Product Details
Le Notti Bianche (White Nights) - Criterion Collection

Le Notti Bianche (White Nights) - Criterion Collection
Directed by Luchino Visconti

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Product Description

A chance encounter on a canal bridge results in a series of twilight rendezvous between a lonely city transplant (Marcello Mastroianni) and a sheltered woman (Maria Schell) haunted by a lover’s promise. Their hesitant courtship soon entangles both of them in a web of longing and self-delusion. Adapted from the Fyodor Dostoyevsky short story, director Luchino Visconti’s Le notti bianche—shot in ravishing black and white—is a romantic, shattering tale of the restlessness of dreamers.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #35278 in DVD
  • Brand: Image Entertainment
  • Released on: 2005-07-12
  • Rating: Unrated
  • Aspect ratio: 1.66:1
  • Formats: Black & White, Closed-captioned, DVD, Special Edition, Subtitled, Widescreen, NTSC
  • Original language: Italian
  • Subtitled in: English
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Running time: 97 minutes

Customer Reviews

Cinema as poetry, pure and simple5
Some movies slowly work their magic, gradually sucking you in. This film had me at hello. As soon as I heard the first few soft, compelling notes of Nino Rota's evocative score, I knew I was going to love this film. Needless to say, I was not disappointed.

A person could probably describe the basic plot of Le Notti Bianche in a single sentence; the film is simple, and all the more timeless and beautiful for being so. It is a mood piece, a tone poem, a thoughtful study of loneliness, isolation and despair in which imagery, the placing of actors and objects within each frame, is as important to establishing character and atmosphere as dialogue and action. Le Notti Bianche works primarily on an emotional level but is also vaguely profound in its existential shadings. It exists in a world halfway between fairy tale and reality, and inhabits that world so convincingly that we never question the more fantastic elements. Cinema as poetry, pure and simple.

Marcello Mastroianni plays a young office worker, new to the city, who roams the streets at night in search of an anodyne for his loneliness. It is interesting to see Mastoianni in his pre-sex symbol days, playing a character who is humble, diffident, and still quite youthful. Only three years later he would appear in La Dolce Vita as the jaded protagonist, a man already bored and angry with his sexuality. Maria Schell is his love interest, a girl so sheltered and ingenuous as to be almost unbelievable, but Schell manages to be convincing, abetted no doubt by the fact that the story is half-fairy tale and a certain suspension of disbelief is required. Jean Marais, possessor of one of the most unique visages in cinema, has a brief role, with little to do other than looking handsome and angst-ridden; he is craggier-looking than in the great films he made with Jean Cocteau, but still charismatic.

The tone of the film is almost like an unbroken line, rarely deviating from its somber pace, with the exception of a couple of key scenes. During the most important and eventful night of the story, the main characters visit a dancehall, and the scene within is wild, sexual, like something out of Fellini, in fact it might have been an influence on the crazy dance scene in La Dolce Vita. Later, Mastroianni's character temporarily hooks up with a woman who has been admiring him for the past few nights, stalking him almost, their encounter ending in a violent confrontation with some street thugs. The way Mastroianni discards the woman is brutal, thoughtless and unsettling, and adds an uncomfortable layer of darkness to the overall sweetness of the character, and the film.

Le Notti Bianche is different than other films in Luchino Visconti's oevre, which tend to be less visually poetic, more melodramatic. The film is certainly as operatic as other Visconti works, but in a more subtle way, how it melds music with the emotion of the moment so perfectly. It's like a Puccini opera, but without the suicide, the crying and screaming, the death by consumption. It tells a gentle story, sad, moving and totally engrossing.

Brief Encounters4
Luchino Visconti wanted this movie to be real and unreal, so a multi-layered city set was built inside a studio. It has a running river, bridges, busy streets, wind, fog and snow, all nicely lit and photographed in black-and-white. We learn this and more from an extra The Criterion Collection has included in this classy edition. "White Nights" is a dreamy romance, adapted from a Dostoyevsky short story and quite unlike other films by Visconti. Critics and admirers of the director will roll their eyes or sigh gratefully for that.

It's far from the scale of "The Leopard" and "The Damned." Two lonely people meet on a bridge. As he grows fond of her, he tries to convince her to forget the man she loves and who has vowed to return. The ending may surprise you, but little else will. There are compensations, however. Maria Schell learned Italian for her role and is memorable in it, Marcello Mastrioanni is earnest and likeable, and Jean Marais is a mysterious presence. Visconti's intimate neo-realistic touches are happily starting to emerge. "White Nights" won some awards in 1957 and may yet win some hearts today.

One of the Great films of Italian cinema5
White Night or Le Notti Bianche was the first film I ever saw by Visconti. It was nothing like i expected. I know alot about the Neorealism films and i know Visconti first made his mark in cinema in that genre with La Terra Trema , White Night is not a neorealist picture. Its quiet simply a love story made so beautiful and truthful thats by the end of the film, you feel elevated, as though something has transcended within you.

Warning: if you haven't seen the film, you may want to skip this paragraph because it gives away the ending. The thing i love about this movie the most is the ending. It's not a hollywood ending, but it tricks you in to thinking maybe they'll end up together and that'll be it. But they don't. The girls boyfriend shows up and Marcello is left alone in the snow, crying.

This love film is not concerned with boy getting girl, but what we can learn trying to get love. He may not have the girl at the end of the movie, but he has their whole experience from that night and its something that will last and stay with him forever.

Don't miss this movie, there's nothing else like it. also the cinematography is breath taking.