Best Production Goffredo Lombardo Won
(tied with Dino De Laurentiis for Everybody Go Home)
Nastro d'Argento 1961 Best Director Luchino Visconti Won
Best Producer Goffredo Lombardo Nominated
Best Screenplay Luchino Visconti, Pasquale Festa Campanile, Suso Cecchi d'Amico, Enrico Medioli Won
Best Story Luchino Visconti, Vasco Pratolini, Suso Cecchi d'Amico Nominated
Best Supporting Actor Paolo Stoppa Nominated
Best Cinematography (B&W) Giuseppe Rotunno Won
Best Production Design Mario Garbuglia Nominated
Best Costume Design Piero Tosi Nominated
Sant Jordi Award 1962 Best Film of the Year Luchino Visconti Nominated
Best Foreign Actress Annie Girardot Won
Venice Film Festival 1960 Golden Lion Luchino Visconti Nominated
Special Jury Prize Won
FIPRESCI Prize Won

In popular culture

The German artist collective Rocco und seine Brüder[18] take their name from the film.

References

  1. ^ a b c d "ROCCO E I SUOI FRATELLI (1960)". BFI. Retrieved 2021-11-10.
  2. ^ "Box Office information for Rocco and His Brothers". Box Office Story.
  3. ^ . Archived from the original on 2015-02-20. Retrieved 2015-02-20.
  4. ^ Henry Bacon, Visconti: Explorations of Beauty and Decay, Cambridge University Press, 1998, p.105
  5. ^ a b c d "Rocco and His Brothers". Cineaste Magazine. Retrieved 2021-11-10.
  6. ^ "Rocco e i suoi fratelli – Rete degli Spettatori" (in Italian). Retrieved 2021-11-10.
  7. ^ French box office for 1961 at Box Office Story
  8. ^ Crowther, Bosley. The New York Times, film review, January 28, 1961. Last accessed: December 31, 2007.
  9. ^ Variety. Film review, September 6, 1960. Last accessed: December 31, 2007.
  10. ^ Kauffmann, Stanley (1966). A world on Film. Delta Books. p. 329.
  11. ^ Erikson, Eric. DVD Savant, DVD/film review, November 11, 2001. Last accessed: December 2, 2009.
  12. ^ Crow, Jonathan (2014-10-15). "Martin Scorsese Creates a List of 39 Essential Foreign Films for a Young Filmmaker". Open Culture. Retrieved 2023-03-26.
  13. ^ "Martin Scorsese on Visconti's Rocco and His Brothers". www.film-foundation.org. Retrieved 2021-11-11.
  14. ^ "Rocco and His Brothers". NW Film Center. 2016-09-06. Retrieved 2021-11-10.
  15. ^ "Rocco and His Brothers". Oklahoma City Museum of Art | OKCMOA. 2016-05-12. Retrieved 2021-11-10.
  16. ^ Ebert, Roger. Rocco and His Brothers Movie Review, January 12, 2008. Last accessed: August 26, 2017.
  17. ^ Henry Bacon, Visconti: Explorations of Beauty and Decay, Cambridge University Press, 1998, p. 102-103
  18. ^ "Rocco und seine Brüder Ausstellung in München". Kunstlabor 2 (in German). Retrieved 2023-03-26.

External links

rocco, brothers, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, august, 20. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Rocco and His Brothers news newspapers books scholar JSTOR August 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message Rocco and His Brothers Italian Rocco e i suoi fratelli is a 1960 drama film directed by Luchino Visconti and starring Alain Delon Annie Girardot Renato Salvatori Katina Paxinou Roger Hanin Paolo Stoppa and Claudia Cardinale in one of her early roles Set in 1960 Milan it tells the story of a migrant family from southern Italy and its disintegration in the society of the industrial north Rocco and His BrothersItalian theatrical release posterItalianRocco e i suoi fratelliDirected byLuchino ViscontiScreenplay byLuchino ViscontiSuso Cecchi D AmicoPasquale Festa CampanileMassimo FranciosaEnrico MedioliStory bySuso Cecchi d AmicoLuchino ViscontiVasco PratoliniBased onIl ponte della Ghisolfaby Giovanni TestoriProduced byGoffredo LombardoStarringAlain DelonAnnie GirardotRenato SalvatoriKatina PaxinouRoger HaninSpiros FocasPaolo StoppaSuzy DelairClaudia CardinaleCinematographyGiuseppe RotunnoEdited byMario SerandreiMusic byNino RotaProductioncompanyTitanusLes Films MarceauDistributed byTitanus Italy Marceau Cocinor France Release dates6 September 1960 1960 09 06 Venice Film Festival 7 October 1960 1960 10 07 Italy 10 March 1961 1961 03 10 France Running time177 minutesCountryItaly 1 France 1 LanguageItalianBox office2 173 480 admissions France 2 11 328 gross Italy 3 The film s title is a combination of the title of Thomas Mann s novel Joseph and His Brothers and Rocco Scotellaro an Italian poet who described the feelings of the peasants of southern Italy 4 The screenplay co written by Visconti is inspired by an episode from the novel Il ponte della Ghisolfa by Giovanni Testori A co production between Italian studio Titanus and French production company Les Films Marceau 1 Rocco and His Brothers suffered from multiple controversies and setbacks in its pre release period 5 It received a lukewarm response from Italian critics but was more positively received internationally winning several accolades including the Special Jury Prize at the 21st Venice International Film Festival Retrospective reviews were more positive and the film is now highly regarded in the canon of Italian cinema 6 Contents 1 Plot 2 Cast 3 Production 4 Reception 4 1 Box office 4 2 Critical response 4 3 Retrospective reviews 4 4 Censorship 5 Awards and nominations 6 In popular culture 7 References 8 External linksPlot EditAfter the death of his father Rocco Parondi one of the five sons of a poor rural Italian family travels north from Lucania to join his older brother Vincenzo in Milan led by the matriarch Rosaria She is the hand to which the five fingers belong and she has a powerful influence on her sons Presented in five distinct sections the film weaves the story of the five brothers Vincenzo Simone Rocco Ciro and Luca Parondi as each of them adapts to his new life in the city Vincenzo the eldest brother is already living in Milan when his mother and brothers come to join him expecting to move in with him An initial scene ensues between the Parondi family and Vincenzo s fiancee Ginetta s family and the whole Parondi family moves in together Despite early friction between Rosaria and Ginetta he soon gets married and starts a family of his own After settling down Vincenzo doesn t interact much with the Parondi brothers Simone the second brother struggles to adapt to urban life He becomes attracted to a prostitute named Nadia who urges him to pursue a career in boxing which his mother also encourages as a fast way to reach fame and wealth Nadia after initially pursuing Vincenzo only to find him happy in his new family life turns her interest to Simone Simone falls in love with Nadia and demands far more than a casual relationship but she rejects him Rocco the third brother leaves to complete military service in Turin and meets Nadia who has just been released from prison for prostitution His innocence and purity of heart ignites her to give up her way of life and enter an exclusive relationship with him When Simone learns of this he attacks Nadia and Rocco with a gang of friends and rapes Nadia to teach Rocco a lesson Rocco subsequently sacrifices his relationship with Nadia telling her that he did not realize how much their relationship hurt his brother Rocco insists that Nadia return to Simone and she reluctantly complies Ciro the second youngest brother perhaps by observing the trials of Simone and Rocco decides to learn from their mistakes and mimic his brother Vincenzo Unlike Vincenzo Ciro still lives with his mother and participates in family matters To that end Ciro finds steady work in Milan at an automobile factory and becomes engaged to a local woman from a good family Rocco often acts to preserve the well being of family members at some cost to his own happiness He continues a boxing career without enjoying it to provide for his family and he covers for Simone in a myriad of ways such as returning an expensive brooch that Simone stole from Rocco s boss After Simone loses the ability to compete as a boxer because of his obsession with Nadia his alcoholism and dissolute lifestyle Rocco agrees to sign a long term boxing contract in order to pay back money that Simone squandered and cannot repay While Rocco fights and wins a championship bout Simone kills Nadia in a jealous rage when she returns to prostitution and refuses to return to him As the family celebrates Rocco s victory he shares an anecdote about masons who at the start of erecting a building sacrifice a brick by throwing it into the shadow of the first passerby to ensure the structure will be sound and endure Rocco s own habit of sacrificing his money and well being can be likewise analogized as attempts to preserve his family after their upheaval from country life Simone arrives at the apartment and confesses to Nadia s murder Despite his anguish Rocco tries to protect Simone but Ciro refuses to go along and leaves to turn Simone in to the police The youngest brother Luca does little but watch quietly in the background most of the time By the end of the film he wants to return with Rocco to the south despite spending the least time in southern Italy before the family moved to Milan In one of the last scenes Ciro speaks to Luca outside his factory and tells him that Rocco won t return there though he might but will not find the south the same under the pressure of inevitable progress and though many people fear a changing world he does not and believes that Luca will benefit from the changes Cast EditAlain Delon as Rocco Parondi Annie Girardot as Nadia Renato Salvatori as Simone Parondi Katina Paxinou as Rosaria Parondi Roger Hanin as Duilio Morini Spiros Focas as Vincenzo Parondi Claudia Cardinale as Ginetta Vincenzo s fiancee Paolo Stoppa as Tonino Cerri Max Cartier fr as Ciro Parondi Rocco Vidolazzi as Luca Parondi Alessandra Panaro as Franca Ciro s fiancee Suzy Delair as Luisa Claudia Mori as Raffaella Adriana Asti as Giannina Nino Castelnuovo as Nino Rossi Corrado Pani as Ivo Renato Terra as Alfredo Ginetta s brother Biagio Gambini it as Renzo Enzo Fiermonte as a boxer Sources 1 Production EditRocco and His Brothers was filmed in Milan during the Spring of 1960 Locations included Piazza del Duomo the Milan Cathedral and the Milano Centrale railway station Other scenes were shot in Rome Bellagio and Civitavecchia Renato Salvatori Simone and Annie Girardot Nadia romantically eloped during filming and married two years later The production was beset by multiple setbacks Luchino Visconti was denied multiple filming permits to locations that had been previously approved and production was shut down on the orders after provincial premier Adrio Casati learned that the climactic murder scene would be filmed in a large recreational area in Idroscalo 5 Casati claimed it was due to an inopportune resemblance to reality of the scene to be shot to the recent murder of a young prostitute in the area Visconti was forced to move shooting to Lazio with the scene instead filmed at Lago di Fondi During post production Visconti re dubbed and re edited the film to change the characters names from Pafundi to Parondi A local judge with the same name had threatened to sue the producers under the mistaken belief that the film was about him 5 Reception EditBox office Edit The film was the 27th most popular film of the year in France 7 It sold 10 220 365 tickets in Italy Critical response Edit For The New York Times Bosley Crowther gave the film a positive review and appreciated the direction of the film and acting A fine Italian film to stand alongside the American classic The Grapes of Wrath opened last night It is Luchino Visconti s Rocco and His Brothers Rocco e i suoi fratelli and it comes here garlanded with laurels that are quite as appropriate in this context as they are richly deserved Signor Visconti has clearly conceived his film and that is what his brilliant handling of events and characters makes one feel There s a blending of strong emotionalism and realism to such an extent that the margins of each become fuzzy and indistinguishable Alain Delon as the sweet and loyal Rocco is touchingly pliant and expressive but it is Renato Salvatori who fills the screen with the anguish of a tortured and stricken character His raw and restless performance is overpowering and unforgettable and the French actress Annie Girardot is likewise striking as the piteous prostitute 8 Variety lauded the drama and wrote With all its faults this is one of the top achievements of the year in Italy Scripting shows numerous hands at work yet all is pulled together by Visconti s dynamic and generally tasteful direction Occasionally as in the near final revelation to the family of Simone s crime the action gets out of hand and comes close to melodrama Yet the impact of the main story line aided by the sensitive expertly guided playing of Alain Delon as Rocco Annie Girardot as the prostitute and Renato Salvatori as Simone is great Katina Paxinou at times is perfect at others she is allowed to act too theatrically and off key 9 Stanley Kauffmann of The New Republic wrote to him Rocco and His Brothers was distended sententious ostentatiously frank fundamentally trite and thematically unsuccessful 10 Retrospective reviews Edit When the film was released in DVD format critic Glenn Erickson wrote A major pleasure of Rocco and His Brothers is simply seeing its portrait of life in working class Milan in 1960 Beautifully directed in the housing projects and streets of the city this is a prime example of a film which will accrue historical interest simply because it shows so much of how people lived and what places looked like now 40 years ago 11 Martin Scorsese lists the film on his 39 foreign films to see before you die 12 13 Francis Ford Coppola cited Rocco and His Brothers as an inspiration for The Godfather 1972 14 15 In 2008 Roger Ebert added Rocco to his Great Movies list 16 Censorship Edit On October 27 twenty days after the premiere the film s release was blocked and the negative seized after Domenico Tardini the Cardinal Secretary of State requested that Italian officials take action against certain destructive films They demanded that four scenes including the murder of Nadia be cut or the film would be confiscated and the producer prosecuted After negotiations Goffredo Lombardo agreed to darken the critical scenes within the film with filters two of these darkened scenes were later omitted entirely 17 Visconti was never informed of these changes The deleted scenes were later restored for home video releases 5 Awards and nominations EditAward Year Category Nominee s ResultBAFTA Awards 1962 Best Film From Any Source NominatedBest Foreign Actress Annie Girardot NominatedBodil Award 1962 Best European Film Luchino Visconti WonCahiers du Cinema 1961 Top 10 List 4th placeDavid di Donatello 1961 Best Production Goffredo Lombardo Won tied with Dino De Laurentiis for Everybody Go Home Nastro d Argento 1961 Best Director Luchino Visconti WonBest Producer Goffredo Lombardo NominatedBest Screenplay Luchino Visconti Pasquale Festa Campanile Suso Cecchi d Amico Enrico Medioli WonBest Story Luchino Visconti Vasco Pratolini Suso Cecchi d Amico NominatedBest Supporting Actor Paolo Stoppa NominatedBest Cinematography B amp W Giuseppe Rotunno WonBest Production Design Mario Garbuglia NominatedBest Costume Design Piero Tosi NominatedSant Jordi Award 1962 Best Film of the Year Luchino Visconti NominatedBest Foreign Actress Annie Girardot WonVenice Film Festival 1960 Golden Lion Luchino Visconti NominatedSpecial Jury Prize WonFIPRESCI Prize WonIn popular culture EditThe German artist collective Rocco und seine Bruder 18 take their name from the film References Edit a b c d ROCCO E I SUOI FRATELLI 1960 BFI Retrieved 2021 11 10 Box Office information for Rocco and His Brothers Box Office Story Rocco e i suoi fratelli 1960 Re Archived from the original on 2015 02 20 Retrieved 2015 02 20 Henry Bacon Visconti Explorations of Beauty and Decay Cambridge University Press 1998 p 105 a b c d Rocco and His Brothers Cineaste Magazine Retrieved 2021 11 10 Rocco e i suoi fratelli Rete degli Spettatori in Italian Retrieved 2021 11 10 French box office for 1961 at Box Office Story Crowther Bosley The New York Times film review January 28 1961 Last accessed December 31 2007 Variety Film review September 6 1960 Last accessed December 31 2007 Kauffmann Stanley 1966 A world on Film Delta Books p 329 Erikson Eric DVD Savant DVD film review November 11 2001 Last accessed December 2 2009 Crow Jonathan 2014 10 15 Martin Scorsese Creates a List of 39 Essential Foreign Films for a Young Filmmaker Open Culture Retrieved 2023 03 26 Martin Scorsese on Visconti s Rocco and His Brothers www film foundation org Retrieved 2021 11 11 Rocco and His Brothers NW Film Center 2016 09 06 Retrieved 2021 11 10 Rocco and His Brothers Oklahoma City Museum of Art OKCMOA 2016 05 12 Retrieved 2021 11 10 Ebert Roger Rocco and His Brothers Movie Review January 12 2008 Last accessed August 26 2017 Henry Bacon Visconti Explorations of Beauty and Decay Cambridge University Press 1998 p 102 103 Rocco und seine Bruder Ausstellung in Munchen Kunstlabor 2 in German Retrieved 2023 03 26 External links EditRocco and His Brothers at IMDb Rocco and His Brothers at the TCM Movie Database Rocco and His Brothers at AllMovie Rocco and His Brothers at Rotten Tomatoes Rocco and His Brothers at DVD Beaver includes images Rocco and His Brothers trailer on YouTube Palestra Visconti permanent dead link one of the movie s location in Milan Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Rocco and His Brothers amp oldid 1146720698, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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