Violent Summer
Brief Synopsis
During 1943, some idle rich young Italians spend their summer at a resort engaging in various love affairs, but soon cannot ignore the World War that is encroaching upon them.
Cast & Crew
Read More
Valerio Zurlini
Director
Eleonora Rossi Drago
Roberta Parmesa
Jean-louis Trintignant
Carlo Romanazzi
Jacqueline Sassard
Rossana
Lilla Brignone
Signora Raluisa
Federica Ranchi
Maddalena
Film Details
Also Known As
Estate Violenta
Genre
Drama
Romance
War
Release Date
1960
Technical Specs
Duration
1h 47m
Sound
Mono
Color
Black and White
Theatrical Aspect Ratio
1.37 : 1
Synopsis
During 1943, some idle rich young Italians spend their summer at a resort engaging in various love affairs, but soon cannot ignore the World War that is encroaching upon them.
Director
Valerio Zurlini
Director
Film Details
Also Known As
Estate Violenta
Genre
Drama
Romance
War
Release Date
1960
Technical Specs
Duration
1h 47m
Sound
Mono
Color
Black and White
Theatrical Aspect Ratio
1.37 : 1
Articles
The Valerio Zurlini Box Set: The Early Masterpieces on DVD
Although the offering is called a Box Set, it comes in a normal keep case.
Violent Summer (Estate violenta)
Synopsis: Riccione, Italy, 1943. A group of affluent young people waits out the war by partying on the beach. Among them is Carlo Caremoli (Jean-Louis Tringtignant), who has so far evaded the draft through the influence of his father (Enrico Maria Salerno) is a fascist appointee. Carlo is first attracted to lovely Rosanna (Jacqueline Sassard of Accident) but finds himself drawn to Roberta (Eleonora Rossi Drago), a war widow ten years older than he, who has a young daughter. Roberta resists but is unable to stop a relationship from forming. The fascists fall and the war still goes on. With his father now absent Carlo's draft deferment expires and his relationship with Roberta is in doubt ... although she's now willing, if need be, to leave her family to be with him.
Violent Summer is an intense romance with a war background. The allies have already landed in the south and much of the country is in turmoil, but Carlo's friends have time for parties and even boating jaunts, provided they stay out of the way of the coast guard. We see some captured Englishmen brought ashore in the beginning, but for the next hour the war is only felt through worried relatives and a few displaced persons. Nobody discusses politics, only inconvenience. We wonder if Carlo's young friends are also being shielded from the war by a corrupt parent. But the script by Suso Cecchi d'Amico and Giorgio Prosperi refuses to judge Carlo for trying to avoid the army.
Instead Zurlini concentrates on Carlo's careful courting of the young war widow. Roberta's mother (Lilla Brignone) expects her to act like a proper wife with a child. The presence of Maddelena (Frederica Franchi), the sister of Roberta's dead husband, is a constant reminder of her obligations. Roberta secretly wants to break free, and Carlo is more than enough temptation. She can't maintain her distance when Maddalena involves her in the group activities. Young Rosanna isn't happy when Carlo's attentions shift to the older woman. In a particularly effective scene, Carlo takes his friends to his house to listen to the black-market American records he claims to have bought in Switzerland. A slow dance to the song Temptation changes Roberta's mind for her.
Valerio's film isn't perfect -- the women's hairstyles and dresses look too modern -- but every scene generates an intense you-are-there atmosphere. We track the characters' movements and expressions, looking for emotional clues not carried in the dialogue. It's very effective filmmaking and a steamy romance under unusual conditions.
Carlo suddenly becomes homeless when the new government requisitions all of the properties belonging to his father, a bully who shaves his head to better resemble Il Duce. His secure life overturned, Carlo is drawn even more passionately to Roberta.
The story is nearly over before we see Germans in uniform, a reminder that the seaside enclave of Riccione is an anomaly of a country turned upside-down by war. Roberta and Carlo are suddenly on a train to Bologna, unsure whether he will re-register for the draft, or if they will try to run away together. Roberta has left her child behind and told no one where she's going. The lovers are exchanging passionate oaths when their train enters a switchyard just as an allied air raid begins. The war that has been so distant has suddenly arrived.
Zurlini's handling of his drama is masterful. The first third is a subdued Beach Party picture and the second an emotionally charged love affair. The B&W photography expresses a wide selection of moods, as when Carlo turns his darkened house into a moonlit dance floor by slowly opening several garden doors. The lovers embrace on a pre-dawn beach, where they can indulge the illusion that the outside world can't touch them. When the air raid scene comes, it's large-scale and frighteningly realistic -- Zurlini's effects men definitely knew what the real thing was like. Eleanora Rossi Drago and Jean-Louis Trintignant are compelling romantic leads -- Trintignant is actually a lot more appealing here than he is in his later international hit A Man and a Woman.
NoShame's disc of Violent Summer is a beautiful transfer of this flat B&W film from 1959. Both pictures were mastered in Hi-Def. Mario Nascimbene's symphonic score is free of distortion.
The NoShame label presents a number of featurettes, unbroken monologues by notables who worked on the film or knew Valerio Zurlini. Violent Summer has pieces with assistant director Florestano Vancini, lyricist Riccardo Pazzaglia, actress Eleonora Giorgi and director Giuliano Montaldo. The first-person reminiscences and endorsements vary in length but are wordy and unfocused. One speaker tells us about Zurlini's career and proceeds to read from a list of movie titles.
Girl with a Suitcase (La Ragazza con la valigia)
Valerio Zurlini's next film leaps to widescreen and scores a casting coup with the knockout beauty Claudia Cardinale near the beginning of her career. It's a provocative but dignified Italian drama co-starring Jacques Perrin, noted actor ("Z") and later producer (Winged Migration).
Synopsis: Young cad Marcello Mainardi (Corrado Pani) callously ditches his latest girlfriend, singer Aida (Claudia Cardinale), and then instructs his younger brother Lorenzo (Jacques Perrin) to brush her off when she comes looking for him at their parents' house. Encouraged by his priest-tutor (Romolo Valli) to be virtuous, the sincere 16 year-old helps the beautiful young woman, eventually stealing his mother's money to get Aida a hotel room. Lorenzo tags along and discovers that businessmen at the hotel consider Aida an easy pickup. He suffers as he watches an old boyfriend (Gian Maria Volanté) bully and abuse her at a café. Aida too is saddened -- Lorenzo is simply too young for her, but his gentlemanly valor is impossible not to love.
Someday the world should try to do without "coming of age" movies about young boys initiated into the world of sex by hot young women. It didn't work in the "sensitive" Summer of '42 any better than it works in the trashy subgenre that began with Jacqueline Bisset in The First Time in 1969. Beautiful young models don't habitually seek out adolescent boys to deflower; either that or this reviewer missed out on something. Girl With a Suitcase offers plenty of opportunities for exploitative or trashy scenes but Zurlini chooses to build a relationship instead.
Girl With a Suitcase is a serious film about good people in an impossible situation. Young Lorenzo is smitten by Aida, but the match is not a good one ... if they were caught together she'd probably be arrested. She's a decent girl having a rough time in a cabaret world where too many men expect too much for a meal and some empty promises. When she's without funds, all she need do is appear in a hotel lobby and someone will invite her to dinner. Lorenzo's selfish brother has more likely than not seduced her with a pack of romantic lies. He's such a cad that he introduced himself with a false name in preparation for leaving her flat. The other men in her life are older boyfriends with harsh demands, or new candidates with big ideas and fast tongues.
Because Lorenzo is so young the situation is more delicate than the romance in Violent Summer. Lorenzo and Aida quickly earn our sympathy. His mother normally keeps him on a short leash, and he's so lovesick that he forgets all of his responsibilities. Lorenzo is acutely aware of a need to do the right thing, which makes him into a prince in Aida's eyes. They share just one kiss and an embrace, and we feel their desperate hopelessness.
Watching Claudia Cardinale bloom on-screen is a visual pleasure in itself. She's possibly the most arresting new Italian actress of the 60s, and there are moments in which she dominates a scene with just a smile or a look. Zurlini makes her a part of the atmosphere of train stations, hotels and other ordinary settings in Lorenzo's beach town.
Future Sergio Leone star Gian Maria Volonté is good as the previous boyfriend. We don't hear his cruel demands but from Aida's reaction they must be terrible. Lorenzo challenges yet another would-be one-night stand twice as big as himself, with the expected result that he earns a beating and more sympathy from Aida. A surprisingly good scene involves Lorenzo's tutor, a priest played by Romolo Valli (Duck, You Sucker): He calls Aida aside to ask her to leave Lorenzo alone, and instead ends up offering her sincere advice.
Zurlini and his writers do not place the blame for Aida and Lorenzo's problems on adults or society in general. They're presented as responsible individuals and not generic victims, and accept the consequences of their actions. Girl With a Suitcase is an emotionally satisfying experience.
NoShame's DVD of Girl with a Suitcase presents Zurlini's film in a beautiful enhanced transfer from the original elements. The B&W image is sharp and well defined. The lively soundtrack occasionally uses pop tunes as an aural backdrop, in a style we associate with the later films of Sergio Leone. Lorenzo agonizes as he watches Aida with other men, while a novelty song is fore-grounded on the soundtrack: "Mai Mai Mai Più" -- "Never never never again."
The extras are more of the same unedited interview testimony. Assistant director Piero Schivazappa, screenwriter Piero De Bernard, Bruno Torri and producer Mario Gallo talk at length. The Restoration of Girl With A Suitcase compares the opening scene with a poor transfer from an earlier disc release. A poster and still gallery finish off the set. The case contains a fat booklet with liner notes and talent bios written by NoShame regular Richard Harland Smith with an assist from Chris D. As with all of NoShame's quality releases, both of these presentations have removable Italian subtitles.
For more information about The Valerio Zurlini Box Set, visit NoShame Films. To order The Valerio Zurlini Box Set, go to TCM Shopping.
by Glenn Erickson
The Valerio Zurlini Box Set: The Early Masterpieces on DVD
NoShame devotes this DVD double bill to a pair of artful dramas
from Valerio Zurlini, an accomplished Italian director who made
popular films but never a breakthrough international success. At
the same time that media attention was focused on the French New
Wave, Zurlini made these two absorbing character studies that
share the theme of an older woman falling in love with a younger
man, but beyond that are quite different. Zurlini seems to have
been passed over in the adulation handed out to his
contemporaries, probably because his films do not invite
intellectual analysis.
Although the offering is called a Box Set, it comes in a normal
keep case.
Violent Summer (Estate violenta)
Synopsis: Riccione, Italy, 1943. A group of affluent young
people waits out the war by partying on the beach. Among them is
Carlo Caremoli (Jean-Louis Tringtignant), who has so far evaded
the draft through the influence of his father (Enrico Maria
Salerno) is a fascist appointee. Carlo is first attracted to
lovely Rosanna (Jacqueline Sassard of Accident) but finds
himself drawn to Roberta (Eleonora Rossi Drago), a war widow ten
years older than he, who has a young daughter. Roberta resists
but is unable to stop a relationship from forming. The fascists
fall and the war still goes on. With his father now absent
Carlo's draft deferment expires and his relationship with
Roberta is in doubt ... although she's now willing, if need be,
to leave her family to be with him.
Violent Summer is an intense romance with a war
background. The allies have already landed in the south and much
of the country is in turmoil, but Carlo's friends have time for
parties and even boating jaunts, provided they stay out of the
way of the coast guard. We see some captured Englishmen brought
ashore in the beginning, but for the next hour the war is only
felt through worried relatives and a few displaced persons.
Nobody discusses politics, only inconvenience. We wonder if
Carlo's young friends are also being shielded from the war by a
corrupt parent. But the script by Suso Cecchi d'Amico and
Giorgio Prosperi refuses to judge Carlo for trying to avoid the
army.
Instead Zurlini concentrates on Carlo's careful courting of the
young war widow. Roberta's mother (Lilla Brignone) expects her
to act like a proper wife with a child. The presence of
Maddelena (Frederica Franchi), the sister of Roberta's dead
husband, is a constant reminder of her obligations. Roberta
secretly wants to break free, and Carlo is more than enough
temptation. She can't maintain her distance when Maddalena
involves her in the group activities. Young Rosanna isn't happy
when Carlo's attentions shift to the older woman. In a
particularly effective scene, Carlo takes his friends to his
house to listen to the black-market American records he claims
to have bought in Switzerland. A slow dance to the song
Temptation changes Roberta's mind for her.
Valerio's film isn't perfect -- the women's hairstyles and
dresses look too modern -- but every scene generates an intense
you-are-there atmosphere. We track the characters' movements and
expressions, looking for emotional clues not carried in the
dialogue. It's very effective filmmaking and a steamy romance
under unusual conditions.
Carlo suddenly becomes homeless when the new government
requisitions all of the properties belonging to his father, a
bully who shaves his head to better resemble Il Duce. His
secure life overturned, Carlo is drawn even more passionately to
Roberta.
The story is nearly over before we see Germans in uniform, a
reminder that the seaside enclave of Riccione is an anomaly of a
country turned upside-down by war. Roberta and Carlo are
suddenly on a train to Bologna, unsure whether he will
re-register for the draft, or if they will try to run away
together. Roberta has left her child behind and told no one
where she's going. The lovers are exchanging passionate oaths
when their train enters a switchyard just as an allied air raid
begins. The war that has been so distant has suddenly
arrived.
Zurlini's handling of his drama is masterful. The first third is
a subdued Beach Party picture and the second an emotionally
charged love affair. The B&W photography expresses a wide
selection of moods, as when Carlo turns his darkened house into
a moonlit dance floor by slowly opening several garden doors.
The lovers embrace on a pre-dawn beach, where they can indulge
the illusion that the outside world can't touch them. When the
air raid scene comes, it's large-scale and frighteningly
realistic -- Zurlini's effects men definitely knew what the real
thing was like. Eleanora Rossi Drago and Jean-Louis Trintignant
are compelling romantic leads -- Trintignant is actually a lot
more appealing here than he is in his later international hit
A Man and a Woman.
NoShame's disc of Violent Summer is a beautiful transfer
of this flat B&W film from 1959. Both pictures were mastered in
Hi-Def. Mario Nascimbene's symphonic score is free of
distortion.
The NoShame label presents a number of featurettes, unbroken
monologues by notables who worked on the film or knew Valerio
Zurlini. Violent Summer has pieces with assistant
director Florestano Vancini, lyricist Riccardo Pazzaglia,
actress Eleonora Giorgi and director Giuliano Montaldo. The
first-person reminiscences and endorsements vary in length but
are wordy and unfocused. One speaker tells us about Zurlini's
career and proceeds to read from a list of movie titles.
Girl with a Suitcase (La Ragazza con la valigia)
Valerio Zurlini's next film leaps to widescreen and scores a
casting coup with the knockout beauty Claudia Cardinale near the
beginning of her career. It's a provocative but dignified
Italian drama co-starring Jacques Perrin, noted actor
("Z") and later producer (Winged
Migration).
Synopsis: Young cad Marcello Mainardi (Corrado Pani) callously
ditches his latest girlfriend, singer Aida (Claudia Cardinale),
and then instructs his younger brother Lorenzo (Jacques Perrin)
to brush her off when she comes looking for him at their
parents' house. Encouraged by his priest-tutor (Romolo Valli) to
be virtuous, the sincere 16 year-old helps the beautiful young
woman, eventually stealing his mother's money to get Aida a
hotel room. Lorenzo tags along and discovers that businessmen at
the hotel consider Aida an easy pickup. He suffers as he watches
an old boyfriend (Gian Maria Volanté) bully and abuse her
at a café. Aida too is saddened -- Lorenzo is simply too
young for her, but his gentlemanly valor is impossible not to
love.
Someday the world should try to do without "coming of age"
movies about young boys initiated into the world of sex by hot
young women. It didn't work in the "sensitive" Summer of
'42 any better than it works in the trashy subgenre that
began with Jacqueline Bisset in The First Time in 1969.
Beautiful young models don't habitually seek out adolescent boys
to deflower; either that or this reviewer missed out on
something. Girl With a Suitcase offers plenty of
opportunities for exploitative or trashy scenes but Zurlini
chooses to build a relationship instead.
Girl With a Suitcase is a serious film about good people
in an impossible situation. Young Lorenzo is smitten by Aida,
but the match is not a good one ... if they were caught together
she'd probably be arrested. She's a decent girl having a rough
time in a cabaret world where too many men expect too much for a
meal and some empty promises. When she's without funds, all she
need do is appear in a hotel lobby and someone will invite her
to dinner. Lorenzo's selfish brother has more likely than not
seduced her with a pack of romantic lies. He's such a cad that
he introduced himself with a false name in preparation for
leaving her flat. The other men in her life are older boyfriends
with harsh demands, or new candidates with big ideas and fast
tongues.
Because Lorenzo is so young the situation is more delicate than
the romance in Violent Summer. Lorenzo and Aida quickly
earn our sympathy. His mother normally keeps him on a short
leash, and he's so lovesick that he forgets all of his
responsibilities. Lorenzo is acutely aware of a need to do the
right thing, which makes him into a prince in Aida's eyes. They
share just one kiss and an embrace, and we feel their desperate
hopelessness.
Watching Claudia Cardinale bloom on-screen is a visual pleasure
in itself. She's possibly the most arresting new Italian actress
of the 60s, and there are moments in which she dominates a scene
with just a smile or a look. Zurlini makes her a part of the
atmosphere of train stations, hotels and other ordinary settings
in Lorenzo's beach town.
Future Sergio Leone star Gian Maria Volonté is good as
the previous boyfriend. We don't hear his cruel demands but from
Aida's reaction they must be terrible. Lorenzo challenges yet
another would-be one-night stand twice as big as himself, with
the expected result that he earns a beating and more sympathy
from Aida. A surprisingly good scene involves Lorenzo's tutor, a
priest played by Romolo Valli (Duck, You Sucker): He
calls Aida aside to ask her to leave Lorenzo alone, and instead
ends up offering her sincere advice.
Zurlini and his writers do not place the blame for Aida and
Lorenzo's problems on adults or society in general. They're
presented as responsible individuals and not generic victims,
and accept the consequences of their actions. Girl With a
Suitcase is an emotionally satisfying experience.
NoShame's DVD of Girl with a Suitcase presents Zurlini's
film in a beautiful enhanced transfer from the original
elements. The B&W image is sharp and well defined. The lively
soundtrack occasionally uses pop tunes as an aural backdrop, in
a style we associate with the later films of Sergio Leone.
Lorenzo agonizes as he watches Aida with other men, while a
novelty song is fore-grounded on the soundtrack: "Mai Mai Mai
Più" -- "Never never never again."
The extras are more of the same unedited interview testimony.
Assistant director Piero Schivazappa, screenwriter Piero De
Bernard, Bruno Torri and producer Mario Gallo talk at length.
The Restoration of Girl With A Suitcase compares the
opening scene with a poor transfer from an earlier disc release.
A poster and still gallery finish off the set. The case contains
a fat booklet with liner notes and talent bios written by
NoShame regular Richard Harland Smith with an assist from Chris
D. As with all of NoShame's quality releases, both of these
presentations have removable Italian subtitles.
For more information about The Valerio Zurlini Box Set,
visit NoShame
Films. To order The Valerio Zurlini Box Set, go to
TCM
Shopping.
by Glenn Erickson
Quotes
Trivia
Miscellaneous Notes
Released in Italy January 1960
Released in United States 1961
b&w
dialogue Italian
subtitled
Released in United States 1961
Released in Italy January 1960