Squaring love

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Movie
German title Squaring love
Original title Cuori solitari
Country of production Italy
original language Italian
Publishing year 1970
length Italy: 121 minutes,
Germany: 89 minutes
Rod
Director Franco Giraldi
script Ruggero Maccari
Franco Giraldi
production Ugo Santalucia
music Luis Bacalov
camera Dario Di Palma
cut Franco Arcalli
occupation

The Italian feature film Quadrature of Love ( Cuori solitari ) from 1970 moves between married drama and comedy. The couple is played by Ugo Tognazzi and Senta Berger . The title on West TV of the film, which is premiered in the German-speaking area by East German television, is Einsame Herzen .

action

The upper class couple Stefano and Giovanna spend the summer in their little house on Lake Como . The everyday life of the 45-year-old architect and the young housewife is monotonous and boring. One morning a young couple pitched a tent on their property and is swimming naked in the lake. Stefano's brief indignation quickly evaporates in favor of his interest in the visitor. He lets the couple spend the night in his house and makes hints that he would be interested in a partner swap .

Nothing will come of it because the young people in love stay to themselves and unabashedly practice their exciting sex life. The next morning they disappeared. Despite Stefano's verbal moralism , he sleeps with his secretary. He comes up to Giovanna more and more frequently on the topic of partner swapping without her abandoning her negative attitude. She also has little interest in his suggestion to post an ad and simply read the incoming letters. While reading the box number advertisements in the newspaper, she suddenly discovered something that she suspected Stefano was behind. He immediately admits it. Reading the letters received gives the couple an amusing evening. Due to Stefano's persistent obsession with swapping partners, Giovanna finally agrees. The first couple they go to turn out to be old and unsightly. Giovanna laughs and they leave. When the second couple comes to visit, Stefano takes a liking to the woman, but Giovanna finds the man pushy. Stefano then comes to mind where he has seen the woman before: in a photo as a prostitute . He rightly suspects an attempt at fraud and the man makes off with the whore. After another, unsuccessful visit to a corresponding club in Ticino , they give it up.

An unexpected opportunity arises later when they let their friends Diego and Gabriella show them a large palazzo. Giovanna is really taken with the cultivated and handsome Diego. While he is playing a Beethoven piece for her on the piano , Gabriella goes to bed with Stefano in a bedroom. But when Diego's piano can suddenly no longer be heard, Stefano suffers a blockage. He runs from bedroom to bedroom in the Palazzo without being able to find Giovanna. In the morning she appears before him with the face of a woman who has had a great night. He doesn't want to know anything about swapping partners; Distraught, he asks her to confirm under an oath that nothing has happened that night. She grants him, slightly alienated, the required support in his attempt to suppress reality.

background

Diego seduces Giovanna by playing Beethoven's Piano Sonata No. 32 . When Stefano wanders through the Palazzo in search of Giovanna, the music from Mozart's Magic Flute from the 15th appearance is played in Act 1, in which Papageno finds Pamina.

criticism

The Corriere della Sera writes: “The theme has an inner consistency to which the two protagonists contribute. U. Tognazzi controlled and convincing, ironic and human. S. Berger delicious. "

Prisma says: "'Lonely Hearts' by Franco Giraldi is not only a parody of the sex mania of the sixties, but also a comedy about longings, fears, wishes and inhibitions, staged with playful Italian humor."

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Corriere della Sera
  2. prisma.de