The Hunchback of Rome
Il gobbo (internationally released as The Hunchback of Rome) is a 1960 Italian crime-drama film directed by Carlo Lizzani.[1] It is loosely based on the real life events of Giuseppe Albano, an Italian partisan that was one of the protagonists, from 1943 to 1945, of the Roman Resistance against German occupation.[2][3]
| The Hunchback of Rome | |
|---|---|
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| Directed by | Carlo Lizzani | 
| Written by | Tommaso Chiaretti Carlo Lizzani Luciano Vincenzoni Ugo Pirro  | 
| Produced by | Dino De Laurentiis | 
| Starring | Gérard Blain | 
| Cinematography | Leonida Barboni Aldo Tonti Giuseppe Aquari  | 
| Edited by | Franco Fraticelli | 
| Music by | Piero Piccioni | 
| Distributed by | Dino De Laurentiis Cinematografica | 
Release date  | 1960 | 
Running time  | 103 minutes | 
| Country | Italy | 
| Language | Italian | 
Plot
    
Alvaro fights during World War II against the Nazis and soon becomes a partisan leader. The other resistance fighters eventually dismiss him because they find his behaviour inacceptable. After the war he doesn't return to a normal life but turns into a foolhardy gangster.
Cast
    
- Gérard Blain: Alvaro Cosenza
 - Anna Maria Ferrero: Nina
 - Pier Paolo Pasolini: Leandro
 - Bernard Blier: Maresciallo
 - Nino Castelnuovo: Cencio
 - Enzo Cerusico: Scheggia
 - Ivo Garrani: Moretti
 - Lars Bloch: German torturer
 - Alex Nicol: U.S. official
 - Franco Balducci: Pellaccia
 - Guido Celano
 
References
    
    
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