Natalia
Maria Schell
Natalia

A middle-aged man meets a young woman who is waiting on a canal bridge for her lover's return.
Le notti bianche di Luchino Visconti - Trailer Official
Natalia
Maria Schell
Natalia
Mario
Marcello Mastroianni
Mario
L'Inquilino
Jean Marais
L'Inquilino
La Padrona della Pensione
Marcella Rovena
La Padrona della Pensione
La Domestica
Maria Zanoli
La Domestica
La Cassiera
Elena Fancera
La Cassiera
Un Coinvolto nella Rissa
Lanfranco Ceccarelli
Un Coinvolto nella Rissa
Un Coinvolto nella Rissa
Angelo Galassi
Un Coinvolto nella Rissa
Un Coinvolto nella Rissa
Renato Terra
Un Coinvolto nella Rissa
Un Giovinastro
Corrado Pani
Un Giovinastro
Il Ballerino
Dirk Sanders
Il Ballerino
La Prostituta
Clara Calamai
La Prostituta
Marcello Mastroianni espies a young woman who is waiting, patiently, by a bridge. Initially he thinks she is one of the ladies of the night but as he passes he thinks he hears her crying. Distressed, she tries to flee from him but he manages to calm her down and they chat. They agree to meet next evening, same place same time - and that's the start of this charmingly simple drama that sees "Mario" and "Natalia" (Maria Schell) begin to confide in each other and cement a bond borne out of both of their emotional desires and frustrations. We also find out just why she waits each night. There are moments of intensity and joy as this story unfolds and we see a love burgeoning. Can it ever result in anything, though? The cold wintery evenings, the snow, the canals - they all add an eerie richness to two potent performances that show the vulnerabilities of their characters, their longings, disappointments and their hopes. Visconti also amiably incorporates a sense of family into the story well too. His being more around the relationship with the loudly omnipresent, but caring, landlady of his hotel (Marcella Rovena) and her's with her ageing grandmother - who rather comically uses a safety pin to adjoin their shirts so she cannot wander off! There is comedy here, but this film also has a sadness to it. Not a melancholic one, more an inevitability that somehow you just know is going to leave one of them quite possibly worse off in the end. Dostoevsky didn't much like "happy" endings - so don't go expecting one here, but there's a delicate chemistry to enjoy between Mastroianni and Schnell.
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