Marcello Mastroianni
14 titles
Filmography
14 results

8½
(1963)A film director, suffering from a lack of creative inspiration, retreats into a world of fantasies and remembrances of the women in his past and present.

La Dolce Vita
(1960)A series of stories following a week in the life of a philandering tabloid journalist living in Rome.

La Notte
(1961)Over the course of one day and night, a novelist and his distressed wife lament over the disintegration of their relationship. Antonioni’s muse Monica Vitti smoulders as seductive socialite.

The 10th Victim
(1965)It is the 21st Century, and society's lust for violence is satisfied by "The Big Hunt," an international game of legalized murder. But when the sport's two top assassins (Marcello Mastroianni and Ursula Andress) are pitted against each other, they find that love is the most dangerous game of all. As the world watches, the hunt is on. Who will become The 10th Victim?

The Sunday Woman
(1975)When Garrone, an odious architect, is beaten to death, a high society wife and her gay friend become the key suspects in the investigation.

What?
(1972)During her vacation in Italy, a young and beautiful American tourist finds herself as a guest in a coastal villa, inhabited by a bunch of odd people.

A Special Day
(1977)Sophia Loren and Marcello Mastroianni deliver the finest and most nuanced performances of their careers in this understated masterpiece from director Ettore Scola.

Marriage Italian Style
(1964)Based on one of the most successful Italian plays ever, 'Filumena Marturano' by playwright and philosopher Eduardo De Filippo, Marriage Italian Style is an exhilarating comedy (nominated for two Oscars, Best Foreign Picture and Best Actress) starring a combative Sophia Loren as a woman who'll do anything to keep her companion! Both Loren and co-star Mastroianni are more irrepressible than ever.

Yesterday, Today and Tomorrow
(1963)Three stories, set in Italy, about three very different women, the men they attract, and how they use their brains and bodies to get what they want.

One Hundred and One Nights
(1995)A man living in an isolated mansion near Paris asks a young film student to relive the history of cinema for him on his 100th birthday, in this playful comedy from Agnès Varda that celebrates cinema's centennial.

Massacre in Rome
(1973)Massacre in Rome by George P. Cosmatos (Rambo) depicts a real life atrocity of WW2 which sparked outrage. After Italian Partisans killed 33 German soldiers with a road-side IED explosion, Hitler ordered to execute 10 civilians for each dead soldier. Richard Burton is the German officer tasked with the reprisal who, together with a priest (Marcello Mastroianni), will try to derail the insane order.

Used People
(1992)At her husband's funeral in 1969 Queens, N.Y., a Jewish widow has an encounter with an old friend of her husband's that leads to new beginnings.

What a Woman!
(1956)Directed by Alessandro Blasetti, this romantic comedy stars Sophia Loren, Marcello Mastroianni, and Charles Boyer. A photographer’s picture of a young woman sparks scandal and opportunity, blurring fame and love. Loren’s charisma and Mastroianni’s charm shine in this lighthearted critique of media and celebrity in 1950s Rome.

Adua and Her Friends
(1960)The closure of brothels leaves Adua, Milly, Lolita and Marilina without their usual source of subsistence. The four young women decide to open a restaurant in the outskirts of Rome, in order to create a façade activity that allows them to continue the exercise of the "profession" to which they are accustomed. Directed by Antonio Pietrangeli, with Marcello Mastroianni and Simone Signoret.