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Sunflower

Play trailer Poster for Sunflower G Released Sep 24, 1970 1h 41m Romance Play Trailer Watchlist
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Tomatometer 3 Reviews 89% Popcornmeter 500+ Ratings
An Italian bride (Sophia Loren) finds her long-lost soldier husband (Marcello Mastroianni) living in Moscow with amnesia and a wife (Lyudmila Saveleva) and daughter.
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Sunflower

Critics Reviews

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Stefan Kanfer TIME Magazine Chetnal fortuna-the pornography of sex cannot be replaced by the opera of soap. Feb 8, 2018 Full Review Mattie Lucas From the Front Row A grand, even pulpy entertainment, filled with underlined emotions and tragic romance. Rated: 3/4 Aug 5, 2019 Full Review Phil Hall Film Threat Excellent drama, with Sophia Loren at the peak of her powers. Rated: 5/5 Dec 12, 2003 Full Review Read all reviews

Audience Reviews

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Audience Member Sunflower tells a story about an Italian woman searching for her husband who went MIA during WWII. Sunflower is a pretty nuanced with a wonderful performance from the artistic Sophia Loren who shows that she is a strong woman. The costume designs by Enrico Sabbatini were also nuanced as one could argue that the costume designs contain plenty of symbolism throughout the film. Some of the costume designs symbolized loyalty, adoration, elegance, joy, honor, positivity, and depression. What made this film pretty powerful was the musical score by Henry Mancini and the cinematography by Giuseppe Rotunno. Sunflower feels like visual poetry. Rated 4.5 out of 5 stars 02/18/23 Full Review Audience Member Although not the most interesting story (in the script and direction), told by maestro Vittorio De Sica, "I girasoli" has singular moments of visual poetry, interpretation, sound and indisputably of De Sica's ability to record and transmute the simplicities of life. I remember the first films that I watched this, that is, a great inspiration and to those who always devote an absolute favoritism. Vittorio De Sica through the possibilities of presenting and not representing life, as the Italian neo-realist movement wished, giving rise to films that were very close to a documentary record and fascinated by their seam in reverse, without modesty to show the volatile frenzy of a Country and its people, in the face of the new relations that emerge, and in the uncertainty of their durability. Certainly a cultural movement can not be tied to a creator, on the contrary, it must be a device for new constructions, and this is notorious in "I girasoli". Produced in 1970, with a script by Cesare Zavattini and an argument elaborated by Tonino Guerra, famous poet, writer and chronicler of the war. Being an Italo-Franco-Soviet co-production, this allowed for a rare record of the former Communist bloc, in part because of De Sica's good relations with the Italian Communist Party. In the form of an ultra simplistic summary, I would like to say, "I girasoli" is the portrait of a brief happiness in the face of the non-amorous concreteness ruled by the adversities of war and reasons not always surrounded by logical meaning or possible to name. The film succeeds as a moving family drama, and microcosm of the social history of Italy during the 1940s (war period) until the early 1970s. The weight of the commercial influence causes losses notorious for the film, in which its plot is constructed through moorings that seek to structure and punctuate the trajectory of the personages to the molds of the melodramatic structure of the films Hollywood of that time, disfiguring the original character of drama that the film proposes And the crisis relations of the drama, always prosperous element in the hands of the director De Sica. This disfigurement may be noted, for example, in the long and unnecessary record of Masha (Lyudmila Savelyeva) revealing to Giovanna (Sophia Loren) how she found and how she rescued Antonio (Marcello Mastroianni) from the cold and the war. A resource, I think, to further punctuate the melodrama of the story and to even more balance the audience in their love and final end crowd with whom Antonio should stay? The beloved woman or the woman who saved you? There are several moments in the film that result in the same sense, to prolong the melodrama, to balance the decisions of the public and to exhibit explanations, something that makes the film exhausting, explanatory in excess and shallow before the dimension of human questions and the possibilities of social, Political and war-related issues that end up being used only as a background, and which, when evoked, are treated superficially. A highlight and deserves special attention is the relationship established by the protagonists Giovanna (Sophia Loren) and Antonio (Marcello Mastroianni). De Sica had done some work, with Sophia and Antonio as a couple of protagonists, (example: Ieri, oggi, domani -1963). This previous experience, collaborates both for those who have already attended or for those who witness for the first time the partnership between such actors and the director. This total chemistry, ease and intimacy for the game, collaborate exactly, where it does not take more than three minutes, for the public to twist and "ship" the couple Giovanna and Antonio. Something very important and necessary for this story, since the happiness between these two is brief. Just as in a football match, the audience vibrates with the determined, passionate posture of Giovanna - an Italian woman - who goes to Russia to look for Antonio, the husband given as lost during World War II. The crossing is made by urban landscapes and fields of sunflowers, a beautiful, flowery and poetic passage that collaborate in the perspective of a happy ending. The work of Sophia Loren is hard in the attempt to disengage from the muse and sexual appeal common to the history of her characters, and in many moments succeed, but to facilitate the outcome of its history, we have precisely the use of the muse and the sexual appeal, But clearly as a resource imposed by the script and accepted by the management. Already Marcello Mastroianni impresses by charisma and magnetism, a simple portrait of the actor or character are enough. We honestly know that it is not at all a difficult job for both actors, since the characters do not require during the feat, during what is filmed or captured, a scattering of states, feelings and conflicts. The melodramatic load is already in charge of this, but at no time do we see a minor work, a corner job, or a lack of prestige. Highlights for the track of Henry Mancini, famous for creating musical identity in the films in which he works. Giuseppe Rotunno's Photography, especially in all the scenes of crowd, that added to the direction of Vitoria print a true picture of an Italy. Among so many moments of brilliance of direction and photography, I highlight the first scene of war in Russia. The strong and fruitful image of a large red flag swaying in the air and oscillating between projections, background and transparencies of a war in the snow that is stained by the blood of people as lost as the fate of two homelands that oscillate between the mother And the hangman, an opposition who, at the same time, embraces and sentences the life of the citizen (common man), and the soldier of war. Rated 3 out of 5 stars 01/28/23 Full Review Audience Member Mastrioianni & Loren r right up there with Tracy & Hepburn Fred & Ginger Powell & Loy they r soo good together. Rated 3.5 out of 5 stars 01/21/23 Full Review Audience Member I never saw him again. A young Italian couple fall in unexpected love and she steals the playboy's heart. They have an amazing life and marriage. However, World War II hits their country hard and the young man is whisked into a terrible battle in Siberia where he is lost and never seen from again. The military presumes he's dead. She goes on an amazing search for true love. "Didn't we already get married?" Vittorio De Sica, director of Yesterday, Today, and Tomorrow; The Voyage; After the Fox; A Place for Lovers; Marriage Italian Style; Two Women; and The Roof; delivers Sunflowers. The storyline for this picture was excellent, well paced, and brilliantly portrayed. The cast delivers remarkable performances and includes Sophia Loren and Mastroianni. "I'll take the scorpions over marriage." I recently came across this on Netflix and added it to my queue. I saw Yesterday, Today, and Tomorrow and thought it was okay with a similar cast and the same director. This was infinitely better and easily my favorite Loren film. I thought she delivered her character well and this tale is well told. I strongly recommend seeing this underrated classic. "Where can you take me with this tiny creature?" Grade: A Rated 5 out of 5 stars 01/19/23 Full Review Audience Member A beautiful and very moving film Rated 5 out of 5 stars 01/16/23 Full Review Audience Member Italy. pre-WW2 setting. Sofia Loren. moving. Rated 4 out of 5 stars 02/16/23 Full Review Read all reviews
Sunflower

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Cast & Crew

Movie Info

Synopsis An Italian bride (Sophia Loren) finds her long-lost soldier husband (Marcello Mastroianni) living in Moscow with amnesia and a wife (Lyudmila Saveleva) and daughter.
Director
Vittorio De Sica
Producer
Carlo Ponti
Screenwriter
Tonino Guerra, Cesar Zavattini
Distributor
AVCO Embassy Pictures
Production Co
Compagnia Cinematografica Champion, Mosfilm, Les Films Concordia
Rating
G
Genre
Romance
Original Language
Italian
Release Date (Theaters)
Sep 24, 1970, Original
Release Date (Streaming)
May 17, 2011
Runtime
1h 41m
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