Italy comedy
1960
bw 102 min.
Director: Mario Monicelli
CLV: $49.95 - available
           1 disc, catalog # CC1473L
VHS: available from Home Vision Cinema
Mario Monicelli's Big Deal On Madonna Street is that genuine rarity in
popular culture: a satire that not only helped kill off one movie genre, but
started a whole new subgenre in the process. The film, released in Italy in 1958
as I Soliti Ignoti (Persons Unknown), was a veritable treasure trove of
cinematic influences, from Italian neorealism to Hollywood postwar film noir and
its 1950s French cousin, all tied together in one neat 90-minute package.
The seeming simplicity of Big Deal On Madonna Street was central to its
popularity. On one level, the movie is a breezy, lunatic-paced crime caper, a
piece of Italian commedia dell'arte mocking such hard-boiled crime
classics as Jules Dassin's Rififi (1954) and its antecedents, most notably
John Huston's The Asphalt Jungle (1950). In contrast to the usual set-up
in such genre films, the gang pulling the job in Big Deal isn't remotely
good at what they do. They aren't even a gang, really, just five people drawn
together to find a fall guy for their would-be ringleader, and he's a failed car
thief. They muddle on with their plans, and, with a little luck, the elements for
a successful heist end up in place.
The movie's heart is in the poverty and frustration that surround its
characters. One can find echoes of The Bicycle Thief in the plight of
Tiberio the cameraless photographer (Marcello Mastroianni), who tries to steal a machina to support his
family. But in fine comic turn, everything is turned on its head. Tiberio is left
to care for his child while his wife serves a term for selling smuggled
cigarettes; Peppe (Vittorio Gassman), the glass-jawed boxer, is served his
coup de grace by one of the women he calls--with satirically outrageous
machismo--his "conquests." Topping off the cast is the famed comedian Toto, a
renowned figure on the Italian stage from the '20s and in movies from the '30s
on, as Dante, the avuncular safecracker who can't resist being a movie critic.
Big Deal On Madonna Street put director/co-author Monicelli (who'd
begun his own professional life as a film critic before turning to filmmaking) on
the map as a major director. In America, it quickly moved beyond the confines of
the art houses and became a popular and critical favorite. Remake proposals
bounced around throughout the 1960s, before Louis Malle shot the American
version, Crackers, in 1984. Long before that, however, other American
movies, including The Hot Rock and The Brink's Job, borrowed from
the mood and attitude of Monicelli's movie, which had so lovingly quoted Huston
and Dassin. In contrast to their movies, in which blind luck
brings about the demise of the plan and the gang members, the luck found on
Madonna Street puts the gang on the path to an honest life. If the action in
Monicelli's film is governed by a personified deity, it's not the vengeful, dark
God of American film noir, but a cheerful, whimsical God who smiles and
appreciates a good practical joke.
--Bruce Eder
Cast
Vittorio Gassman (Peppe)
Renato Salvatori (Mario)
Memmo Carotenuto (Cosimo)
Rosanna Rory (Norma)
Carla Gravina (Nicoletta)
Claudia Cardinale (Carmella)
Carlo Pisacani (Capannelle)
Tiberio Murgia (Ferribotte)
Gina Rovere (Teresa)
Marcello Mastroianni (Tiberio)
Toto (Dante)
Credits
Directed by: Mario Monicelli
Produced by: Franco Cristaldi
Story by: Age-Scarpelli
Screenplay by: Age-Scarpelli, Suso Cecchi DÕAmico, Mario Monicelli
Director of photography: Gianni Di Venanzo
Editor: Adriana Novelli
Music composed and directed by: Piero Umiliani
Sets and costumes: Piero Gherardi
About the Transfer
Big Deal on Madonna Street is presented in its original theatrical aspect ratio
of 1.66:1. This new digital transfer was created from the 35mm composite fine
grain master.