Genre:
Drama
Release Date: 01/22/2002
Dubbed: English
Distributor/Studio: Koch
Normally, an actor or actress in a foreign-language film was not the ideal candidate for an Academy Award, inasmuch as his or her English-language "performance" was often dubbed in by an anonymous third party. Such was not the case of
Sophia Loren in
Two Women (
La Ciociara), who did her own English dubbing. Adapted by director
Vittorio De Sica and
Cesare Zavattini from the novel by
Alberto Moravia,
Two Women is the semi-neorealist account of widow
Cesira (
Loren) and her teenaged daughter,
Rosetta (
Eleanora Brown), as they struggle to survive in war-ravaged Italy. A conventional romantic triangle between mother, daughter, and
Michele (
Jean-Paul Belmondo), is barely under way when the war rears its ugly head once more. Seeking shelter in a bombed-out church,
Cesira and
Rosetta are attacked and raped -- a horrifying sequence, capped by a freeze-frame close-up of
Rosetta, her face a taut mask of terror (this image was enough to prompt a virulent "anti-smut" editorial in
The Saturday Evening Post). Once they've recovered from this appalling experience, mother and daughter are offered a ride back to Rome by friendly truck driver
Florindo (
Renato Salvatori). Though
Cesira had hoped to keep her daughter from compromising herself as a means of survival, she is crushed to discover that
Rosetta has given herself to the truck driver in exchange for a pair of stockings. When
Cesira and
Rosetta finally reconcile, it is a grievous occasion, mourning the death of their mutual love,
Michele. A last-minute replacement for
Anna Magnani,
Sophia Loren brought hitherto untapped depths of emotion to her performance in
Two Women; she later stated that she was utilizing "sensory recall," dredging up memories of her own wartime experiences.
~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide