Yahoo India Web Search

Search results

  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Bitter_RiceBitter Rice - Wikipedia

    Bitter Rice (Italian: Riso amaro [ˈriːso aˈmaːro, ˈriːzo-]) is a 1949 Italian neorealist crime drama film directed and co-written by Giuseppe De Santis, produced by Dino De Laurentiis, and starring Vittorio Gassman, Doris Dowling, Silvana Mangano, and Raf Vallone. The story follows a pair of fugitives, who hide among the rice fields of ...

  2. Bitter Rice: Directed by Giuseppe De Santis. With Vittorio Gassman, Doris Dowling, Silvana Mangano, Raf Vallone. Two criminals on the run end up working in a rice field and decide to recruit other workers for their next robbery.

  3. During planting season in Northern Italy’s Po Valley, an earthy rice-field worker (Silvana Mangano) falls in with a small-time criminal (Vittorio Gassman) who is planning a daring heist of the crop, as well as his femme-fatale-ish girlfriend, played by the Hollywood star Doris Dowling.

  4. Jan 13, 2016 · In Bitter Rice, Giuseppe De Santis focused his lens on the world of Italys female rice workers, for a story that’s part social commentary, part pulp melodrama—and introduced the world to a dazzling young actress named Silvana Mangano.

  5. Directed by Giuseppe De Santis. An earthy drama of human passions among women rice workers in the Po Valley. Francesca and Walter are two-bit criminals in Northern Italy, and, in an effort to avoid the police, Francesca joins a group of women rice workers.

  6. Set in the agricultural Po Valley region of northern Italy, Giuseppe De Santis’ Riso Amaro (US: Bitter Rice) is a unique noir drama in the Italian neorealism tradition. Jewel thieves Walter (Vittorio Gassman) and girlfriend Francesca (Doris Dowling) hide from the police by blending in with the annual migration of female laborers to the Po ...

  7. Dec 2, 2022 · The early-generation genre mashup “Bitter Rice,” from 1949, fuses the class-based politics—and the on-location authenticity—of neorealism with a smoldering romantic melodrama. It’s ...