The Hassled Hooker

The Hassled Hooker (Italian: Il vero e il falso, also known as The True and the False) is a 1972 Italian crime-drama film co-written and directed by Eriprando Visconti.[1][2]

The Hassled Hooker
Directed byEriprando Visconti
Written byLuigi Malerba
Eriprando Visconti
StarringTerence Hill
Paola Pitagora
Martin Balsam
Music byGiorgio Gaslini
CinematographyMarcello Gatti
Edited byAntonio Siciliano
Release date
  • 1972 (1972)
LanguageItalian

Plot

In Latina, 100 kilometers from Rome, Luisa Santini is said to have murdered her husband's lover, Norma Zeitzler. The defendant asserts her innocence, but the evidence speaks against her. Prosecutor Turrisi sees the chance of getting a promotion to Rome through this case and is making sure that the process is pushed ahead in great haste. Only the young and inexperienced defense lawyer Marco Manin doubts Santini's guilt. Turrisi eventually wins the guilty verdict and is in fact promoted. Luisa Santini is sentenced to ten years in prison for manslaughter in affect. Marco Manin then changes from criminal to civil law out of disappointment with the judiciary.

Luisa Santini will have three years off her sentence for good conduct, so that she will be released after seven years. Manin, who apparently also has a romantic interest in Santini, picks her up from prison and helps her with the first steps in freedom. He also determines the current address of her husband, who meanwhile lives with a new lover in Rome. When Santini visits her husband, she sees that the supposed new lover is Norma Zeitzler, for whose murder she was convicted. In a blind rage, she kills the woman and subsequently insists that she can no longer be prosecuted because she has already served the sentence. Nevertheless, she will be tried again.

Lawyer Manin then decides to defend Luisa Santini and also to reopen the old proceedings, Turrisi acts again as public prosecutor.

Cast

See also

References

  1. Roberto Chiti; Roberto Poppi; Enrico Lancia. Dizionario del cinema italiano: I film. Gremese, 1991. ISBN 8876059350.
  2. Paolo Mereghetti. Il Mereghetti. B.C. Dalai Editore, 2010. ISBN 8860736269.
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