Fear (Italian: La Paura) is a 1954 German-Italian drama film directed by Roberto Rossellini and starring his wife Ingrid Bergman. It has also been released as Angst in the English-speaking world. It is loosely based on the Stefan Zweig novel Fear. It was filmed in Munich and was shot simultaneously in German and English. Rossellini created it because he wanted to explore the reconstruction of Germany from both a material and moral standpoint ten years after making his previous German film Germany, Year Zero.[1] The film is noirish with aspects reminiscent of Hitchcock and German Expressionism.
Fear | |
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![]() Belgian theatrical release poster | |
Directed by | Roberto Rossellini |
Written by | Roberto Rossellini Sergio Amidei Franz von Treuberg |
Based on | Fear by Stefan Zweig |
Produced by | Herman Millakowsky |
Starring | Ingrid Bergman Mathias Wieman Renate Mannhardt Kurt Kreuger |
Cinematography | Carlo Carlini Heinz Schnackertz |
Edited by | Jolanda Benvenuti Walter Boos |
Music by | Renzo Rossellini |
Distributed by | Minerva Film |
Release dates |
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Running time | 83 minutes |
Countries | West Germany Italy |
Languages | German English |
Irene is the wife of a pharmaceutics manager. When she decides to leave her lover, she is blackmailed by a harpy. She does everything in her power to conceal the truth, without knowing that her husband already knows everything and is sadistically enjoying the situation behind her back.
The film did not do well when it was released in Italy and Germany. Consequently, the Italian distributor edited the film and re-released it as Non credo più all'amore. In this edited version, a fishing scene is shortened and an explanatory narration is added to two silent scenes. In addition, the ending was changed from a scene showing Bergman attempting suicide to a scene showing her family in the countryside, after Bergman had left her husband, living on for the sake of her children.
This initiative involves 10 films by Roberto Rossellini that are being digitally restored and will then be promoted internationally. Carrying out the restoration work are Cinecittà Luce-Filmitalia, the Cineteca di Bologna, the Centro Sperimentale di Cinematografia, and the Coproduction Office. Fear is one of the ten films being restored. The others are: Rome, Open City (Roma città aperta), Paisan (Paisà), Germany Year Zero (Germania anno zero), L’amore, Stromboli (Stromboli terra di Dio), The Machine that Kills Bad People (La Macchina ammazzacattivi), Journey to Italy (Viaggio in Italia), India: Matri Bhumi, and Interview with Salvador Allende (Intervista a Salvador Allende: La forza e la ragione).[2]
On March 15, 2013, Turner Classic Movies broadcast Fear for the first time on TV in North America. [3]
Films directed by Roberto Rossellini | |
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1930's | La Vispa Teresa (1939) |
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