Buona Sera, Mrs. Campbell (1968) Poster

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8/10
A simple yet endearing comedy which holds up well to this day
MaxBorg8918 July 2008
In the '50s and '60s, perhaps thanks to the success of Neo-Realistic cinema, Italian actors and locations became quite popular in American movies, especially comedies (the amusing It Started in Naples, starring Sophia Loren and Clark Gable, is one example worth revisiting). Buona Sera, Mrs. Campbell, with the always lovely Gina Lollobrigida playing the main role, is probably one of the funniest hybrids of US and Mediterranean talent.

Lollobrigida plays Carla Campbell, a widow who supposedly lost her husband during WWII. She lives in the South of Italy and provides for her daughter Gia (Janet Margolin) all by herself. It's all fine until a group of soldiers who fought in Italy during the war returns for a reunion and the truth is slowly unveiled: there is no Mr. Campbell, Carla having made him up since she slept with three different men (Telly Savalas, Phil Silvers and Peter Lawford) and doesn't know which of them is Gia's father. To complicate things even more, she told all three of them the girl is their daughter. In other words: mix-ups and misunderstandings are inevitable.

The story is extremely simple and a very good premise for a comedy, so good no one has ever tried to remake it (well, if you don't count the ABBA musical Mamma Mia!, which has a similar plot). Then again, it might be hard to pull off something like it nowadays (unless the setting was some place where paternity tests don't exist) - its look on adultery isn't exactly PC (and yet it was released while the Hays Code was still functional). Still, the gags come sharp and fast, particularly when Savalas and Silvers are on screen, and Lollobrigida is, as ever, a beauty to watch and hear. Margolin isn't bad either, whereas Lawford's subdued performance doesn't really sit well with the quick wit and great physical comedy delivered by his two rivals. But that's a minor flaw in a film that doesn't show up very often, but when it does, it truly is worth catching. Where else are you going to hear Lollobrigida explain that she called herself Campbell, like a soup brand, because the only other American name she knew was Coca-Cola?
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8/10
Gina's a delight in this '60s screwball comedy
Andrew_Eskridge12 April 2005
Former sex goddess Gina Lollobrigida is a gorgeous 40ish redhead in this fast-paced comedy filmed on location in Italy in 1968.

La Lollo plays the mother of the lovely Janet Margolin, whose American soldier father was supposedly killed during World War II. The thing is, Gina isn't sure who the father was, since she was friendly with three soldiers at the time, (played by Peter Lawford, Phil Silvers and Telly Savalas), and all are very much alive. Each of the three thinks he is the father and has been financially supporting the girl in secret for over 20 years. Trouble and hilarity ensue when the three men and their wives return to the Italian village for an Army reunion, and Gina has to juggle all six of them while keeping her daughter from finding out the truth.

It's a funny script that hearkens back to Hollywood's great screwball comedies, with especially good jobs from Silvers and Savalas and Shelley Winters and Lee Grant as their wives. But it's Gina who steals the show with her glamorous mugging.
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8/10
Fun comedy
preppy-328 January 2006
Gina Lollobrigida plays a "widow" in Italy with a teenage daughter played by Janet Margolin. In reality Gina was never married but had, in the 1940s, sex with three different Army men (Telly Savalas, Phil Silvers and Peter Lawford) who all believe they're the father! Now they're all coming to town for a reunion and things go crazy.

Light, breezy comedy beautifully filmed on location in Italy. It has a good cast all doing very well in their roles. The standouts are Lollobrigida who is very beautiful and surprisingly good at comedy; Silvers who gets laughs from the stupidest lines and Shelley Winters who is hysterical as his overbearing wife. The only bad acting is by Margolin and Lee Grant as Savalas' wife--but she isn't given much to work with. And there's some hysterically bad process shots when people are riding cars. But these are minor complaints. This is just a silly, fun comedy.

Hard to believe that this was once considered risqué. It was originally rated M (which is the R rating today). It's now been lowered to a PG. I admit is DOES make adultery look OK but who's going to take this film seriously? Recommended. I give it an 8.
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Guffaws Galore
ivan-221 December 2002
One of the best comedies ever made, full of comic details, non-stop hilarity, one of those rare movies that can be seen again and again and it gets better every time. A comedy that doesn't insult human dignity or intellect, full of interesting characters and vignettes, and a lot of emotion too. Not surprisingly, the acting is fabulous when the writing is good. Everyone gives a memorable performance. It doesn't get any better than this. Funniest lines: "In the Piazza", "Doesn't do windows", "Campbell is a noble name". "Is mom going to sing?" "Grazie, grazie very much". "A few Berlitz lessons, and...". "So many of you left a little something here". Lolobgrigida, Winters and Savalas are priceless. The tune by Ortolani fits the movie perfectly. I first saw it in 1969, then in 1983. After so many years it doesn't get stale. That's what I call a classic.
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7/10
You're welcome any day Gina!
ptb-81 May 2005
I just saw a trailer for a new 2008 film called MUMMA MIA starring Meryl Streep in the Gina Lollobrigida role! Another remake!

Well this original from 1968 is a very funny film, and I guess, an extension of the 'caper comedy' style so popular in the mid-60s. I haven't seen the famous multi paneled trailer (sounds very Mad Mad Mad World) but we are in the cine-world of other adult level all star 'wacky marital mix-ups' with phrase titles like DIVORCE American STYLE, WHAT A WAY TO GO, NOT WITH MY WIFE YOU DON'T, BOY DID I GET A WRONG NUMBER etc, each the American idea of farce: yelling and door slamming. However, unlike some of those mentioned above MRS CAMPBELL is genuinely hilarious. In fact today would still make a good play, if it wasn't one already. I believe however it was an original screenplay by Melvin Frank who had already excelled with many 40s and 50s comedies and in the early 60s with LI'L ABNER and later with A TOUCH OF CLASS in '73. I clearly remember sitting in a large suburban cinema with a very entertained crowd roaring with laughter and marveling at how gorgeous Lollobrigida was then. Lee Grant as always is superb as someone's wife and moaning Shelley Winters is a great foil even for comedy against Phl Silvers and Telly Savalas. Even the horrible presence of bland and pointless Peter Lawford cannot spoil the clever comedy storyline of this uproarious well written heartfelt comedy. The charming and catchy theme song still plays in my head. Forgotten by 1970 and much unappreciated today, MRS CAMPBELL is by far the best of late 60s all star marriage farces and deserves a big new century DVD release. It makes you realize how these 60s films really knew how to entertain. It also makes one realize how far Holllywood has strayed from what worked. No wonder adults don't bother with going to the cinema much in 2005. However, even if this film was remade today with 2005 swearing and punching it would still be funny, such is the solid script and good story. Try and find this film and settle in for a great experience.
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6/10
Nothing can stop the Army Air Corps
bkoganbing2 October 2016
Gina Lollobrigida plays the title role in Buona Sera Mrs. Campbell a title that she appropriated for herself. Her past during those World War II years is coming back when an Army Air Corps unit that was stationed in her town is returning and Gina had three men occupy her in every sense of the word. One of them even left something behind.

The something behind was her daughter Janet Margolin and she's been brought up to believe that her father was an American flier killed in action, an officer and a gentleman who did the right thing and married mom and left her a widow. But for the three men who are in the running for daddy, she named Peter Lawford, Telly Savalas, and Phil Silvers as the father and collects from all three.

For 20 years Gina's been conning two of these guys and all three of the wives who are also coming. Shelley Winters is the mother of three precocious little lads and would love to have had a daughter with Phil Silvers. Peter Lawford and Marian McCargo have had no children and Telly Savalas and Lee Grant are also childless. In Savalas's case the doctors say he may be shooting blanks, but is he?

This is an amusing comedy from a cast who know from comedy. Telly Savalas doesn't exactly have a light touch, but his character is similar to one he played in Battle Of The Bulge.

DNA testing has certainly made a modern remake of this film not likely to have the same result. Today I think somebody would have demanded it.

Phillippe LeRoy's character as Gina's faithful French boyfriend who threatens to go back to Bordeaux often doesn't make a lot of sense. In real life he'd have seen Bordeaux again a decade earlier.

Still Buona Sera Mrs. Campbell does have a few laughs and most will find it amusing.
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6/10
The female cast shines!
Maciste_Brother29 March 2009
A fun comedy with all star international cast. Even if it stars three big Hollywood actors, the film is hijacked by scene stealing performances from the 3 main actresses: Gina Lollobrigida, Shelley Winters and Lee Grant.

Grant plays a smart-ass who's mouth would make a trucker blush. She plays her role as if she was afraid she would be eclipsed by either Gina or Shelley. It didn't happen. She clearly stands out in her scenes.

Then there's the incorporable Shelley Winters, who, in her own style and fashion, gives gravitas to a role that could have easily been bland and forgettable and instead is filled with warmth and genuine comedic understanding.

But the best performance in this comedy belongs to sexy Gina. Gina was best in comedies and here she excels with unusual aplomb. The role was probably written with her in mind but Gina took it and made it her own. I can't imagine anyone else as Mrs Campbell. It's a role that could have been played in a trashy way but Gina is such a pro that she makes the story of a young girl who slept with 3 soldiers in a span of 10 days sound like clean cut fun. It's definitely one of Gina's best role in her entire career.

The male cast is also good but their roles are somewhat underwritten and do the best with what they have. Surprisingly, Phil Silvers AND Telly Savalas, who both usually annoy me in other films, are actually pretty good here. Lawford is the one that registers the least. Vittorio, played by hunky Philippe Leroy, who's Mrs Campbell's current lover, is used as window dressing.

The 3 bright performances from the actresses elevate it to an above average comedy.
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10/10
Loved the movie.
betoesq24 January 2007
As of 1/24/2007. I absolutely loved the movie, viewing it from the frame of mind of that era, versus what extreme technology, effects and scripting of the present. I can absolutely say how FUNNY and Hilarious it was to view!

I had watched this movie on the T.M.C. and wasn't really knowing of Ms Gina L acting and performance, as well as her beauty! I just found myself rolling on the floor as well as witnessing the close calls of the three men she was juggling around and detouring them from her daughter. It was really cool to see the stars of the days then, and view the Italian parts and its people of that time.

Though this movie may slammed by others, my own input is that: I LOVED IT! From Ms G.L. to S.Winters, T.Savales, P.Silvers, P.Lawford and the rest of the unmentioned great ones as well. Thank you for giving me this opportunity to express my own comment and view...Joaquin.
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7/10
mistakes, men, and inspiration for Mamma Mia?
didi-51 October 2009
Gina Lollabrigida, the Italian 50s and 60s siren, is Carla Campbell, a war widow with a 20 year old daughter Gia. But is everything as it seems? The premise of this film is of course that Gia's father isn't the late Mr Campbell at all, that the name comes from Campbell's soup, and that any one of three GIs could have been responsible for getting the teenage Carla pregnant. Trouble is that they all believe they're the daddy and have been sending financial support ever since.

Doesn't this all sound a bit familiar? Yes, Mamma Mia has the three possible fathers angle and to be honest, there isn't a lot else different in this. Gia isn't getting married, and the three men in this version all have wives on the trail when they return to their wartime base in Italy, but otherwise it's the same story.

Co-scripted by British humourist Denis Norden, this story is a classic screwball with a modern edge, fitting perfectly with the more permissive mores of the 1960s. As Carla's former lovers, sparky Telly Savalas, perky Phil Silvers, and debonair Peter Lawford shine, while Shelley Winters is particularly good value as one of the wives trying to find out just what went on in her husband's past.

Colourful, funny, and charming, this comedy won't change your life but will leave you smiling.
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10/10
Fantastico
peacetolive22 May 2007
I had never even heard of this film until watching it the other morning. What a wonderful, racy for it's time sort of film. I loved absolutely everything about it. The characters, who would have thought to have placed those actors together. Compliments. The scenery was perfect and warm. Keeping the locals involved made it all the better. I am telling everyone about this film. Believe me, as not being a movie/TV watcher, this film stole my heart completely. Thank you AMC for showing it.

The music was outstanding also. What a fantastic upbeat film with a wonderful message. Love, love loved it.
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7/10
not Mamma Mia
SnoopyStyle30 June 2023
The Italian town of San Forino is celebrating 20 years after liberation and the liberators are coming. It's not happy news for Carla Campbell (Gina Lollobrigida). She had convinced three American GIs to support her daughter Gia while not knowing that there are two others. She doesn't know which one is the real father and had raised Gia as the daughter of the non-existent late Captain Campbell. Phil Newman (Phil Silvers) has brought his wife Shirley (Shelley Winters) and their three kids. Justin Young (Peter Lawford) and his wife Lauren (Marian Moses) are bickering. Walter Braddock (Telly Savalas) is the wild man with wife Fritzie (Lee Grant).

The basic plot sounds very much like Mamma Mia! Although the writer claims no connection. At first, I didn't get the Captain Campbell premise. It seems superfluous, the cultural taboo aside. I would think that an outcast single mom would be a more compelling character. It does lead to a fun misunderstanding with the wives. These characters have some fun despite some seriousness. This movie has some fun with the premise.
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9/10
I love this movie!
qualityguyftl18 March 2010
Don't pay any attention to the bad reviews on here (few as they are) this movie must be watched and appreciated for what it is, farce. The stellar cast turn in great performances and the writing is still very funny. This is the film which inspired the musical stage play "Mama Mia" as well as the film. But the two stories are completely different. Now out on DVD, remastered and in wide screen for the first time ever, this is a must see on a big screen TV. The video and sound transfer is amazing, clear, crisp picture and sound. Filmed on location in Italy this was no low budget film. Is it realistic, no, its not suppose to be, just sit back and enjoy it!
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3/10
A 1968 silly farce
salweir18 June 2001
An Italian woman with a 16 year old daughter whose father might be one of three Americans has been receiving money from each of the three. Suddenly all three men return to Italy for a reunion, wanting to perhaps enjoy female company once more.

Difficult as it might be to believe these days, plot line is a bit risqué: woman slept with three different men and does not know which one fathered her child.

Characters are silly, two-dimensional stereotypes: 1950ish fathers and husbands; wives that are shrill (Winters), shrewish (Grant), or indifferent; hot-blooded Italian woman. Yet it works, to some degree. Escapist entertainment which relies on cuteness and silliness. No special effects, no overt sexuality or the barest hint of violence or nudity, simply effective acting.

Worth a watch.
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9/10
Gina's in a pickle
jjnxn-123 March 2014
Absurd but fun little comedy enlivened by Gina's feisty performance in the lead.

The supporting cast is sprinkled with quality performers all giving good performances, even the usually obnoxious Silvers comes across well, but this is Gina's show and she carries the film easily. Most of the supporting players are simple types that the actors manage to flesh out the best they can. Telly Savalas and Lee Grant take theirs one step further and create a believably troubled couple who have spent so many years battling they fail to realize that what they both want is the same thing. On the surface they seem mismatched but because of subtle playing they expand the character beyond what was on the page.

Back to Gina, under the direction of the competent Melvin Frank, whom had guided her through Strange Bedfellows previously, she has a fine comic sensibility never betraying any doubt that the preposterous situation she finds herself in doesn't make perfect sense. And boy is she a stunner!

Full to the brim with beautiful scenery shot in glorious Technicolor, marred only by obvious but probably necessary process shots while Gina is driving, you'll want to jump a plane to Italy at the film's conclusion.

A potential seamy subject that could have devolved into crassness is handled with the proper light touch making this a genial farce and terrific showcase for Miss Lollobrigida.
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8/10
A delightful and heartwarming film.
mo-jo-328 November 2007
A delightful and heartwarming film that has stood up remarkably well when compared to other comedies of the 1960's. Both Gina Lollobrigida and Shelley Winters give good performances far outclassing the remainder of the cast. Phil Silvers is quite funny and Telly Savalas touching. In my opinion, the only cast member not up to the task is Peter Lawford - as boring as he usually is in any film in which he appears. It is odd that MGM/United Artist have not released the film on DVD, I'm sure that there are many people who would like to add it to their DVD collection. I have read that there are calls for the film to be remade but I don't think that it would work in today's arena. The film was right for its time but that time has now past and I feel that it's better to enjoy the film as it stands rather than try to remake it with a contemporary theme.
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10/10
Screwball Comedy With Plenty Of Heart and Soul
tomreynolds20045 April 2004
La Lollabrigida is magnificent as Carla Campbell who had a baby from a G. I. during World War II, but didn't know which of three possible American soldiers it was, so she writes each telling him the son is his. And they all faithfully send child support -- for twenty years. With Phil Silvers, Shelly Winters, Lee Grant, Telly Savalas and Lee Grant on hand, this could easily have gone way overboard into silly farce. Instead, it blends its pathos, drama, and comedy as seamlessly as it blends its gorgeous Italian landscapes and backdrops with its Hollywood sound-stages. Savalas and Grant are particularly good as the most interesting of the three couples but all are good. Janet Margolin does a good job of giving us a feel for Gina and the Italian actor that plays Gina's faithful friend is marvelous in his few scenes.

Highly recommended. 9/10.
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lovely
Vincentiu27 February 2013
smart, hilarious, precise, good comedy for dark days. seductive and fresh. common recipes but with special spices. and, first, scene for extraordinary Gina Lollobrigida who does a nice role in Italian school manner.the humor - in each kind of form. the idea - far to be original today but the extraordinary use of it in this case makes all new. the acting - great. more important, it is a drawing of Italian society. not profound, not serious but interesting.and precise.it is difficult to write a review because the air of joy from this work is an experience. it is a window to a world in which each thing was more easy and natural. a form of innocence. not disappointing. only full of joy. and hopeful.
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1/10
Not much heart, but plenty of cleavage!
moonspinner551 May 2006
How's this for a contrived set-up: three former soldiers reunite in Italy some 20 years after the war, each thinking he fathered a child with neighborhood "alley cat" Gina Lollobrigida. Hopeless comedy from director Melvin Frank is just a strident and silly excuse to catch buxom Lollo in a series of low-cut outfits. Although Gina does manage a few laughs (and she keeps her dignity), the picture is woefully overlong, smarmy and tired. Supporting cast including Shelley Winters, Phil Silvers, Telly Savalas, Peter Lawford and Lee Grant is at a complete loss.

* from ****
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10/10
"Come On In. Everyone Else Has."
JLRMovieReviews9 April 2014
An Italian young lady with time on her hands befriends an American GI while he is serving his country in Italy, and they spend much time together. Soon after, the same Italian young lady with more time on her hands befriends another American GI while he is serving his country, and they spend much time together. Soon after that, the same Italian young lady with even more time on her hands befriends an American GI while he is serving his country, and they spend much time together. But after they are sent home, she discovers she's in a family way. What to do? She writes each one and they each in turn support her and her young daughter, none of them knowing of each other - that is, until now, present day, when they all appear at one time practically at her doorstep. But to save face and explain the baby to her small Italian village, she tells a fib that while she was away (to have her baby) she met and was widowed by an American GI. She makes up the name of Campbell and chaos ensues once the fathers show up. The young lady is Gina Lollabrigida, and what a predicament this is! While this and "Mamma Mia!" have similarities, this film is in fact much better. Take the music out of "Mamma Mia!" and you may have good actors. But "Mrs. Campbell" is a whole lot funnier and has more depth to it. Phil Silvers, one potential father, provides much of the laughs with his zesty love of life and buoyant energy, and his wife, portrayed by Shelley Winters, is simply wonderful as his loud uncouth wife. Telly Savalas, another potential father, provides the real heart and depth of the film, something he's not usually on call to do in his action films. His wife is portrayed by Lee Grant, who is supposedly very superficial. But, by the end of the film, we have grown very fond of both of them and we feel like we understand them. Peter Lawford is another potential father, but while he's an adequate actor, he and his wife aren't really given that much to do in the film to really distinguish them. With other larger-than-life actors (or hams) in the film, such as Silvers, Winters, and Savalas (Who loves ya, baby?), Peter and wife only seem mildly amusing or interesting. And, given the fact that Gina's not ugly, she has her own boy-toy. All this put together in one box creates pandemonium and is quite simply is one of the most completely satisfying 1960s comedies you're ever likely to see. If you've never seen this or even heard of it, that needs to be rectified right now. Hilarity's a bound when you meet Mrs. Campbell. Buona Sera!
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10/10
They paid more money than the Germans did in reparations!
theowinthrop20 November 2007
Warning: Spoilers
Gina Lollabrigida had the slight misfortune to appear on the scene in Italian cinema at the same time that Sophia Loren did. Between them (aided by Anita Ekbert) they dominated the sexual scene in Italian films, but Loren pulled ahead slightly in dramatic fare - and copped an Oscar in 1960 for "Two Women" , something that Lollabrigida never got. Loren was also lucky enough to get a handsome leading man (Marcello Mastroianni) to complement her in several of her sex farces. Lollabrigida never had a handsome partner. It is a trifle unfair because both women were not only beautiful but quite talented as actresses. And both were first rate in comedy.

"Buono Sera, Mrs. Campbell" may be the best comedy Lollabrigida made - it is certainly the most accessible to English speaking audiences because it is in English. It's plot is reminiscent of the later American comedy "Father's Day" (which is based on a French film) wherein two men (Billy Crystal and Robin Williams) search for a young teenager who they both think is their biological son (or so has the mother of the boy told them - she claims she is not sure which of them or her husband is the actual father). It is also reminiscent (in a reversal of plot) of Loren and Mastroianni's comedy "Marriage Italian Style". There Loren uses money from Mastroianni's business to support three sons, unknown to each other, one of whom is Mastroianni's biological son.

In "Mrs. Campbell", Lollabrigida is the mother of a beautiful young woman who is the daughter of one of three American veterans who helped liberate her town in World War II. The three (Telly Savalas, Phil Silvers, and Peter Lawford) romanced her, and never knew of the other two. When she became pregnant she informed each and they promised to send her money to support the girl. As a result Lollabrigida has had a very comfortable lifestyle, and the girl is well educated. She chooses the name of "Campbell" for her "dead" husband (if anyone inquires) from the name of her favorite American soup company. However, the daughter is growing up, and she is determined to have a sexual life free of her mother's concerns. Their discord is mingled by Lollabrigida's discovery that the American veterans are returning to her village after a quarter century for a huge reunion, and she finds all three of her ex-boyfriends are coming determined to see their daughter.

The complications are not only on Lollabrigida's side. Each of her three "heros" has married and the resulting marriages are not perfect. Silvers is married to Shelley Winters, and they have children of their own (including an obnoxious son). Lawford is married to Janet Margolin, and don't have their kids with them - in fact they took the trip to supposedly get away from their kids. Telly Savalas is married to Lee Grant, and they have the most strained marriage - Grant has wanted kids but Savalas never had any with her.

The story pursues the attempts of the three ex-G.I.s in trying to resume an active relationship with Lollabrigida, but avoiding their wives (and in Silver's case his kids), while Lollabrigida has to keep the three from discovering each other, and from confronting her daughter - who always has thought her father died in the war. The film actually works quite well, with all the principles (even Lawford, for a change) being funny. I will not be revealing too much that eventually the men do meet and realize how two of them (which two we can't tell) were conned. Savallas makes the comment that I varied a little in the "Summary" Line.

How the film ends I leave to the reader to discover when they watch it. It ends quite fairly, with all the fathers discovering their fatherly instincts (despite their mutual shock). It also ends by giving one other character a sweet moment of recognition that is totally unexpected - but thoroughly appreciated by the viewer. As a sweet and funny comic farce it is one of the best.
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8/10
Buona Sera, Mrs. Campbell is quite a funny farce!
tavm25 January 2019
After a few decades of only knowing about the title, I finally watched this movie online just now. Gina Lollobrigida plays a woman with a teen daughter. The men she bedded during World War II are coming back to her Italian hometown to meet their "daughter". Those men are Phil Silvers, Telly Savalas, and Peter Lawford. Their wives are Shelley Winters, Lee Grant, and Marian Moses who resembles Dina Merrill, respectively. I'll just say this was quite a funny farce and that Buona Sera, Mrs. Campbell is recommended.
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Buona sera, Mrs. Campbell
Smalling-227 October 1999
An Italian-born "American widow", living in a small Italian town with her beautiful daughter, gets in panic when her three lovers from WW2 come back to see their daughter, the girl each of them thinking their own and to whom they have been paying alimony for years.

Pleasantly set, agreeably scripted, joyously acted (particularly by Lollobrigida, Winters, Silvers and Grant) and highly entertaining comedy that provides a good measure of witty amusement along the way. It goes on too long, however, and its inventively sardonic premise - the situation of a prostitute under the necessity of war and its consequences - regrettably settles for a somewhat simple farce.
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5/10
Leak Soup
writers_reign27 September 2007
Warning: Spoilers
For a one-idea plot this is reasonably entertaining if you're prepared to overlook the dubious morality of the eponymous character who not only had unprotected sex with three different men in three weeks but cynically accepted monthly checques from each of them for 20 years which by extension depended on convincing and/or allowing each of the three men to think he was the father of her daughter. Having invented, for the benefit of her neighbors to say nothing of her daughter, a dead husband whose name she took from a can of soup the only suspense element is how and when the truth will leak out. With a premise like this the only way to go is to contrive a way for all three men to be in the same place at the same time and once that happens it's just a matter of how long it takes for them to wise up. Given that the three were all with the USAF during World War II the idea of a twentieth reunion sets the ball rolling on what has the makings of a deft farce in the best Feydeau style but turns out to be club-footed. People like Lee Grant and Phil Silvers are basically slumming here whilst Peter Lawford turns in his usual wooden performance and Shelly Winters does her strident bit. Gina Lollobrigida is good to look at but that's about the best you can give it.
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10/10
Lollabrigida is scintillating in marvelously racy comedy
herbqedi22 April 2002
A buoyant and unrepressed Italian star and concept -- Carla Campbell, a war prostitute-by-necessity maintaining 20 years of child support with three of her ex-clients, each of whom believes himself to be the secret father, is surprised to learn that all three of them will be in town for an Army reunion, and each of the three wants to see his daughter.

Somehow, Director/Writer Frank manages to mesh this Italian scenario with quintessential Americans Phil Silvers, Peter Lawford, and Telly Savallas. Shelley Winters and Lee Grant are also terrific, and Janet Margolin (from David and Lisa fame) does a strong and understated straight turn as Carla's judgmental daughter Gina. Carla's interaction with the citizens of her town adds the final elements of a heartily enjoyable gentle yet hilarious comedy.
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10/10
The original of 'Mamma Mia'
HotToastyRag19 April 2020
What an adorable movie! I love Buona Sera, Mrs. Campbell, and have already bought a DVD copy to add to my old movie collection. It's not a very highly publicized fact, but this movie is the original, non-musical version of Mamma Mia! There were a few changes from 1968 to Broadway, like the change of setting from Italy to Greece, but the plot is still really similar, and very entertaining.

Gina Lollobrigida stars as the titular Mrs. Campbell, a single mother in a small Italian village. She hasn't really been alone in raising her daughter, Janet Margolin, though. Twenty years ago, during the war, Gina had whirlwind romances with three different soldiers. When she got pregnant, she didn't know which one was the father, so she wrote to each of them. Child support was the least they could do, right? Only now, there's a problem: There's a reunion organized among the soldiers, and all three men are coming to town! Peter Lawford, Telly Savalas, and Phil Silvers, are all anxious to meet their daughter for the first time, and Gina's got quite a lot of explaining to do. . .

Go out and rent this movie the next time you're having movie night with your mom; it's so cute! Gina is charming and beautiful, Melvin Frank, Denis Norden, and Sheldon Keller's script is hilarious, and the love quadrangle is very entertaining. Gina has a cute romance with Phillippe Leroy on the side, and each of her ex-boyfriends are now married, each with interesting and realistic relationships with their wives: Shelley Winters, Lee Grant, and Marian McCargo. Sufficed to say, there's so much to love about this movie. Buona Sera, Mrs. Campbell is heartwarming and funny, and the song is delightful, too!
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