Il ragazzo di campagna

Il ragazzo di campagna

Film poster
Directed by Franco Castellano
Giuseppe Moccia
Produced by Luciano Luna
Achille Manzotti
Written by Franco Castellano
Giuseppe Moccia
Starring Renato Pozzetto
Massimo Boldi
Music by Detto Mariano
Cinematography Danilo Desideri
Edited by Antonio Siciliano
Release dates
  • 1984 (1984)
Running time
92 minutes
Country Italy
Language Italian

Il ragazzo di campagna ("The country boy") is a 1984 Italian comedy film directed by Franco Castellano and Giuseppe Moccia. It was shown as part of a retrospective on Italian comedy at the 67th Venice International Film Festival.[1]

Plot

Artemio (Pozzetto) is annoyed by his monotonous life as a farmer in the countryside of Lombardy. On his 40th birthday, he decides to move to the big city of Milan and look for a job and a new life there. There he meets his cousin Severino (Massimo Boldi), who is supposed to help him familiarize with the city, but actually turns out to be a trickster and purse snatcher. Having realized the illicitness of Severino's businesses, Artemio quits him. He later falls in love with a victim of Severino's snatching, a career girl named Angela. The gap between his countryman mentality and her modern and dynamic lifestyle leads to a number of comical misunderstandings, but also provides a basis for their friendship to grow. Meanwhile, Artemio's attempts at finding a job are impeded by his naivety and candor. The love affair with Angela seems to be taking a good fold, until Artemio understands that Angela is not interested in a stable relationship as that would interfere with her job. Disenchanted and disappointed, Artemio finally resolves to go back to his country town. There, he is welcomed by his long time admirer, Maria Rosa, who has in the meantime grown to a beautiful girl. When Angela unexpectedly visits Artemio, he rejects her in favor of Maria Rosa.

Il ragazzo di campagna has a cult status in Italian culture[2] in its satyrical representation of the contradictions of the hectic life in Milan in the years of the Italian economic miracle (e.g., when Artemio resolves to take a taxi cab to cross the street in the impossibly trafficked Piazza San Babila). The inadequateness of Pozzetto-"country boy" in relating to Milan is reminiscent of that of Totò in another extremely popular film, Toto, Peppino, and the Hussy.

Cast

References

External links

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