If You Won a Hundred Million
If You Won a Hundred Million | |
---|---|
Directed by |
Carlo Campogalliani Carlo Moscovini |
Produced by | Luigi E. De Angelis |
Written by |
Sandro Continenza (segment "L'indossatrice") Marcello Marchesi (segment "Il principale") Vittorio Metz (segment "Il principale") Dino Verde (segment "Il tifoso") |
Starring |
Tino Scotti Nerio Bernardi Anna Carena |
Music by | Armando Fragna |
Cinematography | Fernando Risi |
Edited by | Mario Bonotti |
Release dates | 1953 |
Running time | 100 minutes |
Country | Italy |
Language | Italian |
If You Won a Hundred Million (Italian: Se vincessi cento milioni) is a 1953 Italian comedy film directed by Carlo Campogalliani and Carlo Moscovini and starring Tino Scotti, Nerio Bernardi and Anna Carena.[1] It is an anthology film split into several different episodes.
Cast
- Tino Scotti as Ambrogio (segment "Il tifoso")
- Nerio Bernardi as Commendator Galloni (segment "Il tifoso")
- Anna Carena as La moglie di Ambrogio (segment "Il tifoso")
- Enzo Maggio as Beniamino (segment "Il tifoso")
- Elsa Martinelli as Anna (segment "L'indossatrice")
- Armando Francioli as Mario (segment "L'indossatrice")
- Milly Vitale as (segment "L'indossatrice")
- Ugo Tognazzi as Ugo (segment "Il principale")
- Alberto Sorrentino as Un impiegato (segment "Il principale")
- Lucia Banti as Luisa (segment "Il principale")
- Carlo Rizzo as Il principale (segment "Il principale")
- Carlo Campanini as Ventura (segment "Il pensionato")
- Andrea Checchi as (segment "Il pensionato")
- Renato Chiantoni as Roberto Greppi (segment "Il pensionato")
- Memmo Carotenuto as Angelo Natarello (segment "Il promesso... sposato")
- Checco Durante as Giovanni (segment "Il promesso... sposato")
- Anita Durante as Pasqua (segment "Il promesso... sposato")
- Isa Querio as Stella (segment "Il promesso... sposato")
- Margherita Bagni
- Gabriella Cioli
- Franco Pesce
- Amina Pirani Maggi
- Silvana Stefanini
- Marcella Mariani
References
- ↑ Betz p.249
Bibliography
- Mark Betz. Beyond the Subtitle: Remapping European Art Cinema. University of Minnesota Press, 2009.
External links
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