1
Beatrice Cenci (Film 1941)
1:17:36
2
Giuseppe Verdi (Film 1953 - AUD ENG)
1:53:42
3
Giuseppe Verdi (Film 1953 - AUD ITA)
1:53:42
4
Eugenia Grandet (Film 1946-ENG SUB)
1:44:41
5
Pane, amore e…/Scandal in Sorrento (Film 1955 - MULTISUB)
1:33:03
6
Pane, amore e gelosia/Bread, Love and Jealousy (Film 1954 - MUSLTISUB)
1:37:29
7
Pane, amore e fantasia/Bread, Love and Dreams (Film 1953 - MULTISUB)
1:30:47
8
Audace colpo dei soliti ignoti/Fiasco in Milan (Film 1959 - ENG SUB)
1:42:12
9
I soliti ignoti/Big Deal on Madonna Street (Film 1958-ENG SUB)
1:41:48
10
Arrivederci amore, ciao/The Goodbye Kiss (Film 2006 - ENG & FRE SUB)
1:47:09
11
Il generale Della Rovere (Film 1959 - MULTISUB)
2:11:55
12
Il Trovatore - Salvarezza, Sacchi, Mascherini, Pederzini - Santini, Gallone (Opera Film 1949)
1:37:27
13
La Meglio Gioventù/The Best of Youth (Act I - ENG SUB)
3:00:04
15
Investigation of a Citizen Above Suspicion (Film 1970 - ENG SUB)
1:55:33
16
Buongiorno, notte/Good Morning, Night (Film 2003 - ENG SUB)
1:42:22
17
A Ciascuno il Suo/We Still Kill the Old Way (Film 1967-ENG SUB)
1:29:34
18
La muta di Portici (Film 1952)
1:18:45
The Battle of Algiers (Film 1966 - ENG SUB Remastered)
2:02:10
20
Il Colosso di Rodi/The Colossus of Rhodes - Sergio Leone Film (1961-ENG SUB)
2:23:00
21
Una giornata particolare/A Special Day (Film 1977 - ENG SUB)
1:47:02
22
L'Assedio dell'Alcazar/The Siege of the Alcazar (Film 1940-ENG SUB)
1:49:35
23
Bellissima - Luchino Visconti, Anna Magnani (Film 1951 - MULTISUB)
1:50:39
24
Il Mestiere delle Armi/The Profession of Arms (Film 2001 - MULTI SUB)
1:44:18
25
Condottieri (Film 1937-ENG SUB)
1:24:25
26
I Girasoli/Sunflower (Film 1970 - ENG SUB)
1:47:22
27
Io, Don Giovanni (Film 2009-ENG SUB)
2:01:50
28
Cronaca di una morte annunciata/Chronicle of a Death Foretold (Film 1987-ENG SUB)
1:49:51
29
Il Gattopardo aka The Leopard (Film 1963-MULTI SUB)
3:05:51
30
Casa Ricordi/House of Ricordi (Film 1954-ENG SUB)
2:00:58
31
Nuovo Cinema Paradiso Director's cut (Film 1988)
2:53:31
32
Puccini (Film 1953-ENG SUB)
1:54:23
33
La Cena delle Beffe/The Jester's Supper (Film 1942-ENG SUB)
1:19:01
34
I Promessi Sposi/The Betrothed (Film 1941-ENG & RUSSUB)
1:51:40
35
Umberto D. by Vittorio De Sica (Film 1952-ENG SUB)
1:28:46
36
Rossini (Film 1942 - ENG SUB)
1:33:56
37
Lorenzino de' Medici (Film 1935 - ENG SUB)
1:25:32
38
Don Camillo e l'onorevole Peppone/Don Camillo's Last Round (Film 1955-ENG SUB)
1:40:19
39
La Corona di Ferro/The Iron Crown (Film 1941)
1:44:53
40
Blaise Pascal (Film 1972)
2:09:46
41
Cento giorni a Palermo - One Hundred Days in Palermo (Film 1984)
1:42:18
42
Il Primo Re/The First King: Birth of an Empire (2019 Film- ENG SUB)
2:07:21
43
Romanzo di una strage/Piazza Fontana: The Italian Conspiracy (Film 2012 - ENG SUB)
2:09:25
44
Cadaveri eccellenti - Illustrious Corpses (Film 1976)
1:55:23
46
Casta Diva ( 1954 Film - ENG Sub)
1:33:38
47
Carthage in Flames (Film 1960)
1:46:59
48
I banchieri di Dio - Il caso Calvi | The Bankers of God - The Calvi Affair (Film 2002)
2:07:37
49
Le Conseguenze dell'Amore/The Consequences of Love (Film 2004-ENG SUB)
1:44:01
50
Il Marchese del Grillo (Film 1981-ENG SUB)
2:19:18
51
Nell'anno del Signore/In The Year of Our Lord (Film 1969-ENG SUB)
1:59:44

The Battle of Algiers (Film 1966 - ENG SUB Remastered)

7 months ago
189

The Battle of Algiers (Italian: La battaglia di Algeri) is a 1966 war film co-written and directed by Gillo Pontecorvo. Audio in French and Algerian with English subtitles (click on CC for subtitles).

The film won the Golden Lion at the Venice Film Festival and was nominated for three Academy Awards (in non-consecutive years, a unique achievement): Best Foreign Language Film in 1966, and Best Screenplay (Gillo Pontecorvo and Franco Solinas) and Best Director (Gillo Pontecorvo) in 1968.

The film is based on events undertaken by rebels during the Algerian War (1954–1962) against the French government in North Africa, the most prominent being the eponymous Battle of Algiers, the capital of Algeria. It was shot on location in a Roberto Rossellini-inspired newsreel style: in black and white with documentary-type editing to add to its sense of historical authenticity, with mostly non-professional actors who had lived through the real battle. The film's score was composed by Pontecorvo and Ennio Morricone. It is often associated with Italian neorealist cinema.

The film concentrates mainly on revolutionary fighter Ali La Pointe during the years between 1954 and 1957, when guerrilla fighters of the FLN went into Algiers. Their actions were met by French paratroopers attempting to regain territory. The highly dramatic film is about the organization of a guerrilla movement and the illegal methods, such as torture, used by the French to stop it. Algeria succeeded in gaining independence from the French, which Pontecorvo addresses in the film's epilogue.

The film has been critically acclaimed. Both insurgent groups and state authorities have considered it to be an important commentary on urban guerrilla warfare. A subject of sociopolitical controversy, the film was not screened for five years in France; it was eventually released in 1971.

Sound – both music and effects – perform important functions in the movie. Indigenous Algerian drumming, rather than dialogue, is heard during a scene in which female FLN militants prepare for bombings. In addition, Pontecorvo used the sounds of gunfire, helicopters and truck engines to symbolize the French methods of battle, while bomb blasts, ululation, wailing and chanting symbolize the Algerian methods. Gillo Pontecorvo wrote the music for The Battle of Algiers, but because he was classified as a "melodist-composer" in Italy, he was required to work with another composer as well; his good friend Ennio Morricone collaborated with him. The solo military drum, which is heard throughout the film, is played by the famous Italian drummer Pierino Munari.

Pontecorvo chose to cast non-professional Algerians. He chose people whom he met, picking them mainly on appearance and emotional effect (as a result, many of their lines were dubbed). The sole professional actor of the movie was Jean Martin, who played Colonel Mathieu; Martin was a French actor who had worked primarily in theatre. Pontecorvo wanted a professional actor, but one who would not be familiar to most audiences, as this could have interfered with the movie's intended realism. Martin had been dismissed several years earlier from the Théâtre National Populaire for signing the manifesto of the 121 against the Algerian War. Martin was a veteran; he had served in a paratroop regiment during the Indochina War and he had taken part in the French Resistance. His portrayal had autobiographical depth.

Saadi Yacef, who plays El-Hadi Jaffar, and Samia Kerbash, who plays Fathia, were both members of the FLN and Pontecorvo is said to have been greatly inspired by their accounts. The actors credited are:

Jean Martin as Colonel Philippe Mathieu
Saadi Yacef as El-Hadi Jafar
Brahim Haggiag as Ali La Pointe
Tommaso Neri as Captain Dubois
Samia Kerbash as Fathia
Ugo Paletti as a Captain
Fusia El Kader as Halima
Franco Moruzzi as Mahmoud
Mohamed Ben Kassen as Little Omar

Loading 1 comment...