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Nights of Cabiria

Le notti di Cabiria

  • Status: Released
  • 03-10-1957
  • Runtime: 110 min
  • Score: 7.981
  • Vote count: 772

Rome, 1957. A woman, Cabiria, is robbed and left to drown by her boyfriend, Giorgio. Rescued, she resumes her life and tries her best to find happiness in a cynical world. Even when she thinks her struggles are over and she has found happiness and contentment, things may not be what they seem.

Giulietta Masina

Maria 'Cabiria' Ceccarelli

François Périer

Oscar D'Onofrio

Franca Marzi

Wanda

Amedeo Nazzari

Alberto Lazzari

Aldo Silvani

The wizard

Dorian Gray

Jessy

Ennio Girolami

Amleto, 'il magnaccia'

Mario Passante

Uncle of Amleto

Franco Balducci

Spectator on the Stage of the Cinema (uncredited)

Ciccio Barbi

Man on the Stage (uncredited)

Luciano Bonanni

Man in Black Suit at the Edge of the River (uncredited)

Leo Catozzo

Man with the Sack (uncredited)

Mimmo Poli

Man Eating in the Nightclub (uncredited)

Dominique Delouche

Priest with the Flag (uncredited)

Franco Fabrizi

Giorgio (uncredited)

Sandro Moretti

Un papponcello (uncredited)

Polidor

Friar (uncredited)

María Luisa Rolando

Marisa (uncredited)

Gianni Baghino

(uncredited)

Riccardo Fellini

(uncredited)

Nino Milano

(uncredited)

Sergio Parlato

(uncredited)

Christian Tassou

Loretta Capitoli

Edda Evangelista

Ines Ferrari

Lina Ferri

CinemaSerf

This is a superb vehicle for a very much on-form Giulietta Masina in the title role. She is a lady of the night whom we see, right at the start, being shoved into the river by her robber boyfriend and left to drown. Rescued thanks to an alert local urchin and a few locals. she is shaken but largely undeterred! From now on, we follow her on her continuing escapades as she defiantly refuses to give up on love. She thinks she has lucked out with a champagne and caviar film actor, but is soon further disillusioned and it is only a chance encounter with the rather unassuming "D'Onofrio" (François Périer) who had admired her on stage one evening, that things might - just might - offer our wandering spirit that which her heart desires most. Fellini uses the still largely war-torn streets of Rome as an effective backdrop to this most human of stories, and the writing allows Miss Masina to deliver her quick-fire, frequently comical (and always unerringly optimistic) dialogue expertly. She is very much in her element as the story develops. There is an air of cynicism to the whole thing, but somehow her character manages to punch through it - and that's what made this entertaining for me. It could have been just a procedural and predictable drama, but it isn't. There are no certainties with the plot. Indeed, the only certainty is that she is never going to give up! The supporting cast deliver really effectively - either as characters with a direct bearing on her life ("Wanda" (Franca Marzi) for example) or as a means for the audience to recalibrate and come up for air for a moment or two. It's an emotional film, but not a sentimental one - and I really enjoyed it