Categories
Morricone

The Morricone Collection: “Il Clan Dei Siciliani” (1969)

Poster insert
Theme

From hhv’s product description:

“CAM Sugar is proud to announce the definitive release of the original soundtrack composed by Ennio Morricone for Il clan dei siciliani (The Sicilian Clan) by Henri Verneuil (1969), one of the most celebrated European noir films of the late 1960s, starring Jean Gabin, Alain Delon, and Lino Ventura.

Album cover sticker

This new edition comes in a limited italian exclusive 3LP Gatefold edition plus poster and it stems from an extraordinary discovery in CAM Sugar’s historical archives: the original master tapes of the complete recording sessions, preserved for decades and never before heard in their entirety. From these tapes emerged precious material, including eight previously unreleased themes—never issued in any format—now fully restored and presented to the public for the first time.

Inner gatefold (l)

With this release, CAM Sugar continues its mission to rediscover and enhance the immense heritage of Italian film music, returning to collective memory one of Ennio Morricone’s most emblematic works—finally in its complete, restored, and definitive form.

Sleeve 1A

· LP 1 – The Original 1969 Soundtrack Album

· LP 2 – Outtakes & Alternates

· LP 3 – The Lost Tape

Thus is born Archivio Segreto, a new series of CAM Sugar physical releases designed to bring to the public the composers’ works in their most complete and definitive form, enriched with unreleased tracks and studio materials.

Side 1

The restoration work, carried out with strict philological rigor, has fully recovered the authentic sound of the orchestra conducted by Morricone. High-resolution digitization and precise restoration have preserved the warmth and dynamic range of the original tape, recreating a spatial sound faithful to the Maestro’s vision. Available as a triple LP and double high-resolution CD, this edition represents the most complete and philologically accurate version ever released of this legendary score, reproducing the full recording session exactly as it was captured.

Sleeve 1B

The music of Il clan dei siciliani occupies a prominent place in Morricone’s career and in the history of European film music. His score combines elegance and tension, exquisitely portraying Verneuil’s protagonists—criminals bound by an ancient code of honor, caught in a world of modernity and betrayal. The main theme, “Il clan dei siciliani,” has become one of the composer’s most iconic pieces, with its clear melody, melodramatic structure, and orchestral arrangement that blends melancholy with sophistication. Since its first release as a 45 RPM single in 1969, the piece has stood as a classic of the genre, uniting popular appeal with musical depth.

Side 2

A musical journey through the soul of crime and honor—between melancholy and formal precision—signed by one of the greatest composers of the twentieth century.

Inner gatefold (c)

The CAM Sugar edition is not a mere reissue: it is an act of historical and cultural restoration. The eight unreleased tracks found on the master tapes reveal new shades of Morricone’s work, including thematic variations, sequences removed from the final edit, and musical ideas that shed light on the Maestro’s creative process at the height of his artistic maturity. The new edition also includes a booklet featuring period images, production notes, and a critical essay on the genesis of the soundtrack—offering listeners a fully immersive experience in the sonic and cinematic world of the film.”

The Maestro’s signature
Sleeve 2
Side 3
Sleeve 2B
Inner gatefold
Inner sleeve 3A
Reverse cover

The Film:

Classic trailer

From Wikipedia:

The Sicilian Clan (FrenchLe clan des Siciliens) is a 1969 French-Italian gangster film[3] based on the novel by Auguste Le Breton. It was directed by Henri Verneuil and stars Jean GabinLino Ventura and Alain Delon, whose casting has been credited with the film’s box office success in France.[6][7] Ennio Morricone composed the score for the film.

In Paris, robber and murderer Roger Sartet escapes from custody with the help of the Manalese, a small, well-organized Sicilian Mafia clan consisting of patriarch Vittorio, his two sons, and his son-in-law. Sartet pays them with some valuable stamps he had stowed away, and the Manalese hide him in an apartment above the arcade game manufacturing company they own as a front. Jeanne, the French wife of Vittorio’s elder son, looks after Sartet, but he sneaks out to see a prostitute at a hotel and narrowly avoids getting captured by Commissaire Le Goff.

Alternate illustrated film poster

While in prison, Sartet got to know an engineer who worked on the security for a jewelry exhibition in Rome before becoming incarcerated, and he learns the details of the system. He proposes that the Manalese help him rob the show, but they are dubious of the hot-headed outsider, so Vittorio and his old friend Tony Nicosia, who has lived in New York City for decades, go to the exhibition to check it out. They notice additional security measures negate Sartet’s plan, but, after learning the show will soon be moved to New York, Nicosia comes up with a plan to steal the jewels in transit. He sends Jack, an alcoholic ex-pilot, to Paris to help the Manalese with the heist.

Figuring Sartet will need fake papers to leave the country, Le Goff tracks down the forger who made his previous fake passport. By coincidence, Vittorio was having the same man make several fake passports as part of the heist, and Le Goff finds the phone number of one of Vittorio’s employees at the forger’s studio. Le Goff questions Vittorio, but he says the employee no longer works for him

The Manalese clan retreat to a hideout near the Italian border. Jeanne sunbathes nude in front of Sartet and they start to make love, but are interrupted by Roberto, her six-year-old nephew. She entreats him not to tell anyone.

Sartet goes to Rome, where he discreetly kidnaps Edward Evans, an English insurance man, and takes Evans’ place among the small group of officials sent to guard the jewels during their trip on a passenger flight. As Jack, Jeanne, Vittorio, and his sons wait to catch the plane when it stops in Paris, they are surprised to see Evans’ wife arrive and, intending to accompany her husband to New York, board the plane early. Thinking fast when Mrs. Evans returns from the plane, Vittorio leads her to believe that Evans will be on the same flight the next day, as that is when the jewels are really being transported. While the plane loads and takes off, Mrs. Evans puts through a call to her husband’s hotel in Rome. When she learns he never arrived there, she contacts the police and identifies Sartet as one of the men she saw on the plane.

During the plane’s descent towards New York, the Manalese clan hijack the aircraft. Warned of Sartet’s imminent arrival in the United States, the local police race to the airport, but Jack lands the plane on a new stretch of highway that is not yet open. Nicosia’s men are waiting to unload the jewels, and the gangsters split up. Sartet hides out in New York while he waits for his share of the proceeds and a ticket to Veracruz.

Back home in Paris, the Manalese family watch a film in which a couple start to make love, and Roberto exclaims that it looks just like what Sartet was doing with Jeanne. Though Jeanne denies everything, Vittorio lures Sartet back to Paris by withholding his share of the loot. Jeanne calls Sartet’s sister, Monique, and asks her to warn him of the trap. Monique goes to the airport, where she finds Vittorio’s sons and son-in-law waiting for Sartet, and they are all arrested by Le Goff, who was monitoring Monique’s telephone.

Sartet, who had arrived in Paris by an earlier flight than expected, calls Vittorio to arrange a meeting at an isolated spot. Vittorio brings Jeanne with him, and, while Sartet examines the money, Vittorio shoots Sartet and Jeanne dead, leaving the cash by the corpses. When Vittorio returns home, Le Goff is waiting to arrest him.

Development

The Sicilian Clan was based on the second novel in a series by Auguste Le Breton. The first, which also featured the characters of Sartet and Le Goff, had been filmed by Bernard Borderie as Brigade antigangs in 1966.

The epitome of 1960s French cinema cool

The film rights to The Sicilian Clan were bought by Henri Verneuil, who teamed with Jacques-Eric Strauss and signed a deal with 20th Century Fox.[8] Verneuil wrote a screenplay with Pierre Pelegri and then José Giovanni. The two lead roles were written with Jean Gabin and Alain Delon in mind, as Verneuil had worked with both men before.[9] As the writing progressed, Verneuil began to feel that the police officer was another strong role, and he decided to cast Lino Ventura, who had made his film debut 15 years earlier in Touchez pas au grisbi, which also starred Gabin.[8]

Jean Gabin

Irina Demick was unhappy with her character in the film compared to the novel, in which she was more active, and wanted her to take part in the hijacking. Verneuil felt this would not be believable, but Demick had considerable influence, as she was the mistress of the head of Fox, Darryl F. Zanuck, so Verneuil rewrote the sequence.[8]

Lino Ventura

Filming

Second unit filming started in New York in March 1969. The main unit went into production on March 24 at Franstudio’s Saint-Maurice Studios. The film was shot in two versions: with the actors speaking French, and with the actors speaking English.[8]

Jean Gabin (l) and Alain Delon (r)

During production, Delon was involved in a real-life scandal, the Marković affair, which surrounded the still-unsolved murder of his former bodyguard Stevan Marković several months earlier.

Delon

Box office

In France, The Sicilian Clan drew 4,821,585 admissions,[10] making it the third-most-popular movie of 1969 in France, behind Once Upon a Time in the West and The Brain.[11] It was the second-highest-grossing film of all time in France, behind La Grande Vadrouille(1966), when only considering films not shown on a roadshow release basis.[1] In the United States and Canada, the film earned $1 million in theatrical rentals during 1970.[12]

According to Fox records, the film required $7,925,000 in rentals to break even, and it had earned worldwide rentals of $9,250,000 by 11 December 1970.[5] By September 1970, it had made Fox a profit of $533,000.[13]

Jean Gabin (c) and clan

Critical reception

Vincent Canby of The New York Times wrote that the film “has its occasional moments… but mostly it’s a tired example of a tired genre.”[14] The Los Angeles Times said it “winds up seeming more corny and contrived than witty and ironic.”[15]

Delon takes aim

Retrospectively, and more positively, in the book French Cinema: From Its Beginnings to the Present, author Rémi Fournier Lanzoni wrote: “This gangster film reinvented the classic gangster genre, elevating it to a higher level with its hard-boiled acting, deep character studies, and attractive photography.”[9]

Release

The film had its premiere in Paris on 8 December 1969.[1]

The stars of The Sicilian Clan at work…

References

  1.  “‘Sicilians’ Moves In French Stakes; Now B.O. Second”. Variety. 11 February 1970. p. 11.
  2.  “The Sicilian Clan (1970)”Turner Classic MoviesTurner Broadcasting System (WarnerMedia). Archived from the original on October 18, 2015. Retrieved 8 October 2018.
  3.  “Le Clan Des Siciliens (1968)”British Film Institute. Archived from the original on March 3, 2017. Retrieved 6 October 2018.
  4.  Solomon, Aubrey. Twentieth Century Fox: A Corporate and Financial History (The Scarecrow Filmmakers Series). Lanham, Maryland: Scarecrow Press, 1989. ISBN 978-0-8108-4244-1. p256
  5.  Silverman, Stephen M (1988). The Fox that got away : the last days of the Zanuck dynasty at Twentieth Century-Fox. L. Stuart. p. 329ISBN 9780818404856.
  6.  Michael L. Stephens  Gangster films – 1996 “A surprising success in the United States (where it grossed over $2 million), The Sicilian Clan was an enormous box office success in Europe, and remains one of the all-time moneymakers in France. It is yet another variation on the heist gone wrong”
  7.  Canby, Vincent (2011). “New York Times: The Sicilian Clan”. Movies & TV Dept. The New York Times. Archived from the original on 2011-05-20. Retrieved 2008-09-03.
  8.  Lombard, Philippe (3 August 2008). “The Sicilian Clan”Film Stories.
  9.  Fournier Lanzoni, Rémi (22 October 2015). French Cinema: From Its Beginnings to the Present (2nd ed.). United States: Bloomsbury Publishing. pp. 266–267. ISBN 978-1-5013-0307-4.
  10.  Box office information for film at Box Office Story
  11.  “French Box Office 1969”Box Office Story.
  12.  “Big Rental Films of 1970”. Variety. 6 January 1971. p. 11.
  13.  Silverman p 259
  14.  Screen: Verneuil’s ‘The Sicilian Clan’ By Vincent Canby. New York Times 30 Mar 1970: 52.
  15.  Heist Theme Featured in The Sicilian Clan’ Thomas, Kevin. Los Angeles Times 27 May 1970: e15.
…and at rest.

Categories
Morricone

The Morricone Collection: “Storie Di Vita E Malavita” (1975)

Original Italian Theatrical Poster.
The Maestro around the time he composed the score for “Storie Di Vita e Malavita.
Morricone’s screen credit.

The Album

Album cover sticker.

From the Cam Sugar journal:

Cam Sugar’s write up for “Storie Di Vita e Malavita.”

“In 1975 Ennio Morricone composed the music for Storie di Vita e di Malavita, the film with which director Carlo Lizzani followed up his investigation on youth deviance and crime in Milan. The opus documented the city’s lowlives, the malavita, based on a reportage by Marisa Rusconi, a pioneering author and journalist who could seamlessly move from investigative to lifestyle and fashion journalism, as witnessed by her work with the likes of Panorama, L’Espresso and Vogue.

As the soundtrack by Ennio Morricone finally resurfaced in its entirety from the CAM Sugar archive with its first-ever vinyl release on the occasion of Record Store Day, photographer Fabrizio Vatieri reimagines the film’s iconography in the streets of contemporary Milan.”

The Film:

Storie Di Vita e Malavita” on blu-ray.
Title shot.

Aka “The Teenage Prostitution Racket,” 1975’s “Storie Di Vita e Malavita” was directed by Carlo Lizzani, who also directed the excellent Italian crime picture “Wake Up & Kill” aka “Svegliati e Uccidi,” the Spaghetti Western “The Hills Run Red,” and the political drama “Mussolini: Ultimo Atto,” all of which, like this picture, feature stunning scores by the Maestro.

Album cover art.
Album cover art.

Here is the synopsis of the film from the Amazon product description:

“Occupying a creepy cinematic netherworld somewhere between Eurocrime and erotica, Carlo Lizzani’s Teenage Prostitution Racket (Storie di Vita e Malavita) is an unapologetically sordid film that explores the troubled sexuality of a series of young women coming of age in 1970s Milan. Beginning on the outskirts of town, where a peasant woman pimps her thirteen-year-old companion to passing truck drivers, Lizzani s film worms its way into the metropolis, where the oldest profession, in its varied forms, is dramatized in a series of interlocking narratives. A working-class girl is lured into prostitution by a boyfriend; a rich girl uses sex to rebel against her wealthy parents; a photographer s model discovers sex is an unspoken requirement of her job; an ex-convent girl becomes a nymphomaniac after being seduced at school; an independent hooker relies on a vicious dog to defend her against a gang of mobsters. As sensational as the episodes may be, Lizzani doesn’t reduce the characters to mere sex objects. Instead, he endows each woman with enough depth that even the most voyeuristic viewer can t help but become invested in her struggles to survive, and share her resentment toward the shady characters who try to control her. Special Features: Documentary (Italian language with English subtitles) | fotogallery | Cut scenes.”

Still from “Storie Di Vita e Malavita.

The Director:

Italian director Carlo Lizzani.
Carlo Lizzani on IMDb.
Director highlights from IMDb.

Carlo Lizzani’s bio from Wikipedia:

“Born in Rome, before World War II Lizzani worked as a scenarist on such films as Roberto Rossellini‘s Germany Year ZeroAlberto Lattuada‘s The Mill on the Po (both 1948), and Giuseppe De Santis‘ Bitter Rice (1949), for which he received an Academy Award nomination for Best Original Story.

After directing documentaries, he debuted as a feature director with the admired World War II drama Achtung! Banditi! (1951). Respected for his awarded drama Chronicle of Poor Lovers (1954), he has proven a solid director of genre films, notably crime films such as The Violent Four (1968) and Crazy Joe (1974) or crime-comedy Roma Bene(1971). His film L’oro di Roma (1961) examined events around the final deportation of the Jews of Rome and the Roman roundup, grande razzia, of October 1943.[2] For his 1968 film  Bandits in Milan, he won a David di Donatello award as best director and a Nastro d’Argento award for best screenplay.[3]

Lizzani worked frequently for Italian television in the 1980s and supervised the Venice International Film Festival for four editions, from 1979 to 1982.[4] In 1994 Lizzani was a member of the jury at the Berlin Film Festival.[5]

For his 1996 film Celluloide, which deals with the making of Rome, Open City, he received another David di Donatello award for his screenplay.[3]

While preparing for the film L’orecchio del potere (“The Ear of Power”, a project he cultivated since the late nineties with the title Operazione Appia Antica), Lizzani committed suicide in Rome at the age of 91, when he jumped from the balcony of his apartment in Via dei Gracchi on 5 October 2013.[1] On 10 October his coffin was transferred to a room in the Capitol that was set up as a funeral home, and the following day the civil funeral was held. Later, his body was transferred to the Flaminian cemetery for cremation.”

Italian director Carlo Lizzani.

Earlier Album Release:

Double CD release for “Storie Di Vita e Malavita” and “Un Delitto Inutile.

Posters:

Carlo Lizzani Retrospective in 3 Films.

Links:

Listen to “Sotto Controllo” from Morricone’s score for “Storie Di Vita e Malavita” here:

Sotto Controllo” on YouTube.

Purchase a copy of the vinyl on Discogs here:

“Storie Di Vita e Malavita” on Discogs.

Watch the complete film for free on YouTube here:

The complete film on YouTube.

Purchase the blu-ray on Amazon here:

Storie di Vita e Malavita” on blu-ray.

Categories
Morricone

The Morricone Collection: “i Malamondo.” (1966)

Surf guitar, strings, vocal melodies, pop, classical, and jazz, Morricone’s 1964 score to Paolo Cavara’s mondo youth picture, “i Malamondo,” contains a wide range of sounds, moods, and passions, befitting the soundtrack to an anthology picture of such varied episodes as Italian students butchering a pig; teenagers skiing nude in Switzerland; a Parisian “happening”; Swedish students contemplating suicide; a nighttime orgy in a graveyard; a performance from the male Royal Ballet, etc. There are moments that suggest Morricone’s later work on Spaghetti Westerns, a little James Bond vibe here and there (as there will be on Morricone’s score for “Slalom,” a year later), and some of the dark, dissonant sounds of Morricone’s giallo scores.

This 2021 release from CAM Sugar and Decca Records features nine bonus tracks, and striking artwork by Eric Adrian Lee. It is the second in CAM Sugar’s Morricone Segreto series, celebrating the “secrets (sogretto is Italian for “secret”) of Morricione’s genius.”

Inner-gatefold album artwork by Eric Adrian Lee.

Fans of Wes Anderson may already be familiar with the standout track L’ultima Volta (The Last Time), which was featured in “The French Dispatch” (both the film and the trailer).

Listen to L’ultima Volta here:

https://youtube.com/watch?v=84hamSLnX_M%3Fsi%3DZerseoNoZQyUnZ9G

Watch the trailer for “The French Dispatch” here:

Trailer for “The French Dispatch” on YouTube.

Watch the trailer for “i Malamondo” here:

Trailer for “i Malamondo” on YouTube.