La Cenerentola

1981
9.1| 2h31m| en
Details

The Prince, Don Ramiro (who has changed places with his valet, Dandini), meets Cenerentola and they are instantly attracted to each other. When the Philosopher, Alidoro, later takes Cenerentola (dressed in magnificent clothing) to the palace, Dandini (still posing as the prince) tries to talk of love to her, but Cenerentola rejects him, saying that she is in love with his 'valet'. Ramiro, who has overheard this comment, is overjoyed, and immediately proposes to her, but Cenerentola says that he must first seek her out and then, if he still felt the same way, she would marry him. She gives him one of a matching pairs of bracelets, telling him to look for its companion on her right arm (she then leaves the palace). Ramiro ends the masquerade, and he and Dandini resume their true identities. The Prince then sets out on his quest - little realising that destiny, in the form of a violent thunderstorm, is about to take a hand in the affair.

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Deutsche Grammophon

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Trailers & Clips

Also starring Frederica von Stade

Also starring Paolo Montarsolo

Also starring Francisco Araiza

Reviews

Curapedi I cannot think of one single thing that I would change about this film. The acting is incomparable, the directing deft, and the writing poignantly brilliant.
Hadrina The movie's neither hopeful in contrived ways, nor hopeless in different contrived ways. Somehow it manages to be wonderful
Kaydan Christian A terrific literary drama and character piece that shows how the process of creating art can be seen differently by those doing it and those looking at it from the outside.
Billy Ollie Through painfully honest and emotional moments, the movie becomes irresistibly relatable
john-584-765813 Although somewhat dated with advances in sound technology since 1981 this production is as musically fresh as ever. It is now more than 30 years since I first heard it and I still think it is the best production I have ever heard. Because it is filmed and the singers mime to their own voices there is the occasional lapse in synchronism. Cardboard sets? These put the emphasis on the music whilst fully adding to the character of the opera.The singers? The sisters Clorinda and Tisbe are anything but ugly and have remarkably good voices plus really good comic timing and expressions. The prince and Dandini are good solid singers and actors. And the stars? Paolo Montesoro, as the Baron, is not only a superb singer but one of the best comic actors I have ever seen; body language and expressions almost perfect. Frederica von Stade as Angelina sings and looks gorgeous. Whilst she does not have the comic flair of Cecilia Bartoli her singing in Italian is equally good. I marvel at her command of the language. Despite singing with an Italian star cast she is always their equal. Her range is good at the extremes in the accuracy and volume of her notes.
TheLittleSongbird As much as I loved the production with Cecilia Bartoli and Alessandro Corbelli and enjoyed the one with Ann Murray and Gino Quillico, I think this is the best Cenerentola I've seen, and in the top 5 of my favourite Jean-Pierre Ponnelle films alongside Rigoletto, Le Nozze Di Figaro, Der Barbier Von Sevilla and La Clemenza Di Tito.La Cenerentola is opera magic. When I first saw it, I admittedly found the story confusing, but the more productions I've seen of it the more I have grown to appreciate the opera's wit, charm and fun. When done right, it is often hilarious, with Dandini and Don Magnifico getting the lion's share of the best moments, and Rossini's music as always sparkles.I have often said that Ponnelle's opera films are visually stunning. Before I saw La Cenerentola, I perceived his most visually stunning film to be between Rigoletto, Madama Butterfly and La Clemenza Di Tito. They still do, but now after seeing this Cenerentola this gets my vote now as his most beautiful film visually, with very elegant settings and sumptuous costuming. The camera work is also wonderful as well as the sound.The staging engages throughout, either being very funny or very beautiful. The most effective in my opinion was that of the Act II sextet, with the scene shot entirely in silhouette with each singer's movements resembling that of the motions of a big Bavarian Cuckoo clock. Another remarkable asset of this scene was the singers' abilities to create something larger making their individualities more effective.Musically, the orchestra have lots of style and beauty in their playing. Claudio Abbado's conducting is wonderfully buoyant, very breakneck speed at times, while still maintaining the spirit of Rossini.I cannot begin to describe or even to start how amazing Frederica Von Stade is as La Cenerentola. What was it that I loved most about her performance? How beautiful she was? The vibrant, warm tone of her singing? Her subtle acting and facial expressions, especially her look when she discovers her love in the Prince's Valet and her smile as she relives the ball stroking her bracelet? Her crystalline diction in her patter commentary? Her ability to nail the melancholic side of Cenerentola's character? The answer is I cannot decide, so I'd say, all of it. Bartoli had a charming stage presence and a very smoky beautifully produced voice, and Murray's singing and acting were great, but to me Von Stade had the whole package.Francissco Araiza is excellent as Ramiro. His voice has the right agility for Mozart and Rossini, and he uses it brilliantly without ever pushing. His acting deserves credit, I have known Araiza to be stiff before, but here he is very dashing and convincing, better I think than the later performance with Murray and Quillico and preferable to Matteuzzi. Paul Plishka sings the role of Alidoro as if it was made for him. His singing is robust and sonorous, doing justice to his very difficult aria(very high and florid even for a bass) and his acting is hearty, and looking at him in this film you would actually think it was Rossini himself come to life. I didn't get this much enjoyment from the other two Alidoros I've seen so far.The step-sisters are sung by Margherita Guglielmi and Laura Zannanni, and their purposefully high singing(not the singing itself but the register it is composed in) is still appealing and contrasts very well with Cenerentola's lower and perhaps more mellow range, their stage presence is both fun and commanding, almost like a Lucy and Ethel act, and their chemistry is great together. I only have one criticism, and it is more a nit-pick really, but their constant squealing can get annoying after a while.Aside from Von Stade, although the entire cast are wonderful with nobody I would describe as bad, the best of the cast were Paolo Montarsolo's Don Magnifico and Claudio Desderi's Dandini. I will say in regards to other performances of Don Magnifico I loved Enzo Dara and Walter Berry. Dara's interpretation was hilarious and he nails the fiendishly difficult pattering that is required of the role, and Berry's performance is equally virtuosic if a little more nastier than Dara's.Montarsolo's Magnifico is not just nasty, but very funny- the scene with him at Ramiro's court is the film's comic highlight- as he can be a real buffoon here and there is even a sympathetic side at the end as he realises his downfall. His singing and diction are impeccable. Desderi did have stiff competition with the brilliant Quillico and very impressive Corbelli, however I think he outdoes them both. His Dandini is simply hilarious with his scenes with Montarsolo a comic joy, and of the three his is also the most vocally expressive and musical. He also literally spits out his diction in his patterings.All in all, simply brilliant and the best Cenerentola. 10/10 Bethany Cox
Nik Shaylor There is something very odd about rating for this film. It seems strange that there are currently only eighteen votes, but it is staggering that three people gave it a score of two! I've admired this production ever since it was first broadcast on British TV which I taped, and have watched many times. However, I recently bought the DVD which is quite a revelation in video quality. Musically this production is a very solid, and the quality of the 6 channel DTS audio is excellent on the DVD. I like the singers, especially Francisco Araiza and Claudio Desderi. Frederica von Stade is very solid. She certainly has all the notes though she does have a tendency to use more glissando than is to my taste. The real star for me is Paolo Montarsolo whose bluff buffoonery is superb. Its hard to imagine a better performance than this. The acting of all the cast, including the chorus, is excellent and often very funny. The production values are truly marvelous. The sets and costumes of Jean-Pierre Ponnelle are exceptionally beautiful. The direction, also by Ponnelle, is very inventive. There is a clever variation halfway through where he gets Rossini rather than Alidoro to send Cinderella to the ball. Lastly the cinematography by David Watkin is fantastic. Watkin is a true genus, and he complements Ponnelle art perfectly. Come on guys, how can any of you think that this is only worth a rating if two?
Gyran La Cenerentola is my favourite Rossini. It has an excellent libretto that manages to make you believe in the familiar characters from the Cinderella story. This is one of Jean-Pierre Ponnelle's better opera films, maybe because it is an adaptation of a production at La Scala. As in all Ponnelle's film, the singers mime to their own recording, but at least they do it convincingly. Frederica von Stade is wonderful in the title role and she is ably supported by Francisco Ariaza as the prince