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IMDbPro

Vertigine

  • 1942
  • 1h 29m
IMDb RATING
6.5/10
18
YOUR RATING
Beniamino Gigli, Emma Gramatica, and Camilla Horn in Vertigine (1942)
Drama

The well off daughter of a tenor breaks up a romance with a helpful youth from a misunderstanding.But she continues to cover him with his gambling debts despite her delicate health.The well off daughter of a tenor breaks up a romance with a helpful youth from a misunderstanding.But she continues to cover him with his gambling debts despite her delicate health.The well off daughter of a tenor breaks up a romance with a helpful youth from a misunderstanding.But she continues to cover him with his gambling debts despite her delicate health.

  • Director
    • Guido Brignone
  • Writer
    • Guido Cantini
  • Stars
    • Beniamino Gigli
    • Emma Gramatica
    • Ruth Hellberg
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.5/10
    18
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Guido Brignone
    • Writer
      • Guido Cantini
    • Stars
      • Beniamino Gigli
      • Emma Gramatica
      • Ruth Hellberg
    • 2User reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos

    Top cast17

    Edit
    Beniamino Gigli
    Beniamino Gigli
    • Il tenore Luciano Riccardi
    Emma Gramatica
    Emma Gramatica
    • Letizia Riccardi - la sorella di Luciano
    Ruth Hellberg
    Ruth Hellberg
    • Claudia - la figlia di Luciano
    Herbert Wilk
    • Alberto Vieri
    Camilla Horn
    Camilla Horn
    • Corinna Dellys - l'amante di Alberto
    Elena Altieri
    Elena Altieri
    • Marcella
    Oreste Bilancia
    Oreste Bilancia
    • Battista - il maggiordomo di Vieri
    Lamberto Picasso
    • L'usuraio Jamar
    Augusto Marcacci
    • Gualtieri - l'impressario
    Milla Papa
    • Bice Gualtieri
    Mario Brizzolari
    • L'avvocato Molteni
    Oreste Fares
    • Il dottor Masetti
    Guido Notari
    • Il presentatore alla 'Grande Festa Musicale'
    Giuseppe Pierozzi
    • Un vetturino
    Giulia Martinelli
    • Clementina - la cameriera di casa Riccardi
    Fausto Guerzoni
    Fausto Guerzoni
    • L'autista di Riccardi
    Vera Furlan
    • La cameriera in teatro
    • Director
      • Guido Brignone
    • Writer
      • Guido Cantini
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews2

    6.518
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    Featured reviews

    ItalianGerry

    Dizziness and arias.

    Unlike many of the other films made with operatic tenor Beniamino Gigli, such as "Ave Maria" and "Marionette," this movie focuses to a greater degree on the lives of other characters, with Gigli's role relegated to a secondary, though important, status. Here he is the operatic tenor father Riccardi of daughter, Claudia, who abandons her fiancé' Alberto when she learns he is interested in rekindling a romance with a former flame. The guy then gambles away a ton of money and falls into the clutches of an unscrupulous money-lender. Loving the man as much as she does, Claudia gives him money to pay his debt, even as she is dying from an illness.

    The last scene of the film is structured as a heavy-handed parallel between the opera "La Bohème", as Riccardi sings Rodolfo, comforting his dying Mimì at the same time Alberto, in regret for his actions, comforts the dying Claudia and is "redeemed" as a consequence. It's a bit too much. The scene must have siphoned out liters of tears in the audience of wartime Italy where this movie was a considerable hit.

    The best moments in the film, as might be expected, are those when we are simply able to enjoy Gigli's voice in selections of music from Richard Wagner, Giacomo Puccini, Francesco Cilea, Giuseppe Giordani (1745 - 1798, whose perennial salon-favorite, the concert aria "Caro mio ben," Gigli sings.) And while at it, it should be noted that the movie was made also in a German version, "Tragödie einer Liebe" with the same director and pretty much the same cast. This also explains the necessity of featuring some of Wagner's music. To my knowledge "Vertigine" was never released in the U.S., although it could have played ethnic houses. Video copies can be found in Italy and other places.

    The direction by Guido Brignone is adequate to the task. The title "Vertigine" means "dizziness" or "vertigo" and must refer to the quality of Claudia's love as well as being a symptom of her illness.
    10clanciai

    Overwhelming heartbreaks both on stage and in reality

    This is actually a masterpiece in its mixture of opera and reality, and for us today it is a major treat to see one of the great world tenors (Beniamino Gigli) alive on screen in a part of almost himself (a world tenor) and playing it well, as it involves great human involvement with other peolple, especially his ailing daughter, for whom he gives up his career and stops singing to live only for her, after her broken heart when she has broken up with her one suitor, who proved to have another woman since five years and wasting everything on gambling as well. Opera and realism are intermixed throughout the film with great convincing virtuoso expertise, so it is both a great opera film (for Benjamin Gigli's sake) and a great human drama, touching on neorelism and at least verism. The universal compassion with the ailing girl is irresistible, she is too convincing in all her frailty and understandable incurable love, and the cinematography is also impressing, from Venice in summer to a very wintry Rome with lots of beautiful Italy in between. One of the sensations in the film is that Beniamino Gigli actually sings Wagner, but in Italian - and suddenly Wagner's music becomes better. His music remains difficult and strained all the same, but Italian at least makes it sound better. The film is of great interest above all to opera fans, as you can study in detail his manner of singing, with his small mouth he actually seems to make no effort at all, while his big head gives him perfect resonance. It is a unique film for its expert composition in mixing up opera and hard core reality in a perfectly harmonized blend, and this film certainly must not be forgotten.

    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      The film was shot (in Cinecittà) with both Italian and Germans actors, all appearing in both versions. All German actors are dubbed in the Italian version and vice-versa. The German version of the film, known as "Tragödie einer Liebe", was released in Germany in 1943.
    • Soundtracks
      Winterstuerme wichen den Wonnemond
      from the opera "Die Walküre" (uncredited)

      Music by Richard Wagner

      Performed by Beniamino Gigli

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • March 10, 1942 (Italy)
    • Countries of origin
      • Italy
      • Germany
    • Language
      • Italian
    • Also known as
      • Broken Love
    • Filming locations
      • Venice, Italy
    • Production companies
      • Itala Film
      • Itala-Film
      • Suprafilm
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      1 hour 29 minutes
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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    Beniamino Gigli, Emma Gramatica, and Camilla Horn in Vertigine (1942)
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    By what name was Vertigine (1942) officially released in Canada in English?
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