Kritzerland is proud to present a limited edition soundtrack release, first time on CD:
DIVORCE, ITALIAN STYLE Music Composed by Carlo Rustichelli
What’s a poor Baron to do? He’s in love with his sixteen-year-old cousin. He’s married to a clingy and not so attractive woman with a little moustache. The laws in Italy in the early 1960s do not allow divorce. But they don’t look too harshly on murder, if the murder is for family honor - for example, catching your wife with another lover. That is the germ of Pietro Germi’s brilliant dark comedy, Divorce, Italian Style (Divorzio, all’Italiana). Mastroianni, with his slicked-back hair, his moustache, his cigarette holder, and his perpetually drooping eyelids gives one of the greatest comedy performances in all of cinema. Rocca is a wonderful foil, and Sandrelli is luminous and angelic. Add to that a cast of great Italian character actors, a brilliant screenplay (which won the Academy Award) and you have the recipe for Comedy, Italian Style, one that is as funny and sharp today as it was then.
The film was a sensation and audiences all over the world were entranced. It was hugely influential and ushered in a whole era of Comedy, Italian Style, which included Germi’s own Seduced and Abandoned, Marriage, Italian Style, Yesterday, Today, and Tomorrow and others. In addition to winning the Academy Award for Best Screenplay (Ennio de Concini, Alfred Gianetti, and Germi), Mastroianni received a Best Actor nomination and Germi a Best Director nomination, which, considering the competition in 1962, one of the greatest years in film history, was really something.
Aiding and abetting the mischievous fun was the wonderful score by Carlo Rustichelli. Rustichelli, born in 1916, had begun working in film in 1939 and by 1962 had become a hugely popular composer for Italian films. His first film for Pietro Germi was Lost Youth in 1948 and thus began one of the longest and most fruitful director/composer collaborations ever, with Rustichelli composing scores for all but the first of Germi’s films - eighteen in total. He also worked with other directors such as Billy Wilder, Mario Bava, Gillo Pontecorvo, Luigi Comencini, and provided scores for countless sword and sandal films, spaghetti westerns, crime films, and just about every genre imaginable. He was a superb melodist, and Divorce, Italian Style is rife with great themes, which all serve the film perfectly. In fact, the film would be unthinkable without Rustichelli’s wonderful and tuneful score.
Divorce, Italian Style was released on a United Artists LP. As was the case with several UA soundtrack albums, there were both mono and stereo releases, but both were actually mono. For this premiere CD release the original mono album masters were used. Additionally, we’re pleased to present a suite of additional and alternate cues that were not included on the LP.
Divorce, Italian Style is a one-of-a-kind classic and so is its score by Carlo Rustichelli.
This release is limited to 1000 copies only. Kritzerland
トラックリスト
1. Song Of Love (Canto d’Amore) 2. Traffic (Traffico) 3. Funeral March (Marcia Funebre) 4. Lawyer’s Prayer (Orazione Avvocato) 5. Trattoria 6. In Love (Innamoramento) 7. Murder of Wife and Love (Uccisione Moglie e Amante) 8. Music Of Love (Musica d’Amore) 9. Divorce (Divorzio) 10. Furtively (Furtivamente) 11. Trial (Processo) 12. Deceit and Gossip (Tradimento a Pettegolezzo) 13. Fefe 14. Serenade (Serenata) 15. Bonus Suite of Additional and Alternate Cues <
カンヌ国際映画祭の喜劇映画賞受賞、マルチェロ・マストロヤンニ主演のコメディのOST初CD化。LP収録楽曲に加え、未発表の追加楽曲、別バージョン楽曲を組曲形式で収録。1000枚限定盤。
トラックリスト法律で離婚が禁じられているカトリック教国イタリアの、社会的矛盾を痛烈に皮肉ったコメディ。シチリアの没落貴族フェルディナンド(マストロヤンニ)は、連れ添って12年になる妻に飽き飽きし、17才の従妹(サンドレッリ)と恋仲になるが、妻と死別するほか再婚の望みはない。しかし、“刑法587条 自己ノ配偶者、娘、姉、妹が不法ナル肉体関係ヲ結ブトキ、コレヲ発見シ、激昂ノ上殺害セル者ハ、3年以上7年ノ刑ニ処ス”と法律にあったことから、妻に不貞を働かせ、名誉のために殺害したことにしようと計画する……。監督:ピエトロ・ジェルミ。1961年伊。
Kritzerland is proud to present a limited edition soundtrack release, first time on CD:
DIVORCE, ITALIAN STYLE
Music Composed by Carlo Rustichelli
What’s a poor Baron to do? He’s in love with his sixteen-year-old cousin. He’s married to a clingy and not so attractive woman with a little moustache. The laws in Italy in the early 1960s do not allow divorce. But they don’t look too harshly on murder, if the murder is for family honor - for example, catching your wife with another lover. That is the germ of Pietro Germi’s brilliant dark comedy, Divorce, Italian Style (Divorzio, all’Italiana). Mastroianni, with his slicked-back hair, his moustache, his cigarette holder, and his perpetually drooping eyelids gives one of the greatest comedy performances in all of cinema. Rocca is a wonderful foil, and Sandrelli is luminous and angelic. Add to that a cast of great Italian character actors, a brilliant screenplay (which won the Academy Award) and you have the recipe for Comedy, Italian Style, one that is as funny and sharp today as it was then.
The film was a sensation and audiences all over the world were entranced. It was hugely influential and ushered in a whole era of Comedy, Italian Style, which included Germi’s own Seduced and Abandoned, Marriage, Italian Style, Yesterday, Today, and Tomorrow and others. In addition to winning the Academy Award for Best Screenplay (Ennio de Concini, Alfred Gianetti, and Germi), Mastroianni received a Best Actor nomination and Germi a Best Director nomination, which, considering the competition in 1962, one of the greatest years in film history, was really something.
Aiding and abetting the mischievous fun was the wonderful score by Carlo Rustichelli. Rustichelli, born in 1916, had begun working in film in 1939 and by 1962 had become a hugely popular composer for Italian films. His first film for Pietro Germi was Lost Youth in 1948 and thus began one of the longest and most fruitful director/composer collaborations ever, with Rustichelli composing scores for all but the first of Germi’s films - eighteen in total. He also worked with other directors such as Billy Wilder, Mario Bava, Gillo Pontecorvo, Luigi Comencini, and provided scores for countless sword and sandal films, spaghetti westerns, crime films, and just about every genre imaginable. He was a superb melodist, and Divorce, Italian Style is rife with great themes, which all serve the film perfectly. In fact, the film would be unthinkable without Rustichelli’s wonderful and tuneful score.
Divorce, Italian Style was released on a United Artists LP. As was the case with several UA soundtrack albums, there were both mono and stereo releases, but both were actually mono. For this premiere CD release the original mono album masters were used. Additionally, we’re pleased to present a suite of additional and alternate cues that were not included on the LP.
Divorce, Italian Style is a one-of-a-kind classic and so is its score by Carlo Rustichelli.
This release is limited to 1000 copies only. Kritzerland
1. Song Of Love (Canto d’Amore)
2. Traffic (Traffico)
3. Funeral March (Marcia Funebre)
4. Lawyer’s Prayer (Orazione Avvocato)
5. Trattoria
6. In Love (Innamoramento)
7. Murder of Wife and Love (Uccisione Moglie e Amante)
8. Music Of Love (Musica d’Amore)
9. Divorce (Divorzio)
10. Furtively (Furtivamente)
11. Trial (Processo)
12. Deceit and Gossip (Tradimento a Pettegolezzo)
13. Fefe
14. Serenade (Serenata)
15. Bonus Suite of Additional and Alternate Cues
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