My Brother Anastasia
My Brother Anastasia | |
---|---|
Directed by | Steno |
Written by | Sergio Amidei Alberto Bevilacqua Alberto Sordi |
Cinematography | Sergio D'Offizi |
Edited by | Raimondo Crociani |
Music by | Piero Piccioni |
Running time | 87 minutes |
Language | Italian |
My Brother Anastasia (Italian: Anastasia mio fratello) is a 1973 Italian drama crime film directed by Steno.[1][2]
Cast
- Alberto Sordi as Don Salvatore Anastasia
- Richard Conte as Albert Anastasia
- Luciano Pigozzi as Pasquale
- Edoardo Faieta as Sonny Boy
- Feodor Chaliapin, Jr. as Frank Costello
- Franco Angrisano as Inspector De Felice
Plot
Don Salvatore Anastasia, a priest in a seminary in Tropea, Calabria (Italy), gets a ticket to visit his brother in New York. He has never known him, because the brother emigrated illegally in the U.S.A. years before.
Upon his arrival in America, he is greeted with much respect, as well as his brother, also from the Italian-American community of Little Italy. Enthusiastic of that, he decided to stay on as assistant pastor in the church of Saint Lucia and bring it to a new shine.
Accompanied in New York, his last name, Anastasia, commands respect and, above all, opens the door hitherto locked: his brother, really, is the infamous mob boss Albert Anastasia.
After the allegations of a clandestine horse race, there is a federal investigation, and Albert, brother of Don Salvatore, is locked up in the prison of Sing Sing and sentenced to 10 months for tax evasion.
Here begins the collapse of Don Salvatore, who will recover only when his brother gets out of jail. But the recovery will be short-lived because Albert dies shortly after, assassinated in a barber salon. Don Salvatore, overcome by grief at the loss of his brother, has no choice but to embark, sadly, and return to Italy.
References
External links
- My Brother Anastasia at IMDb
- v
- t
- e
- A Night of Fame (1949)
- A Dog's Life (1950)
- È arrivato il cavaliere! (1950)
- Cops and Robbers (1951)
- Toto and the King of Rome (1952)
- Toto and the Women (1952)
- Toto in Color (1952)
- The Unfaithfuls (1953)
- Man, Beast and Virtue (1953)
- Cinema d'altri tempi (1953)
- A Day in Court (1954)
- An American in Rome (1954)
- Le avventure di Giacomo Casanova (1954)
- The Letters Page (1955)
- Nero's Weekend (1956)
- Female Three Times (1957)
- Susanna Whipped Cream (1957)
- Maid, Thief and Guard (1958)
- Mia nonna poliziotto (1958)
- Toto in the Moon (1958)
- Toto in Madrid (1959)
- The Overtaxed (1959)
- Uncle Was a Vampire (1959)
- Un militare e mezzo (1960)
- Letto a tre piazze (1960)
- Some Like It Cold (1960)
- Psycosissimo (1961)
- Musketeers of the Sea (1961)
- La ragazza di mille mesi (1961)
- The Two Colonels (1962)
- Totò Diabolicus (1962)
- Copacabana Palace (1962)
- Toto vs. the Four (1963)
- Heroes of the West (1964)
- I gemelli del Texas (1964)
- A Monster and a Half (1964)
- Letti sbagliati (1965)
- Rose rosse per Angelica (1965)
- Love Italian Style (1966)
- The Crazy Kids of the War (1967)
- How to Kill 400 Duponts (1967)
- Caprice Italian Style (1967)
- Transplant (1969)
- Gang War (1971)
- The Blonde in the Blue Movie (1971)
- Execution Squad (1971)
- Il terrore con gli occhi storti (1972)
- L'uccello migratore (1972)
- My Brother Anastasia (1973)
- Flatfoot (1973)
- Policewoman (1974)
- Flatfoot in Hong Kong (1974)
- The Boss and the Worker (1975)
- Febbre da cavallo (1976)
- L'Italia s'è rotta (1976)
- Three Tigers Against Three Tigers (1977)
- Double Murder (1977)
- Flatfoot in Africa (1978)
- Amori miei (1978)
- Dr. Jekyll Likes Them Hot (1979)
- Hot Potato (1979)
- Flatfoot in Egypt (1980)
- Prickly Pears (1980)
- Quando la coppia scoppia (1981)
- Il tango della gelosia (1981)
- Dio li fa e poi li accoppia (1982)
- Banana Joe (1982)
- An Ideal Adventure (1982)
- Bonnie and Clyde Italian Style (1983)
- Mani di fata (1983)
- Mi faccia causa (1984)
- Urban Animals (1987)
- Big Man (1987)
This article related to an Italian comedy film of the 1970s is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e