A variety of different people, both adults, children, families, young lovers and youth gangs, spend a Sunday at the beach of Ostia outside Rome.A variety of different people, both adults, children, families, young lovers and youth gangs, spend a Sunday at the beach of Ostia outside Rome.A variety of different people, both adults, children, families, young lovers and youth gangs, spend a Sunday at the beach of Ostia outside Rome.
- Nominated for 1 BAFTA Award
- 2 wins & 1 nomination total
Elvi Lissiak
- Luciana
- (as Elvy Lissiak)
Jone Morino
- Mesmè
- (as Ione Morino)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaMarcello Mastroianni is dubbed by Alberto Sordi.
- ConnectionsEdited into Gli ultimi giorni dell'umanità (2022)
- SoundtracksDomenica d'agosto
Written by Nino Oliviero (as Oliviero) and Tito Manlio
Performed by Giacomo Rondinella
Featured review
Saw on YouTube August 4, 2019, i.e., a Sunday in August. I had never heard of this movie before YouTube announced it, and other than Marcello Mastroianni, the personnel, including director Luciano Emmer, all unfamiliar to me.
The camera work and cutting are superb. The YouTube print with subtitles was crystal clear.
The movie simply serves up a day at the beach, a day made up of multiple stories of the assorted beach goers. Emmer's direction may be described as neorealistic but accomplished with a touch considerably lighter than what is seen movies such as the nearby Umberto D (1951). This movie proves that neorealism does not reside entirely on the dark side.
It may be kinder and gentler, but the believability of the action is maintained at all times. I especially enjoyed the boy-meets-girl story featuring Anna Baldini, offering moments touching and plausible in about equal measure. Who knows, maybe some of the relatives of the Roman beach goers were on Coney Island during the time of the film's action, and if they were, the stories would have been hardly different, except for a forced detour around the minefield in "Domenica".
The movie's ancestors include "People on Sunday" (1930, original title Menschen am Sontag) directed by Siodmak, Ulmer, et al., as well as the many early silent films shot with the camera planted on the beach as people clothed from head to toe frolicked in grainy waves.
Strong recommendation.
The camera work and cutting are superb. The YouTube print with subtitles was crystal clear.
The movie simply serves up a day at the beach, a day made up of multiple stories of the assorted beach goers. Emmer's direction may be described as neorealistic but accomplished with a touch considerably lighter than what is seen movies such as the nearby Umberto D (1951). This movie proves that neorealism does not reside entirely on the dark side.
It may be kinder and gentler, but the believability of the action is maintained at all times. I especially enjoyed the boy-meets-girl story featuring Anna Baldini, offering moments touching and plausible in about equal measure. Who knows, maybe some of the relatives of the Roman beach goers were on Coney Island during the time of the film's action, and if they were, the stories would have been hardly different, except for a forced detour around the minefield in "Domenica".
The movie's ancestors include "People on Sunday" (1930, original title Menschen am Sontag) directed by Siodmak, Ulmer, et al., as well as the many early silent films shot with the camera planted on the beach as people clothed from head to toe frolicked in grainy waves.
Strong recommendation.
- markwood272
- Aug 4, 2019
- Permalink
- How long is Sunday in August?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Ein Sonntag im August
- Filming locations
- 17 Via Romagna, Rome, Lazio, Italy(Rosetta's masters house)
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime1 hour 28 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content