One hundred years since the birth of Nino Manfredi, one hundred films he interpreted. In which the actor from Ciociaria gave life to very different characters: comical or dramatic, generous or abject, protective (don’t want Benigni, his remains the best Geppetto ever) or frightened. With a predilection for the characters of individuals beaten by life; even pathetic to chance, but never such as to inspire contempt, but rather compassion and solidarity. Like Stefano Liberati from Gaucho by Dino Risi, whom his friend Vittorio Gassman believes enriched in Argentina and instead finds humiliated and poor in the barrel. From the vast repertoire we are going to extract the “faces” of Nino that we prefer (as you can see, the titles are concentrated between the end of the 1960s and the following decade, the most fertile period of Manfredi’s career).
We loved each other so much (1974) by Ettore Scola
In the triad of male characters in Scola’s masterpiece, Manfredi embodies the most noble and coherent one: the porter Antonio, who remained faithful to the ideals of equality for which he fought during the Liberation. Paying the consequences. In the climate of post-war compromises, Antonio is discriminated against in hospital for his political militancy. He is also seen taking away Luciana, the girl he loves, from his cynical friend Gianni and takes a beating for her at the Trevi Fountain, during the filming of the Sweet life. The actor is perfect in the most positive “character” of the film, but also the synthesis of the disappointments of a generation.
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‘Pane e cioccolata’, his cult film for the 100th anniversary of Nino Manfredi