Boccaccio (1972 film)
Boccaccio | |
---|---|
Directed by | Bruno Corbucci |
Produced by | Dino De Laurentiis |
Written by |
Mario Amendola Bruno Corbucci |
Music by | Carlo Rustichelli |
Cinematography | Luigi Kuveiller |
Edited by | Eugenio Alabiso |
Release dates |
|
Running time | 98 min |
Country | Italy |
Language | Italian |
Boccaccio (also known as The Nights of Boccaccio) is a 1972 Italian comedy film written and directed by Bruno Corbucci. It is loosely based on the Giovanni Boccaccio's novel Decameron, and it is part of a series of derivative comedies based on the success of Pier Paolo Pasolini's The Decameron.[1][2]
Cast
- Alighiero Noschese: Lambertuccio da Cecina
- Enrico Montesano: Buonamico di Cristofano aka Buffalmacco
- Mario Carotenuto: Judge Nicola
- Sylva Koscina: Fiammetta
- Isabella Biagini: Ambruogia
- Raymond Bussières: Cagastraccio
- Bernard Blier: dottor Mazzeo
- Pia Giancaro: Monna Lisa
- Paola Tedesco : Lidia
- Andrea Fabbricatore: Calandrino
- Pascale Petit: Giletta di Narbona
- María Baxa: Tebalda
- Rosita Pisano: Mannocchia
- Sandro Dori: Nicostrato
- Lino Banfi: Father Ignazio da Canosa
- Pippo Franco: Bruno degli Olivieri
- Toni Ucci: Pietro da Vinciolo
- Franca Dominici: Perdicca
- Luisa Dominici: Belcolore
- Guido Celano: Messer Anselmo
- Andrea Aureli: Maso
- Hélène Chanel: Princess of Civignì
- Ignazio Leone: Il Bargello
- Antonia Santilli: donna nella tinozza
- Nello Pazzafini: Marito della donna nella tinozza
- Gastone Pescucci: Giovanni Cioppolo
- Mimmo Poli: Spettatore grasso
- Luca Sportelli: Loderinghi
References
External links
- Boccaccio at the Internet Movie Database
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