Amore: Amaro 1974
The "Amore Amaro" (Bitter Love) of the title refers to the paradox of their relationship. They cannot live without each other, but the class chasm is too wide to bridge. Pietro can offer her silk sheets in a Milanese penthouse, but he cannot offer her respect, as he still sees her as a "project to manage." Lucia, in turn, cannot leave her revolutionary friends or her crippled brother (played with heartbreaking nuance by Franco Nero in a cameo). When Amore Amaro 1974 was submitted to the Italian censorship board (the Commissione di Revisione Cinematografica ), it caused a minor scandal. It wasn't the sex that bothered them—the 70s were lenient—but the violence. One sequence, often referred to as "The Carousel of Shame," where Pietro humiliates Lucia in front of his bourgeois friends, was ordered to be cut by four minutes.
– At just 19, Muti radiates a dangerous, natural sensuality. Lucia is a factory worker from the impoverished South, living in a makeshift housing project on the outskirts of Rome. She is angry, proud, and desperately hungry for a life beyond survival. amore amaro 1974
Pietro travels to Rome for a business deal concerning the exploitation of rural land—land that Lucia’s community is squatting on. When they meet, it is not love at first sight; it is war. Their first scene together is a vicious argument about politics and dignity. But antagonism turns to an illicit, obsessive affair. The "Amore Amaro" (Bitter Love) of the title
For the collector, the scholar, or the curious viewer, is not an easy watch. It is a bruise. But it is a beautiful, necessary bruise—a time capsule of a turbulent Italy that preferred to laugh on the surface while bleeding underneath. When Amore Amaro 1974 was submitted to the
– A former political activist who has "sold out" to become a successful, yet cynical, advertising executive in Milan. He is trapped in a sterile marriage with the wealthy but emotionally vacant Elena (Florinda Bolkan).