6/10
Extremely well made anti-war film
28 August 2010
Warning: Spoilers
Director Martin Ritt had reportedly disowned this sleeper. If true, that's perplexing because it's a well-made, exceptionally acted anti-war film. In WWII Yugoslavia, five women are accused by partisans of consorting with the enemy (in this case, callous Nazi stud Steve Forrest). Run out of town, the women trek through the countryside having one brutal encounter after another. Soon, they show their collective courage and rejoin their compadres. Silvana Mangano, Vera Miles, Jeanne Moreau, Barbara Bel Geddes and Carla Gravina are the women and while they're all fine, Mangano is the standout as the de-facto leader. Moreau is the lovelorn shop girl and Bel Geddes is a bitter widow. Miles finds herself in the most ironic spot...never having been with Forrest in the first place. Gravina, the youngest, is pregnant. Van Heflin is the lead partisan, first hell-bent on punishing the women, then, possibly, falling in love with the strong-willed Mangano. Richard Basehart is a captured German soldier and Harry Guardino is one of Heflin's hot headed cohorts. Ritt's direction is fine and the script is really unflinching. There are no happy endings. The cinematography is by the great Giuseppe Rotunno, who shot Visconti's ROCCO & HIS BROTHERS the same year.
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