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Scipione l'africano, 1937

Scipione l'africano

Italian

Italy

Rating:5.3
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Profile of Scipione l'africano

The mood of Scipione l'africano is captivating, tense, and stylized. The plot centers around political intrigue, leadership, and military life. It is a foreign, war, and historical movie. Stylistically, Scipione l'africano is epic. In approach, it is serious and realistic. The setting is the Roman Empire and Africa. Scipione l'africano happens in ancient times. Visually, it is black and white. It is drawn from a biography.

Summary of Scipione l'africano

Scipio L'Africano (aka Scipio Africanus) represented the first foray into filmmaking by Vittorio Mussolini, the war-hero son of Italian dictator Benito Mussolini. It was originally intended to be an Italian-American co-production, but Hollywood producer Hal Roach pulled out of the project on the advice of his associates. Rumors have it that Vittorio's father, "Il Duce" himself, wrote the screenplay and personally demanded that Italian filmmaker Carmine Gallone return to his homeland to direct the picture. One of the most expensive historical epics in movie history, the film concentrates on Roman consul Scipio's (Annibale Ninchi) Herculean efforts to topple the regime of Carthaginian conqueror Hannibal (Camillo Pilotto). It takes 15 years, but Scipio is finally able to raise a big enough army to defeat Hannibal, first in Africa and finally at the pivotal Battle of Zama. A subplot concerns the political intrigues concocted by the treacherous Numidian Queen Sofonisba (Francesca Braggioti). To bring Scipio L'Africano to fruition, director Gallone was afforded the luxury of a 232-day production schedule. According to official files, 32,848 extras, 1,000 horses and 50 elephants (for Hannibal's journey across the Alps) were used in the film. Even so, this heavily propagandistic paean to the glories of the Roman Empire is often shoddily put together, chock full of such anachronisms as telephone wires stretching over the battlefields. The film was not the enormous flop that many people claim, but its lukewarm box-office showing was enough to convince the Italian film industry to concentrate on musicals and "white telephone" comedies for the duration of the Mussolini regime.

Details

Language: Italian
Country: Italy
Release date: 21 September 1939
Runtime: 83 min

Cast and Crew

Annibale Ninchi

as Publius Cornelius Scipio

Camillo Pilotto

as Hannibal

Fosco Giachetti

as Captain Massinissa

Francesca Braggiotti

as Queen Sophonisba

Photos

Scipione l'africano (1937)
Scipione l'africano (1937)

Clips

Scipione l'africano
Scipione l'africano: Trailer
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