A Woman Has Killed

A Woman Has Killed (Italian: Una donna ha ucciso) is a 1952 Italian melodrama crime film directed by Vittorio Cottafavi. While on a train journey a young woman tells another passenger how she murdered her husband, a British army officer.[1] It is a neorealist film, based on the real story of Lidia Cirillo, who appears in the film.

A Woman Has Killed
Directed byVittorio Cottafavi
Written bySiro Angeli
Giorgio Capitani
Vittorio Cottafavi
StarringFrank Latimore
Lianella Carell
Music byRenzo Rossellini
CinematographyBitto Albertini
Edited byRenzo Lucidi
Production
company
Nuovissima Film
Distributed byCinecid (Indipendenti Regionali)
Release date
4 January 1952
Running time
93 minutes
CountryItaly
LanguageItalian

The film's sets were designed by the art director Ottavio Scotti.

Cast

gollark: People are perfectly capable of learning maths and treating it as abstract nonsense they refuse to apply anywhere.
gollark: What? How would that help people?
gollark: You should use OpenPOWER.
gollark: RISC-V isn't open enough, actually.
gollark: I kind of want smart home things, but I have no actual usecase and the maintenance burden it would add to my mess of scripts and infrastructure would likely be bad.

References

  1. Bayman p.1

Bibliography

  • Bayman, Louis. The Operatic and the Everyday in Postwar Italian Film Melodrama. Edinburgh University Press, 2014.
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