Search results
Two Women (Italian: La ciociara [la tʃoˈtʃaːra], rough literal translation "The Woman from Ciociaria") is a 1960 war drama film directed by Vittorio De Sica from a screenplay he co-wrote with Cesare Zavattini, based on the 1957 novel of the same name by Alberto Moravia.
Two Women: Directed by Vittorio De Sica. With Sophia Loren, Jean-Paul Belmondo, Eleonora Brown, Carlo Ninchi. In WWII Italy, a widow and her lonely daughter seek distance between themselves and the horrors of war.
- (13K)
- Drama, War
- Vittorio De Sica
- 1961-05-09
Sep 8, 2008 · Two Women Sophia Loren Jean-Paul Belmondo - YouTube. allroundmaster1. 363 subscribers. Subscribed. 318. 126K views 15 years ago. Awards: Won Oscar. Another 5 wins & 3 nominations Cesira...
- 2 min
- 126.1K
- allroundmaster1
Widowed shopkeeper Cesira and her 13-year-old daughter Rosetta flee from the allied bombs in Rome during the second World War; they travel to the remote village where Cesira was born. During their journey and in the village and onward, the mother does everything she can to protect Rosetta.
- (257)
- 13
- Vittorio De Sica
- 100 min
Two Women, Italian film drama, released in 1961, that earned Sophia Loren an Academy Award for best actress—the first Oscar ever given for a performance in a foreign-language movie. Two Women —which was based on the novel by Alberto Moravia—is a tale of survival in war-torn Italy in the early 1940s.
- Lee Pfeiffer
During WWII, widowed thirty-something Cesira, a grocer in Rome, devotes herself to her innocent 13-year-old daughter Rosetta, sometimes at the expense of finding love for herself, knowingly still a desirable woman.
People also ask
Is two women based on a true story?
Who are the actors in 'two women' by Vittorio De Sica?
When did two women get an Oscar?
Where can I watch two women?
Two Women (1960) -- (Movie Clip) To A New World Cesira (Sophia Loren), Rosetta (Eleanora Brown) and their Marxist friend Michele (Jean-Paul Belmondo), are the only villagers willing to feed two English soldiers, in Vittorio De Sica's Two Women, 1960.