Madly in Love

For the 1991 Canadian film sometimes known as Madly in Love, see Love Crazy (1991 film).
Madly in Love
(Innamorato pazzo)
Directed by Castellano & Pipolo
Produced by Mario Cecchi Gori, Vittorio Cecchi Gori
Written by Franco Castellano & Giuseppe Moccia
Starring Adriano Celentano, Ornella Muti
Music by Bruno Zambrini
Edited by Antonio Siciliano
Production
company
Release dates
  • 18 December 1981 (1981-12-18)
Running time
102 minutes
Country Italy
Language Italian

Innamorato pazzo, internationally released as Madly in Love, is a 1981 Italian romantic comedy film, starring Adriano Celentano and Ornella Muti. The film was shot in Como, with scenes filmed in Villa Olmo and in Rome.[1] The film was a commercial success.[2]

Plot

Cristina, the princess of a fictional monarchical state named San Tulipe, is visiting Rome with her father, Gustavo VI, who is trying to appeal to Italy's national bank for a loan to buoy his country's financial crisis. Bored and rebellious, Cristina sneaks away from the embassy and decides to engage in a sightseeing tour of the city. On the bus she takes, Cristina meets the driver Barnaba Cecchini, who instantly falls in love with her.

Barnaba, a charming and happy-to-go ATAC employee, takes Cristina around the city, including the Forum Romanum, and slowly begins to win her personal interest. But after having had her fun and spending a (chaste) night in his apartment, she locks him into his clothes dresser's massive drawer and leaves with her family's bodyguards without telling him about her true identity. After a fruitless search on his own, Barnaba recognizes her when he witnesses a TV report about her sojourn in Rome, and despite his modest background he boldly asks her father for her hand. When Gustavo refuses, Barnaba engages in a series of daredevil schemes to prove his worth, even to the point of appearing (by Cristina's invitation) at a royal banquet in his ATAC uniform and holding successful discussions about high politics with a number of international dignitaries.

However, although Barnaba succeeds in impressing Gustavo and winning Cristina's genuine affection, San Tulipe's financial crisis finally drives the king into engaging his daughter to a billionaire. Determined not to lose his love, Barnaba appeals to the citizens of Rome to make a donation for the cause. As Gustavo's family leaves the city, Barnaba's sympathizers shower them with money, thus annulling both the royal debts and Cristina's planned engagement to a stranger, and Barnaba gaining Gustavo's approval to marry his daughter.

Cast

References

  1. Oggi, Volume 37, Mondadori, 1981
  2. Achille Valdata (30 December 1981). "Pubblico innamorato pazzo film di Celentano". La Stampa. p. 15.

External links


This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Sunday, April 10, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.