Footprints on the Moon (1975 film)
Footprints on the Moon (Italian: Le orme) is a 1975 Italian film starring Florinda Bolkan and Klaus Kinski.
Footprints on the Moon | |
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Film poster | |
Directed by | Luigi Bazzoni |
Produced by |
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Screenplay by |
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Based on | Las Huellas by Mario Fenelli |
Starring | |
Music by | Nicola Piovani[1] |
Cinematography | Vittorio Storaro[1] |
Edited by | Roberto Perpignani[1] |
Production company | Cinemarte S.r.l.[1] |
Distributed by | Cineriz |
Release date |
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Running time | 96 minutes[1] |
Country | Italy[1] |
Box office | ₤202.505 million |
Plot
Alice Cespi, living alone in Rome and employed as an interpreter, wakes up to find she has lost several days. Tormented by a recurrent nightmare from a film she saw when young called “Footsteps on the Moon”, in which an astronaut is left to die on the Moon by an evil mission controller, she has become reliant on tranquilisers. Going in to work, she is fired for being absent without explanation.
Back in her apartment she finds a postcard showing a faded old hotel at a place called Garma. Hanging up, she finds a bloodstained yellow dress she has never seen before. And then she notices that she has lost an earring. She decides to go to Garma, a Turkish island, and books into the mostly empty hotel. People there say they saw her a few days ago, but she had long red hair. In a shop she sees an identical yellow dress to the one she found. A dog in the woods is playing with a long red wig. She begins to suspect that the missing days in her life may indeed have been on Garma.
In a panic in the woods, she falls unconscious and a man called Henry carries her to an empty villa. When she comes to, she recognises the distinctive stained glass windows showing peacocks. On the floor she finds her missing earring. In her jumbled memories, Henry was a lover who left her, just as the astronaut was left, and in revenge she stabbed him with scissors (hence the bloodstains on the yellow dress).
She hears Henry talking on the telephone and, suspicious that he is arranging to have her taken away, kills him with a pair of scissors. Pursued along the beach by the psychiatric nurses he had called, she sees them as astronauts sent by the evil controller. An end title says she is in a secure hospital.
Cast
- Florinda Bolkan as Alice Cespi
- Peter McEnery as Henry
- Lila Kedrova as Mrs Heim
- Nicoletta Elmi as Paula Burton
- Klaus Kinski as Blackmann
- Caterina Boratto as Boutique owner
- Evelyn Stewart as Mary
- Esmeralda Ruspoli
- John Karlsen as Alfred Lowenthal
- Rosita Torosh as Marie Leblanche
Production
The films script was allegedly based on Las Huellas by Italian-Argentinian writer Mario Fenelli.[2] He was close friends with Manuel Puig with the two writing scripts together while Puig encouraged Fenelli to become a fiction writer instead of a film-maker.[3] The film was shot in nine weeks between Rome and Turkey starting in 29 April 1974.[4][5] Florinda Bolkan spoke on her performance in the film stating that she was immersed into it psychologically and physically stating she lost eleven pounds while working on it.[4] the film was director Luigi Bazzoni's final film.[4]
Release
Footprints on the Moon was distributed by Cineriz in Italy as Le orme on 1 February 1975.[1][3] The film grossed a total of 202,505,676 Italian lire domestically.[3]
Reception
On its initial release, critic Giovanni Grazzini wrote that "following Dario Argento's exploits, Italian cinema can count on another director who knows how to make a thriller...The movie nails you to the chair, keeps you awake, sows in doubt and curiosity, and eventually does not make you regret the time and money spent."[4]
Francesco Barilli saw the film in 2011 and referred to it as an "intriguing, elegant, suggestive film, very courageous and peculiar, very well shot and with a beautiful photography by Vittorio Storaro"[6]
References
Footnotes
- Curti 2017, p. 146.
- Curti 2017, p. 148.
- Curti 2017, p. 147.
- Curti 2017, p. 149.
- Curti 2017, p. 150.
- Barilli, Francesco (April 2012). "In Nero". Nocturno Cinema. No. 116. p. 4.