Nenè

1977
6.2| 1h48m| NA| en| More Info
Released: 21 September 1977 Released
Producted By: San Francisco Film
Country: Italy
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
Official Website:
Info

In the Catholic and traditionalist Italy, two teenagers covertly discover new prohibited games.

Genre

Drama

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Director

Salvatore Samperi

Production Companies

San Francisco Film

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Nenè Audience Reviews

Baseshment I like movies that are aware of what they are selling... without [any] greater aspirations than to make people laugh and that's it.
BelSports This is a coming of age storyline that you've seen in one form or another for decades. It takes a truly unique voice to make yet another one worth watching.
Bob This is one of the best movies I’ve seen in a very long time. You have to go and see this on the big screen.
Dana An old-fashioned movie made with new-fashioned finesse.
KobusAdAstra It is three years after the end of WWII and things are not easy in Italy. Particularly for one family. The husband is a small-minded and petty bully and regularly physically and verbally assaults his wife and daughter. His young son Ju (Sven Valsecchi) is his favourite and barely gets criticized. It is clear that women are seen as lesser beings than men. The husband runs his household like a tyrant and gives his wife barely enough money to buy proper food. It is more important that his son gets a proper (and expensive) education, than wasting money on food, he argues. The man's brother is gravely ill and the husband agrees that his niece can move in with them. This girl, Nenè (Leonora Fani), is a warm-blooded 14 year old lass who quickly makes friends with a young vagrant of mixed race, a mulatto, who lives with several other homeless people in a derelict building nearby. This young man only has one thing in mind.Ju is precocious and despite his very young age gets to learn about the facts of life quite early on, Nenè an enthusiastic teacher. He is inquisitive and spies on Nenè when she gets together with her boyfriend. And that is how Ju's father found them...This is an engrossing film, particularly with the background of post-war political turmoil. The film is funny at times, but the underlying atmosphere is one of sadness at the oppression the women suffer.I found the acting quite good, but is is particularly the cinematography that impressed. I score this film a good 7/10.
lazarillo Savatore Samperi is considered one of Italy's best directors in the comedy-drama genre, but international recognition has largely eluded him, perhaps because international releases of his films have been horribly, horribly dubbed into English (like his most seminal film "Malizia") or given wildly appropriate English-language titles (like the exploitative UK title of this one).This movie is set in the late 1940's, a few years after the trauma of WWII and during 1948 Italian elections when the Italian Communist Party was surprising defeated at the polls (an election many now believe was stolen by the American CIA). The political events are mostly kept in the background, however, as this story is told from the perspective of a precocious nine-year-old boy, "Ju". His parents are both emotionally damaged from the deprivations of war--there's an uncomfortable scene where he watches his mother (Paola Senatore) sexually service his father (Ugo Tognazzi), marks on her backside evident from the switch his abusive father likes to use on his family members (especially the female ones). The boy's larger awakening into adulthood, however, comes courtesy of his orphaned older cousin "Nene" (Leanora Fani), who comes to stay with his family. The teenage girl lets him sleep in her bed and confides him about her burgeoning sexuality and the illicit affair she is having with a local mulatto hood.Obviously, this movie broaches some subjects Anglo-Americans especially are rather paranoid about these days, but I don't think it really deserves comparison to the notorious "Maladolescenza". This is a serious art film, not exploitation. Perhaps some of the confusion is in the casting. Leanora Fani, who was actually quite a bit older than she looks here, was generally in much sleazier movies (i.e. in "Beastialita" she played a girl romantically in love with a dog). And Paola Senatore later became a bonafide hardcore porn star (although only briefly and as the result of serious drug addiction). Both actresses, however, were beautiful and talented and very unlike the stereotype of porn stars today. And while their respective roles here have a certain sexual frankness, they're still a long way from porn or other lurid exploitation. Ugo Tognazzi was more respected actor perhaps, but even he did later direct some Edwige Fenech sex comedies and he was in Marco Ferreti's outrageous art-house hit "Le Gran Bouffe". What it really comes down to is that the Italians in the 70's simply didn't "ghetto-ize" and compartmentalize sexually-themed films and the actors that appeared in them the way Anglo-Americans do, especially today. But I'm not so sure this is such a bad thing.Along with "Malizia" and "Scandalo", this is a Samperi film that desperately needs to be released with some decent Englsh subtitles (the version I saw looked good, but only had Italian subtitles). It would do much to rehabilitate the reputation of one of Italy's most talented 70's era directors.
fertilecelluloid Made in the same year as "Maladolescenza" and sharing some similarities, this Italian tale of teen and pre-teen exploration is essentially an indictment of Family and could be described as "Maladolescenza Lite". There is some dark psycho-sexual material here, but it involves the mentally ill patriarch of a little boy's family whose sadistic impulses are visited on the body (and behind) of the boy's mother. A little boy (Sven Valsecchi) becomes sexually curious about Nene (Leonara Fani) when she stays with the family in the wake of her mother's suicide. In a couple of subtle sequences, Nene allows the boy to sleep beside her and engage in innocent touching. A dark, well written tale, "Nene" has a beautiful score by Francesco Guccini and superb direction by Salvatore Semperi. Interesting.