#202: DE SICA, Vittorio: Indiscretion Of An American Wife/Terminal Station (1953)

DE SICA, Vittorio (Italy)
Indiscretion Of An American Wife/Terminal Station [1953]
Spine #202
DVD


An American housewife (Jennifer Jones) vacationing in Italy reluctantly decides to put an end to her brief affair with an Italian academic (Montgomery Clift). She flees to Rome's Stazione Termini, where she bids him farewell, yet he begs her to stay. The film's plot is simple; its production was not. The troubled collaboration between director Vittorio De Sica and producer David O. Selznick resulted in two cuts of the same film. De Sica's version, Terminal Station (Stazione Termini), was screened at a length of one-and-a-half hours, but after disappointing previews, Selznick severely redited it and changed the title to Indiscretion of an American Wife without De Sica's permission. The Criterion Collection is proud to present both versions of this controversial release.

Indiscretion Of An American Wife
72 minutes

Terminal Station
89 minutes
Black & White
Monaural
1:33:1 aspect ratio
Criterion Release 2003
Director/Writers


From a story by Cesare Zavattini.
Dialogue by Truman Capote.
Screenplay by Zavattini, Luigi Chiarini and Giorgio Prosperí.
Vittorio De Sica was 52 when he directed Indiscretion of an American Wife.

Other De Sica films in the Collection:

#323: The Children Are Watching Us (1944)
#374: Bicycle Thieves (1948)
#1119: Miracle In Milan (1951)
#201: Umberto D. (1952)

The Film

Film Rating (0-60):

60

The Extras

The Booklet

Twelve-page wraparound featuring an essay by Dave Kehr.

Commentary

By film scholar and writer Leonard Leff on Indiscretion of an American Wife.

Publicity sketches and original newspaper ads

Original theatrical trailer

Extras Rating (0-40):

39

60 + 39 =

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

The Complete Criterion Collection By Spine #

#331: OZU, Yasujiro: Late Spring (1949)

#304: ROEG, Nicolas: The Man Who Fell To Earth (1976)