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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: “Svegliati E Uccidi” (1966)

Featuring 9 bonus tracks, this 2018 Dagored limited edition (500 copies) of Morricone’s score to the 1966 Italian crime thriller “Svegliati E Uccidi” (aka “Wake Up & Die,” aka “Wake Up & Kill,” aka “Too Soon To Die”) is the first time the complete soundtrack has been available on vinyl. Described as “dark and powerful,” this early work from Morricone showcases his mastery of not just film scores, but pop songs, too, as evidenced by the stirring, mournful opening track “Una Stanza Vuota” (“An Empty Room”) sung by the film’s lead actress, Lisa Gastoni, who also starred in the Morricone-scored films “Grazie Zia,” “Maddalena,” and “I Pugni In Tasca” (aka “Fists In The Pocket”).

Listen to the song here:

https://youtube.com/watchv=khFesfrt244%3Fsi%3DRuOWPlr43gE_JeFF

Thanks to Babbel.com, I can (almost) understand all the lyrics. I’ll attempt to translate below (with just a little help from Google Translate):

Una stanza vuota (An empty room)

e tu, che mi hai lasciato (and you, who left me)

con il cuore pieno di te, (with a heart full of you)

e non ti vedo. (and I don’t see you)

Torna, torna indietro, (Come back, come back)

voglio darti tutti i miei giorni. (I want to give you all my days)

Torna da me, da me! (Come back to me, to me!)

Se in un mondo matto per me (If in a world, crazy for me)

ti sei perduto, (you are lost,)

cerca di capire. (try to understand)

Purchase the record here:

https://www.discogs.com/release/13042939-Ennio-Morricone-Svegliati-E-Uccidi-

Watch the film here:

Directed by Carlo Lizzani, the fun and stylish “Svegliati E Uccidi” stars Robert Hoffman, Lisa Gastoni, and Gian Maria Vononté.

Learn Italian (or any language you like!) here:

https://www.babbel.com