Released Date:
1948-03-26
Languages:
English, German, French, Polish, Hungarian, Czech
Countries:
Switzerland, USA
Runtime:
104 min
Rated:
PASSED
IMDB Ratings:
7.9 (2621 Reviews)
Director:
Fred ZinnemannRichard Schweizer (screen play)
David Wechsler (collaborator: on screen play)
Paul Jarrico (additional dialogue)
A silent nine-year-old Czech boy, a survivor of Auschwitz, flees a refugee center in postwar Germany and is found by an American G.I. At the same time, the boy's mother, the sole surviving member of his family, searches refugee centers for her son. Time, distance, and the massive numbers of refugee children are factors hampering the reunion of mother and son.
Released Date:
1951-08-27
Languages:
English, Italian
Countries:
USA
Runtime:
109 min
Rated:
APPROVED
IMDB Ratings:
6.7 (894 Reviews)
Director:
Richard ThorpeWilliam Ludwig (suggested by book "Biography of her Husband" by Dorothy Caruso)
Loosely traces the life of tenor Enrico Caruso (1873-1921). He loves Musetta, in his home town of Naples, and then Dorothy, the daughter of one of the Metropolitan Opera's patrons. Caruso is unacceptable to both women's fathers: to one, because he sings; to Dorothy's, because he is a peasant. To New York patricians, Caruso is short, barrel chested, loud, emotional, unrefined. Their appreciation comes slowly. The film depicts Caruso's lament that "the man does not have the voice, the voice has the man": he cannot be places he wants to be, because he must be elsewhere singing, including the day his mother dies. Throughout, Mario Lanza and stars from the Met sing.
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