Seduced and Abandoned


1h 58m 1964
Seduced and Abandoned

Brief Synopsis

Hypocrisy dominates when a 15-year old girl is impregnated by her sister's fiance.

Film Details

Also Known As
Sedotta e abbandonata, Séduite et abandonnée
Genre
Comedy
Drama
Foreign
Release Date
Jan 1964
Premiere Information
New York opening: 15 Jul 1964
Production Company
C. C. F. Lux; Lux Film; Ultra Film; Vides
Distribution Company
Continental Distributing, Inc.
Country
France

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 58m
Sound
Mono
Color
Black and White

Synopsis

During the siesta in a Sicilian village, Peppino Califano seduces Agnese Ascalone, the 15-year-old sister of his fiancée, Matilde. Agnese becomes pregnant, whereupon her father, Vincenzo, ends Matilde's engagement to Peppino. Vincenzo finds a new fiancé for Matilde--the penniless Baron Rizieri--and tries to force Peppino to wed Agnese. Peppino perversely refuses to marry an unchaste girl and goes into seclusion. Vincenzo plans to have Peppino murdered, but Agnese warns the police. Peppino is ordered to marry the girl or go to prison for seducing a minor. He makes Agnese's family grovel for his assent and thereby turns Agnese against him so that she rejects him. The dishonored Agnese and her relatives are ridiculed in the streets by the villagers; the baron breaks his engagement to Matilde; Vincenzo has a heart attack; Matilde becomes a nun; and the baron attempts suicide. Vincenzo dies, but Agnese restores the family honor by finally agreeing to wed Peppino.

Film Details

Also Known As
Sedotta e abbandonata, Séduite et abandonnée
Genre
Comedy
Drama
Foreign
Release Date
Jan 1964
Premiere Information
New York opening: 15 Jul 1964
Production Company
C. C. F. Lux; Lux Film; Ultra Film; Vides
Distribution Company
Continental Distributing, Inc.
Country
France

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 58m
Sound
Mono
Color
Black and White

Articles

Seduced and Abandoned


Italian director Pietro Germi made over a dozen neorealist films before his dark comedy Divorce: Italian Style (1961), a film so successful that it became the first in a trilogy of comedies. It was followed by Seduced and Abandoned (1964) and the anthology film, The Birds, the Bees and the Italians (1966). Indeed, Divorce Italian Style sparked an entire genre: Commedia all'italiana (Comedy: Italian Style). Produced after the second World War, from the 1950s to early 1970s, Commedia all'italiana satirizes the Italian politics and societal structures of the time, particularly those pertaining to gender.

Hardly didactic and certainly not patronizing, these films balance slapstick comedy conventions with metatheatrical commentary and highly stylized camerawork. And while the themes are clear in these films, there is no prescriptive messaging. Italian film critic Mario Sesto describes the genre as a coin - with one side being comedy and the other tragedy. Clarifying, one of Seduced and Abandoned's screenwriters, Furio Scarpelli, points out that, "we only laugh at things with a dramatic element at their core." Germi's trilogy excavates Italian masculinity in order to unearth the troubling double-standards between men and women when it comes to sex and marriage.

Lending extra diegetic meaning to Germi's first comedy, in Divorce Italian Style Marcello Mastroianni plays Ferdinando Cefalù, a restless and impoverished Sicilian nobleman, who can no longer stand his annoying wife Rosalia (Daniela Rocca). Because divorce was illegal in Italy at the time, Ferdinando plots to off his wife so he can be free to seduce his younger, more attractive cousin, Angela (Stefania Sandrelli). He settles on projecting his behavior onto his wife - framing her for infidelity - in order to justify her murder. The plotline reflects the legal treatment of honor killings at the time; honor was so important to Italian society that this type of murder was seen as justifiable, even acceptable, and punishment for the vengeful cuckold was often lenient. Germi's brilliant satire works as audiences of the film find themselves suspending their own moral righteousness. We become complicit in state sanctioned sexism, laughing at Ferdinando's efforts to kill his wife instead of critiquing the illegality of divorce and the general mistreatment of women.

If Divorce Italian Style focuses on a restless and insecure man seeking to avoid middle age matrimony, Seduced and Abandoned, an informal sequel, focuses on a successful older man named Don Vincenzo Ascalone (Saro Urzì). He becomes violently anxious about losing the respect of his gossipy town when one of his daughters, Agnese (Stefania Sandrelli), becomes pregnant by his other daughter's fiance, Peppino (Aldo Puglisi). While it had become fashionable to cast American actors in Italian roles (such as Burt Lancaster in The Leopard (1963) and Dustin Hoffman would star in Germi's 1972 comedy Alfredo, Alfredo), Urzì's portrayal of Vincenzo embodied the kind of familiar Italian patriarch that Germi aimed to lambast. The film is quick to highlight how, in that cultural context, a father's shame can eclipse his daughter's wellbeing. Vincenzo beats and blames Agnese for what he believes is her sexual indiscretion even though the audience knows that she had been raped. Vincenzo forces Peppino into a reparatory marriage with Agnese to save face. At first Peppino agrees, but then he says he does not want to marry Agnese, insisting that he'll only marry a virgin. The irony that Agnese was a virgin when she was raped is emphasized further when Peppino's own mother recalls how his father had pressured her for sex before their marriage. Peppino's father admits that he wouldn't have married her either, arguing, absurdly: "It's a man's right to ask, it's a woman's duty to refuse."

Although Agnese's trauma is never broached, the film does not wholly victimize her. When interviewed about playing Agnese, Stefania Sandrelli said she was grateful for the liberty that Germi gave her in playing a role that represented an "evolution of the female character in Italian society." Moreover, Don Vincenzo, as well as the larger Sicilian patriarchy he represents, is clearly being mocked with forthright candor. Seduced and Abandoned, like Divorce, Italian Style, remains remarkable for its ability to temper a seething critique of gendered hypocrisies with humor and sophisticated parody.

By Rebecca Kumar
Seduced And Abandoned

Seduced and Abandoned

Italian director Pietro Germi made over a dozen neorealist films before his dark comedy Divorce: Italian Style (1961), a film so successful that it became the first in a trilogy of comedies. It was followed by Seduced and Abandoned (1964) and the anthology film, The Birds, the Bees and the Italians (1966). Indeed, Divorce Italian Style sparked an entire genre: Commedia all'italiana (Comedy: Italian Style). Produced after the second World War, from the 1950s to early 1970s, Commedia all'italiana satirizes the Italian politics and societal structures of the time, particularly those pertaining to gender. Hardly didactic and certainly not patronizing, these films balance slapstick comedy conventions with metatheatrical commentary and highly stylized camerawork. And while the themes are clear in these films, there is no prescriptive messaging. Italian film critic Mario Sesto describes the genre as a coin - with one side being comedy and the other tragedy. Clarifying, one of Seduced and Abandoned's screenwriters, Furio Scarpelli, points out that, "we only laugh at things with a dramatic element at their core." Germi's trilogy excavates Italian masculinity in order to unearth the troubling double-standards between men and women when it comes to sex and marriage. Lending extra diegetic meaning to Germi's first comedy, in Divorce Italian Style Marcello Mastroianni plays Ferdinando Cefalù, a restless and impoverished Sicilian nobleman, who can no longer stand his annoying wife Rosalia (Daniela Rocca). Because divorce was illegal in Italy at the time, Ferdinando plots to off his wife so he can be free to seduce his younger, more attractive cousin, Angela (Stefania Sandrelli). He settles on projecting his behavior onto his wife - framing her for infidelity - in order to justify her murder. The plotline reflects the legal treatment of honor killings at the time; honor was so important to Italian society that this type of murder was seen as justifiable, even acceptable, and punishment for the vengeful cuckold was often lenient. Germi's brilliant satire works as audiences of the film find themselves suspending their own moral righteousness. We become complicit in state sanctioned sexism, laughing at Ferdinando's efforts to kill his wife instead of critiquing the illegality of divorce and the general mistreatment of women. If Divorce Italian Style focuses on a restless and insecure man seeking to avoid middle age matrimony, Seduced and Abandoned, an informal sequel, focuses on a successful older man named Don Vincenzo Ascalone (Saro Urzì). He becomes violently anxious about losing the respect of his gossipy town when one of his daughters, Agnese (Stefania Sandrelli), becomes pregnant by his other daughter's fiance, Peppino (Aldo Puglisi). While it had become fashionable to cast American actors in Italian roles (such as Burt Lancaster in The Leopard (1963) and Dustin Hoffman would star in Germi's 1972 comedy Alfredo, Alfredo), Urzì's portrayal of Vincenzo embodied the kind of familiar Italian patriarch that Germi aimed to lambast. The film is quick to highlight how, in that cultural context, a father's shame can eclipse his daughter's wellbeing. Vincenzo beats and blames Agnese for what he believes is her sexual indiscretion even though the audience knows that she had been raped. Vincenzo forces Peppino into a reparatory marriage with Agnese to save face. At first Peppino agrees, but then he says he does not want to marry Agnese, insisting that he'll only marry a virgin. The irony that Agnese was a virgin when she was raped is emphasized further when Peppino's own mother recalls how his father had pressured her for sex before their marriage. Peppino's father admits that he wouldn't have married her either, arguing, absurdly: "It's a man's right to ask, it's a woman's duty to refuse." Although Agnese's trauma is never broached, the film does not wholly victimize her. When interviewed about playing Agnese, Stefania Sandrelli said she was grateful for the liberty that Germi gave her in playing a role that represented an "evolution of the female character in Italian society." Moreover, Don Vincenzo, as well as the larger Sicilian patriarchy he represents, is clearly being mocked with forthright candor. Seduced and Abandoned, like Divorce, Italian Style, remains remarkable for its ability to temper a seething critique of gendered hypocrisies with humor and sophisticated parody. By Rebecca Kumar

Seduced and Abandoned - Pietro Germi's 1964 Domestic Comedy of Italian Mores - SEDUCED AND ABANDONED on DVD


Pietro Germi's Sedotta e abbandonata is a fall-down funny farce about the essential inconsistency in a social order that encourages young men to chase young girls, but also expects young girls to remain virgins until marriage. The stylish production exaggerates nothing to achieve its satirical aims, as the desperate schemes of its various agitated Sicilians come straight from outmoded but irrepressible notions of honor and dignity. The harried police chief expresses his opinion of Sicily by wishing for an atom bomb to wipe it off the map!

Synopsis: Nervous paterfamilias Don Vincenzo Ascalone (Saro Urzì) worries about marrying off his string of not-so-bright daughters while retaining the family honor: In this Sicilian town everyone knows everybody else's personal business. Oversexed dullard Peppino Califano (Aldo Puglisi) is engaged to Don Vincenzo's daughter Matilde (Paola Biggio) but when the opportunity arises, he cannot resist seducing her younger sister, the beautiful Agnese (Stefania Sandrelli). Don Vincenzo throws the house into a panic when he discovers that Agnese is pregnant; he goes to elaborate lengths to keep the news from getting out. He finds a substitute husband for Matilde in the destitute Baron Rizieri (Leopoldo Trieste of The White Sheik), clearing the way for 'shotgun' nuptials between Peppino and the 16 year-old Agnese. The only problem is that the slippery Peppino also demands his 'rights of honor': He doesn't want a non-virgin bride. As far as he's concerned, the fact that he's the one responsible for her pregnancy is irrelevant!

Seduced and Abandoned is Pietro Germi's comedic follow-up to the wildly popular Divorce Italian Style with Marcello Mastroianni and Stefania Sandrelli. The lack of big star distractions allows a better appreciation of this story of keeping up appearances in a closed society that never forgives a disgrace. Poor Don Vincenzo is willing to go to outrageous lengths to maintain his social standing in a setup where everything is a double standard. If a family embarrassment can be fixed in a socially acceptable way -- arranging a quick marriage; playing musical chairs with daughters and suitors -- Don Vincenzo can walk with his head held high. But should the discord becomes a public affair, he'll forever be a town laughing stock and will never get his daughters married off.

The amusing characters are too distinctive to be simple caricatures, and the lively script orchestrates them marvelously. Saro Urzì's frantic father doesn't even bother to consult his passive wife and clueless daughters, and when the midwife declares that Agnese is no longer a virgin, spins out of control: "Then check them all!" We're surprised that he doesn't insist that the family dog be checked as well. The daughters are indeed a handful. The elder Matilde is a dunderhead who never once catches onto what's going on, while the sensual Agnese goes into fits of delirium over the thoughtlessly vain Peppino. It's assumed that the younger generation has no say in anything, and Don Vincenzo dreams up several schemes to safeguard his household's good name.

Seduced and Abandoned distinguishes itself from bumpkin comedy by its skillful referencing of real issues. Although this kind of paternal tyranny has subsided in Sicily as it has everywhere else, it is still part of the culture. Germi and his writers Agenore Incrocci, Age Scarpelli and Luciano Vincenzoni milk it for every humorous possibility. The key scene is probably when Peppino takes his 'principled' stand and refuses to marry Agnese on the grounds that she's no longer a virgin. His father agrees, admitting that under similar conditions he'd not have married Peppino's mother: It's the maiden's duty to refuse sex but the man's prerogative to get away with all he can.

The script offers more examples of this attitude. The town's respected fathers have no qualms about publicly lusting after a trio of prostitutes, but Don Vincenzo can't abide his prospective son-in-law Peppino showing an interest in the same women. The daughters are kept cloistered at home and are supervised at all times in public; it's no wonder that Agnese is unprepared and defenseless when Peppino suddenly makes his move.

All of this builds to logical extremes. Don Vincenzo dispatches his mild-mannered son Antonio (Lando Buzzanca) to murder Peppino, forcing the local Police Chief Polenza (Oreste Palella) to intercept him. Polenza's seen it all before: The locals willingly perjure themselves to keep personal 'matters of honor' from becoming fodder for the local gossip mill. Nobody realizes that the same transparent games have been going on for centuries and anybody with a brain can see through Don Vincenzo's posturing.

The acting is superb, with Urzì's Don Vincenzo making a potential clown into a believable and loveable fellow. Stefania Sandrelli repeats from a star-making role in Divorce Italian Style and made the strongest impression when the film was new. As the penniless and practically toothless Baron Rizieri, Leopoldo Trieste is charmingly open. We understand immediately how he'd be fleeced out of what remains of his family's fortune, but we're also proud of Rizieri when he rebels at Don Vincenzo's bribery. The Baron throws the elaborate bridgework that has restored his smile back in Don Vincenzo's face. Pietro Germi's Sicilians are funny, but they don't like being made into clowns, and Seduced and Abandoned respects them.

Criterion's beautiful presentation of Seduced and Abandoned gives us a handsome enhanced transfer with crystal-clear sound; it's obvious that decades of crummy import prints and cheap videos have misrepresented Italian production values. A literally authoritative docu-featurette pairs screenwriters Scarpelli and Vincenzoni with a film critic to sketch the film's special significance. They praise Germi as a top-level Italian director who fell out of favor in the 1960s because he didn't play politics and pretend to be a Leftist, as did many others.

New interviews show us actors Stefania Sandrelli and Lando Buzzanca today, and we also get to see Ms. Sandrelli's original screen test. The original trailer is included. Disc producer Debra McClutchy chooses a menu style that matches the cartoon motif of the cover art, and includes a good liner note essay by Italian critic and educator Irene Bignardi.

For more information about Seduced and Abandoned, visit The Criterion Collection. To order Seduced and Abandoned, go to TCM Shopping.

by Glenn Erickson

Seduced and Abandoned - Pietro Germi's 1964 Domestic Comedy of Italian Mores - SEDUCED AND ABANDONED on DVD

Pietro Germi's Sedotta e abbandonata is a fall-down funny farce about the essential inconsistency in a social order that encourages young men to chase young girls, but also expects young girls to remain virgins until marriage. The stylish production exaggerates nothing to achieve its satirical aims, as the desperate schemes of its various agitated Sicilians come straight from outmoded but irrepressible notions of honor and dignity. The harried police chief expresses his opinion of Sicily by wishing for an atom bomb to wipe it off the map! Synopsis: Nervous paterfamilias Don Vincenzo Ascalone (Saro Urzì) worries about marrying off his string of not-so-bright daughters while retaining the family honor: In this Sicilian town everyone knows everybody else's personal business. Oversexed dullard Peppino Califano (Aldo Puglisi) is engaged to Don Vincenzo's daughter Matilde (Paola Biggio) but when the opportunity arises, he cannot resist seducing her younger sister, the beautiful Agnese (Stefania Sandrelli). Don Vincenzo throws the house into a panic when he discovers that Agnese is pregnant; he goes to elaborate lengths to keep the news from getting out. He finds a substitute husband for Matilde in the destitute Baron Rizieri (Leopoldo Trieste of The White Sheik), clearing the way for 'shotgun' nuptials between Peppino and the 16 year-old Agnese. The only problem is that the slippery Peppino also demands his 'rights of honor': He doesn't want a non-virgin bride. As far as he's concerned, the fact that he's the one responsible for her pregnancy is irrelevant! Seduced and Abandoned is Pietro Germi's comedic follow-up to the wildly popular Divorce Italian Style with Marcello Mastroianni and Stefania Sandrelli. The lack of big star distractions allows a better appreciation of this story of keeping up appearances in a closed society that never forgives a disgrace. Poor Don Vincenzo is willing to go to outrageous lengths to maintain his social standing in a setup where everything is a double standard. If a family embarrassment can be fixed in a socially acceptable way -- arranging a quick marriage; playing musical chairs with daughters and suitors -- Don Vincenzo can walk with his head held high. But should the discord becomes a public affair, he'll forever be a town laughing stock and will never get his daughters married off. The amusing characters are too distinctive to be simple caricatures, and the lively script orchestrates them marvelously. Saro Urzì's frantic father doesn't even bother to consult his passive wife and clueless daughters, and when the midwife declares that Agnese is no longer a virgin, spins out of control: "Then check them all!" We're surprised that he doesn't insist that the family dog be checked as well. The daughters are indeed a handful. The elder Matilde is a dunderhead who never once catches onto what's going on, while the sensual Agnese goes into fits of delirium over the thoughtlessly vain Peppino. It's assumed that the younger generation has no say in anything, and Don Vincenzo dreams up several schemes to safeguard his household's good name. Seduced and Abandoned distinguishes itself from bumpkin comedy by its skillful referencing of real issues. Although this kind of paternal tyranny has subsided in Sicily as it has everywhere else, it is still part of the culture. Germi and his writers Agenore Incrocci, Age Scarpelli and Luciano Vincenzoni milk it for every humorous possibility. The key scene is probably when Peppino takes his 'principled' stand and refuses to marry Agnese on the grounds that she's no longer a virgin. His father agrees, admitting that under similar conditions he'd not have married Peppino's mother: It's the maiden's duty to refuse sex but the man's prerogative to get away with all he can. The script offers more examples of this attitude. The town's respected fathers have no qualms about publicly lusting after a trio of prostitutes, but Don Vincenzo can't abide his prospective son-in-law Peppino showing an interest in the same women. The daughters are kept cloistered at home and are supervised at all times in public; it's no wonder that Agnese is unprepared and defenseless when Peppino suddenly makes his move. All of this builds to logical extremes. Don Vincenzo dispatches his mild-mannered son Antonio (Lando Buzzanca) to murder Peppino, forcing the local Police Chief Polenza (Oreste Palella) to intercept him. Polenza's seen it all before: The locals willingly perjure themselves to keep personal 'matters of honor' from becoming fodder for the local gossip mill. Nobody realizes that the same transparent games have been going on for centuries and anybody with a brain can see through Don Vincenzo's posturing. The acting is superb, with Urzì's Don Vincenzo making a potential clown into a believable and loveable fellow. Stefania Sandrelli repeats from a star-making role in Divorce Italian Style and made the strongest impression when the film was new. As the penniless and practically toothless Baron Rizieri, Leopoldo Trieste is charmingly open. We understand immediately how he'd be fleeced out of what remains of his family's fortune, but we're also proud of Rizieri when he rebels at Don Vincenzo's bribery. The Baron throws the elaborate bridgework that has restored his smile back in Don Vincenzo's face. Pietro Germi's Sicilians are funny, but they don't like being made into clowns, and Seduced and Abandoned respects them. Criterion's beautiful presentation of Seduced and Abandoned gives us a handsome enhanced transfer with crystal-clear sound; it's obvious that decades of crummy import prints and cheap videos have misrepresented Italian production values. A literally authoritative docu-featurette pairs screenwriters Scarpelli and Vincenzoni with a film critic to sketch the film's special significance. They praise Germi as a top-level Italian director who fell out of favor in the 1960s because he didn't play politics and pretend to be a Leftist, as did many others. New interviews show us actors Stefania Sandrelli and Lando Buzzanca today, and we also get to see Ms. Sandrelli's original screen test. The original trailer is included. Disc producer Debra McClutchy chooses a menu style that matches the cartoon motif of the cover art, and includes a good liner note essay by Italian critic and educator Irene Bignardi. For more information about Seduced and Abandoned, visit The Criterion Collection. To order Seduced and Abandoned, go to TCM Shopping. by Glenn Erickson

Quotes

Trivia

Notes

Opened in Rome caFeb 1964 as Sedotta e abbandonata. Opened in Paris in July 1964 as Séduite et abandonnée. Original running time: 123 min. An Italian source credits Carlo Egidi as costumer and Sammaciccia and Menichelli as assistants.

Miscellaneous Notes

Winner of the Best Actor Award (Saro Urzi) at the 1964 Cannes Film Festival.

Released in United States 1964

Released in United States August 19, 1990

Shown at Lincoln Center, New York City in the series "A Roman Holiday" August 19, 1990.

Released in United States 1964

Released in United States August 19, 1990 (Shown at Lincoln Center, New York City in the series "A Roman Holiday" August 19, 1990.)

Voted One of the Year's Five Best Foreign Language Films by the 1964 National Board of Review.