47 morto che parla (1950) Poster

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7/10
Totò does Harpagon (sort of)
petra_ste26 May 2007
Warning: Spoilers
A bit Molière's L'Avare, a bit Plautus' Aulularia, this little comedy is notable because of the great comedic talent of Totò, one of the most charismatic, compulsively watchable Italian actors of the 20th century - even if he spent most of his career on droll but unremarkable fluff. This is not one of his best movies - see, for example, his part as a scornful master thief in Monicelli's I Soliti Ignoti - but it's rather amusing nonetheless.

Greedy baron Peletti (Totò) hides a box of precious jewels his father had destined to their town. The townspeople trick him into believing he is dead and, in a fake afterlife, try to convince him to finally give up the heredity.

Although Totò's performance as the avaricious baron is by far the best thing about the picture, I have to say a young Carlo Croccolo is also rather funny as his miserable butler.

Overall, not a great movie, and almost every scene without Totò (thankfully, very few) is worthless; besides, while the first act (before the fake death) is amusing, and the second (the baron's ordeal in the "afterlife") is also not bad, the last part drags. However, Totò's interpretation of the archetypal greedy character inevitably brings a smile to my face.

6,5/10
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6/10
One of the Classic Italian Comedies
lchadbou-326-2659230 November 2020
47 Morto Che Parla was one of six films starring the popular comedian Toto that were released in just the year 1950.Veteran scenarists Age and Scarpelli devised a clever vehicle for the great star combining: an old plot from Ettore Petrolini in which townspeople trick a man into thinking he is dead, the Moliere satire The Miser, and a bit of Jules Verne. (Five Weeks In a Balloon) The turn of century period setting is pleasantly brought to life by expert director Carlo Ludovico Bragaglia.Toto plays his part (a baron who hoards a treasure chest full of valuable jewels supposed to help build an elementary school) to the hilt, constantly reminding fellow citizens that he really has no money and that any time there is a cost, "Io pago!" (I land up paying) Silvia Pampanini lends able support as a pretty traveling music hall singer cajoled into pretending to be a phantom spirit who will guide the supposedly dead Toto in the afterlife to...the hidden box of wealth.
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