/sU6ENo313Dh36Q7UK2vw72WBKJ1.jpg
DramaRomance

Rocco and His Brothers

- DARING in its realism. STUNNING in its impact. BREATHTAKING in its scope.

When a impoverished widow’s family moves to the big city, two of her five sons become romantic rivals with deadly results.

Release Date : 1960-10-07

Language :Italian

Adult : false

Status : Released

Production Company : TitanusLes Films Marceau

Production Country : FranceItaly

Alternative Titles : Rocco & His Brothers

Cast

Alain Delon

Character Name : Rocco Parondi

Original Name : Alain Delon

Gender : Male

Renato Salvatori

Character Name : Simone Parondi

Original Name : Renato Salvatori

Gender : Male

Annie Girardot

Character Name : Nadia

Original Name : Annie Girardot

Gender : Female

Katina Paxinou

Character Name : Rosaria Parondi

Original Name : Katina Paxinou

Gender : Female

Alessandra Panaro

Character Name : Ciro's Fiancee

Original Name : Alessandra Panaro

Gender : Female

Spiros Focás

Character Name : Vincenzo Parondi

Original Name : Σπύρος Φωκάς

Gender : Male

Max Cartier

Character Name : Ciro Parondi

Original Name : Max Cartier

Gender : Male

Corrado Pani

Character Name : Ivo

Original Name : Corrado Pani

Gender : Male

Rocco Vidolazzi

Character Name : Luca Parondi

Original Name : Rocco Vidolazzi

Gender : Male

Claudia Mori

Character Name : Laundry Worker

Original Name : Claudia Mori

Gender : Female

Adriana Asti

Character Name : Laundry Worker

Original Name : Adriana Asti

Gender : Female

Enzo Fiermonte

Character Name : Boxer

Original Name : Enzo Fiermonte

Gender : Male

Nino Castelnuovo

Character Name : Nino Rossi

Original Name : Nino Castelnuovo

Gender : Male

Rosario Borelli

Character Name : Gambler

Original Name : Rosario Borelli

Gender : Male

Renato Terra

Character Name : Alfredo, Ginetta's Brother

Original Name : Renato Terra

Gender : Male

Roger Hanin

Character Name : Morini

Original Name : Roger Hanin

Gender : Male

Paolo Stoppa

Character Name : Cerri

Original Name : Paolo Stoppa

Gender : Male

Suzy Delair

Character Name : Luisa

Original Name : Suzy Delair

Gender : Female

Claudia Cardinale

Character Name : Ginetta

Original Name : Claudia Cardinale

Gender : Female

Jerome Adjer

Character Name : Black Boxer (uncredited)

Original Name : Jerome Adjer

Gender : Male

Orlando Baralla

Character Name : Croupier (uncredited)

Original Name : Orlando Baralla

Gender : Male

Luigi Basagaluppi

Character Name : (uncredited)

Original Name : Luigi Basagaluppi

Gender : Male

Sauveur Chioca

Character Name : (uncredited)

Original Name : Sauveur Chioca

Gender : Male

Bruno Fortilli

Character Name : (uncredited)

Original Name : Bruno Fortilli

Gender : Male

Biagio Gambini

Character Name : Boxing Coach (uncredited)

Original Name : Biagio Gambini

Gender : Male

Becker Masoero

Character Name : Nadia's Mother (uncredited)

Original Name : Becker Masoero

Gender : Male

Rocco Mazzola

Character Name : (uncredited)

Original Name : Rocco Mazzola

Gender : Male

Felice Musazzi

Character Name : (uncredited)

Original Name : Felice Musazzi

Gender : Male

Eduardo Passarelli

Character Name : (uncredited)

Original Name : Eduardo Passarelli

Gender : Male

Emilio Rinaldi

Character Name : (uncredited)

Original Name : Emilio Rinaldi

Gender : Male

Gino Seretti

Character Name : (uncredited)

Original Name : Gino Seretti

Gender : Male

Reviews

C

CinemaSerf

@Geronimo1967

2025-02-15

I’m not sure this ought not to have been called “Simone” and his brothers as it’s that sibling (Renato Salvatori) whose actions seem to resonate most across this family. They are led my matriarch “Rosaria” (Katina Paxinou) from their roots in Italy’s south to find a new home in Milan. That’s because elder son “Vincenzo” (Spyros Fokas) has moved there to be with his girlfriend “Ginetta” (Claudia Cardinale). Almost immediately, there’s a bit of a lively inter-family squabble that sees the her and her other sons “Rocco” (Alain Delon), “Simone”, the more sensible “Ciro” (Max Cartier) and their much younger brother “Luca” (Rocco Vidolazzi) all struggling to make ends meet with “Vincenzo” doing what he can to assist. Jobs are hard to come by and so they all resort to milking the system to put a roof over their heads whilst “Ciro” gets a job and the others do what they can to raise some cash. The narrative is loosely compartmentalised with each brother getting a little bit of the storyline but increasingly they centre around the handsome but unreliable “Simone” who proves useful in the boxing ring and who starts to make some money and to date “Nadia” (Annie Girardot). She’s a lady of the night with whom he falls heavily for, but when she discovers that he his stealing to pay his way with her, she asks “Rocco” to return the gifts and moves to another town. Now “Rocco” receives his draft papers and having sent his last lire to his mother, bumps into “Nadia” and soon a romance of their own is bubbling. This one, though, is not based on supply and demand and when his brother discovers this news, he and his friends set up a scenario with heinous ramifications. With “Simone” now on quite an obviously self-destructive path, “Rocco” - himself now a distinguished boxer after his time in the army disgusted by his brother, and “Nadia” loathing just about everyone - including herself, things become more and more toxic for the “Parondi” family. It’s that toxicity that Luchino Visconti captures evocatively as this characterful story develops along lines that are anything but predictable. Sure there is vengeance, but it’s exercised in such a subtle and accumulating manner as to provide us with a denouement that proves entirely unsatisfactory but somehow entirely appropriate. It’s Salvatori who steals this for me, but Girardot also shines as does Paxinou as the epitome of the Italian mother whose character is largely responsible for some of the sparing but punchy histrionic humour that peppers this family drama. The setting of a nation still recovering from the ravages of war, with money tight and opportunities unevenly spread throughout the place tells us potently of the trials and tribulations of relocation and of fitting-in as much as anything else, and some of the monochrome photography contrasts just as strikingly their slum dwellings with the more beautiful architecture of Milan suggesting that even there, there are rags and riches stories to be told and perhaps even to anticipate too. As in so many stories, boxing is used effectively as not just a conduit for hope, but also one for hatred and ambition and it’s with this persona that Delon is at his most effective as his increasingly conflicted and decent “Rocco” finds life nigh on impossible. The final segment falls to the impressionable young “Luca” who might feel just a little short-changed, but who might also prove to be the one most affected and with the most to look forward to. It’s vibrant, angry, clever and possibly my favourite Visconti film and if you can sit for a few hours and watch it on a big screen, then it’s well worth the effort.