The Bride's Journey

(Redirected from Il viaggio della sposa)

The Bride's Journey (Italian: Il viaggio della sposa) is a 1997 Italian comedy drama film written, directed and starred by Sergio Rubini.[1][2]

The Bride's Journey
Directed bySergio Rubini
Written byFilippo Ascione
Umberto Marino
Raffaele Nigro
Sergio Rubini
Produced byVittorio Cecchi Gori
StarringSergio Rubini
Giovanna Mezzogiorno
CinematographyItalo Petriccione
Music byGermano Mazzocchetti
Release date
  • 1997 (1997)
Running time
104 min
LanguageItalian

Plot edit

In the 16th century, in Abruzzo, the noblewoman Porzia Colonna is promised as a bride to a nobleman of the Orsini family of Conversano, near Bari. Porzia must be escorted from the convent of Atri, where she was educated, to Conversano. During the journey, a band of brigands attacks her party, and most of those travelling with her are killed. The only survivors are Porzia and a rough fellow named Bartolo, who decide to continue the journey to Apulia on foot, although they are so different that they are distrustful of each other. They travel together for two months, meeting many adventures along the way. For the young lady, who has known life only out of books, this is a meeting with hard reality. Bartolo has to teach her the difficult ways of real life. In turn, Porzia teaches him to read and write and to respect learning. Despite their differences, or perhaps by the attraction of opposites, they fall in love, but Bartolo sees their backgrounds as an insurmountable barrier. When they finally arrive at Conversano, he leaves Porzia there and sets off to go home. She is in tears, running behind him, after telling him she loves him.

Many years later, Bartolo, now an elderly schoolteacher, receives a letter from Porzia, who has quietly followed the events of his life. From her death bed, she thanks him for their time together and says she always went on loving him, sending him a diary telling the story of their love and adventures. Bartolo is in tears on hearing Porzia has died. He goes on teaching a mixed class. A child repeats the first of Bartolo's mistakes that Porzia corrected: "Do it! Do not do it!"

Cast edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Roberto Chiti; Enrico Lancia; Roberto Poppi. Dizionario del cinema italiano: I Film. Gremese Editore, 2002.
  2. ^ Deborah Young (September 7, 1997). "Review: 'The Bride's Journey'". Variety. Retrieved 27 February 2014.

External links edit