American military personnel interact warily with a variety of Italian locals over a year and a half in the push north during the Italian Campaign of WWII as German forces make their retreat.American military personnel interact warily with a variety of Italian locals over a year and a half in the push north during the Italian Campaign of WWII as German forces make their retreat.American military personnel interact warily with a variety of Italian locals over a year and a half in the push north during the Italian Campaign of WWII as German forces make their retreat.
- Nominated for 1 Oscar
- 10 wins & 2 nominations total
- American Soldier (episode I: Sicilia)
- (as Leonard Penish)
- Joe - American MP (episode II: Napoli)
- (as Dots. M. Johnson)
- Pasquale (episode II: Napoli)
- (as Alfonsino)
- Harriet - Nurse (episode IV: Firenze)
- (as Harriet White)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThe monks in the fifth episode were authentic Franciscan monks from the Maiori convent, near Salerno.
- GoofsAt approximately 1:36 (2:05 version), during Episode V, as the American Army Catholic Chaplain stands in the center of the screen discussing his two associate Army Chaplains (Protestant and Jewish) with the monks, you can see two individuals standing in the doorway behind them (they appear to be the other two Army Chaplains). In less than a minute, they suddenly disappear.
- Quotes
Captain Bill Martin - the catholic chaplain (episode V: Appennino Emiliano): I've never examined their consciences. I've never discussed this with them. I've never asked them anything, because I never felt I could judge them. I know them too well. They're good friends. Perhaps you, here mind this peace, this atmosphere of serene meditation, consider me guilty. I don't feel guilty. My conscience is clear.
- Alternate versionsOriginally premiered at the Venice Film Festival on September 8, 1946 in a longer cut (running 134 minutes). Later cut to 125 minutes. The 134 min. cut has been restored from material found at the Bundesarchiv-Filmarchiv in Berlin, Germany and has premiered at the 55th Venice Film Festival in 1998.
- ConnectionsEdited into Secret Dossier of the Mafia (1970)
The on-location shooting was a plus, too. For people who have been to Firenze, Napoli, Sicilia, Roma, or any of the locations in this film, it is a stunning sight to see places you know crawling with Nazis and Allies struggling. It endows the movie with a sense of realism that it needs badly. It needs this realism because the acting is horrendous. Of course, the unskilled acting was supposed to convey more realism, but I think it detracts in actuality.
If you are interested in history or Italy during the World War, see this film. It is a good representation of what life was like then, but beware that not everything could be represented ... so it is not all-inclusive. It is a long film, but anyone with an interest will enjoy it immensely, I think.
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Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Languages
- Also known as
- Пайза
- Filming locations
- Uffizi Gallery, Florence, Tuscany, Italy(episode IV: Firenze)
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime2 hours
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1