L'armata Brancaleone (1966) Poster

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9/10
Surrealistic medieval comedy: a masterpiece
Sigmund21 August 1999
It is difficult to export this movie outside Italy, in particular because much of the amusement lies in the funny language used, a mix of italian dialects and mock middle-age latin. Anyway, it would be yet a good choice for everyone. It may remember Monthy python's 'Holy Grail', as a surrealistic medieval comedy. Only, this is way better. It is no surprise, considering that we have two great authors, a great director, and a group a great actors. And the word 'great' is no exaggeration! If you ever get a chance to see it, don't miss it, because it's unique.
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9/10
One of the Funniest Comedies of the Cinema
claudio_carvalho30 November 2010
In the Middle Ages, a group of marauders pillage a scroll from the fearful and dangerous Arnolfo Mano-di-Ferro (Alfio Caltabiano) that grants to its owner the property of Aurocastro, a wealthy land with grapevines and cattle. They seek out a knight to claim the real estate and share with them. When they meet the ruined Brancaleone da Norcia (Vittorio Gassman), he accepts to be their leader and they travel to the land. Along their journey, Brancaleone defeats the nobleman Teofilatto dei Leonzi (Gian Maria Volonté) that joins his army. Then they head to the Holy Land with the preacher Zenone (Enrico Maria Salerno), but while crossing a bridge, their friend Pecoro (Folco Lulli) falls off in the river and vanishes. When Zenone falls in a abyss, they travel to Aurocastro again. Then they rescue the damsel Matelda (Catherine Spaak) and Brancaleone promises to her tutor to protect her virtue for her fiancé and receives one hundred golden coins. However, Teofilatto has one night stand with the maid and Brancaleone is imprisoned in the castle of her fiancé. Brancaleone and his clumsy army get in many troubles until they reach Aurocastro. But their adventure has not finished yet.

"L'Armata Brancaleone" is one of the funniest comedies of the cinema. The last time I had seen this film was on 27 February 2000, and with the death of Mario Monicelli yesterday, I have decided to see the clumsy Brancaleone and his army again. The story is very well developed with hilarious situations and Vittorio Gassman has a magnificent performance in the role of the the anti-hero Brancaleone. The screenplay presents the most different situations in the environment of the Middle-Ages and the hero always gets in trouble despite his perfect planning. I did not recognize Gian Maria Volonté in the role of Teofilatto dei Leonzi. My vote is nine.

Title (Brazil): "O Incrível Exército de Brancaleone" ("The Incredible Army of Brancaleone")
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9/10
Branca! Branca! Branca!
Aleister13 November 1998
Ok, this movie is very funny, really. There are great jokes, a lot of gags and pure nonsense. The characters are unforgettable and the reconstitution of Middle Age is impressive. Unfortunately, it's an unknown (in the USA) masterpiece of Mario Monicelli and there are another Medieval Comedy's movies more famous, like Monty Phyton and the Holy Grail. But, if you will have a chance to watch "L'Armata Brancaleone" (The Incredible Army of Brancaleone), don't miss because it's really good.
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Masterpiece of linguistic humour
s.toria2 August 2000
I take the risk of annoying most people but it must be said: in order to get the full flavour of the fun in this movie you should have a really good knowledge of the Italian language, and view the film in original. It is hard even for an Italian to understand some of the dialogues, while they rapidly switch from Gassman's impeccable proto-Italian with strong Latin influences (spoken in such a serious manner as to result irresistibly comic), to Abacuc's Jewish version thereof, to the other characters' strong rural poor-man's accent.

In this movie, and in the delectable sequel "Brancaleone alle Crociate", Gassman is at the top of his skill as an actor. This is somehow like acting the "Fifteen Minutes Hamlet" without even remotely smiling, but giving a serious, professional performance. Only someone who is truly great can do the buffoon like this without appearing histrionic, or ridiculous.
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10/10
A little known masterpiece
gandalfone2 January 2001
"L'Armata Brancaleone" is an absolute comedy masterpiece. Its surreal medieval world is incredibly deep and funny. The story is summarized here at IMDB, so it's not necessary to repeat it. The main comic device is based on the contrast between the heroic world that the charachters try to master (paladins, knights' tournaments, kings etc) and their actual miserable conditions. The only problem with this movie for non-italian speakers is the language: the authors re-created a mock medieval language (using ancient italian, latin and italian dialects) which is absolutely flamboyant. This particular language (very difficult to understand if you're not italian native speaker) and Vittorio Gassman make this movie one of the best comedies of the 20th century. Thanks to Mario Monicelli, the great film director.
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10/10
absolute fun
robertodandi4 June 2002
Ok, the italian comedy of the `50s and `60s is one of the best in the world. I say this not only because I am italian but because it`s true. Just rent or buy the movies of directors such as Pietro Germi, Dino Risi, Steno and of course Mario Monicelli. L`Armata Brancaleone is one of the best comedies ever because of the script, the gags, the language (a very funny mix of ancient italian and latin, I don`t know how the translation could work) and the actors, first of all Gassman, the protagonist, that Monicelli `discovered` as a comic character in `I soliti ignoti` (before that Gassman played almost exclusively drama plays). Even the representation of the Middle Age seems to me (a non-expert in history) quite accurate: see for example the prophet who guides the people towards the Crusade (an incredible Gian Maria Volonte`).

Another gem of italian comedy, a must-see for everyone.
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10/10
... Leone, Leone, Leone!
atc0029 July 2001
I watched this movie as a 12 year old in Brazil, and loved it -- the "branca, branca, branca, leone, leone, leone!" stuck with me all these years... When I saw the Monty Python's Holy Grail I thought it was not as good as good old Brancaleone, but I was never able to watch it again in the US.

I'm now 28 and studying medieval romance language literature and would love to watch it again. I understand that L'armata Brancaleone is loosely based on Don Quixote. Does anyone know whether the movie is available in the US?
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9/10
A real comedy
greenylennon20 March 2008
"L'armata Brancaleone" was made at the time of Italian cinema's triumphs, when Italy could boast some excellent directors and well-known actors. There's one simple reason why this movie is still loved by young generations: it's a real comedy, hilarious without being trivial, and it can rely on a couple of ingenious tricks, such as the language and the setting. The characters speak a funny pseudo-ancient Italian crammed with Latin words and solemn sentences, and maybe some quotations from "La Divina Commedia" by Dante Alighieri (the name Matelda and her character played by the gorgeous Catherine Spaak). And what about the setting? A wild Medieval Italy, with uncontaminated natural sceneries, castles and towns infested by pestilences. Kudos to the actors, everybody is perfect in his/her own role, from Vittorio Gassman and Gian Maria Volonté to the supporting roles, and of course to the director Mario Monicelli, amalgamating all with his personal touch.
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7/10
The silly side of chivalry...
ccmiller149228 May 2006
A comedic masterpiece in the picaresque tradition of Don Quixote, it features Vittorio Gassman as a moronic but sincere knight errant who assembles a threadbare army of nitwits consisting of a pubescent boy, a nonagenarian Jew merchant, a bastard in exile, a scraggly thief, and an overlarge village dullard. Brancaleone's steed Acquilante brays like an ass and has the contrariness of a mule in many funny sequences. With great expectations they set about seeking their fortune with many diversions along the way in a marvelous succession of superbly realized medieval scenarios. The ambiance of this film is more convincing than many other more sober and better known works set in this period. It captures not only the grandeur of the period, but also the filth with many a sly dig and lots of gusto. Gassman stays incredibly straight-faced throughout all the craziness. Volante as the Byzantine exile, and Steele as his bizarre Aunt are standouts. The truly picaresque spirit of the piece is brilliant.
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10/10
masterpiece
spaiz-17 February 2007
well, a local essay cinema showed this movie today. i saw it the last time maybe 15 years ago, and the movie is more than 40 years old. a masterpiece. the Italian spoken is so overwhelmingly old, it took me 10 minutes to get into it - and i'm Italian. in fact, i once saw an interview with the authors saying that it took them very long to sort out the exact language. i wonder what happens when it gets translated. for 2007 times it's slightly slowish, but it got me laughing on the floor more than a couple of times, something that didn't happen to me in a theater in a looooong time. some of the initlai sequences set a standard for amazing comedy. a superbly crafted movie. monicelli is great, gassman and the cast are fabulous. hats off.
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9/10
A gem that inspired the Holy Grail
james-pennington-17 January 2007
I saw this film in an Algerian cinema in 1967 - it was dubbed in French (so the cod-Latin/Italian invented language was lost on me) and I think I was the only person laughing. It was a cinema in Constantine (east Algeria) - well before any religious unpleasantness which would account for there being some people buying tickets. I believe it was the inspiration for The Holy Grail. I thought it was a complete spoof, little realising, until I returned to England, that there was a whole "genre" I knew nothing about. A "genre" that seemed to be taking itself seriously when in the hands of Leone. Someone, please, tell me there is a DVD available.
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2/10
Really boring!
RodrigAndrisan2 October 2018
The film does not deserve 8 stars, I've watched it again after many years and found it outdated, without salt and pepper, boring. And all this despite the fact that the director is the great Mario Monicelli, and in the distribution there are two giants of all time, Gian Maria Volontè and Vittorio Gassman, plus a shorter appearance of the great Enrico Maria Salerno and the very beautiful and very talented Catherine Spaak. The only original and a little bit funny scene is with the bear with whom the "disappeared" Folco Lulli has joined.
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Branca Branca Branca - Unforgettable Movie!
phoenix-10626 November 2000
I have seen this movie when it first came out in Germany in a dubbed version. I went back several times I liked it so much, great comedy, great acting and entertainment. After all this years I started searching on the web, because nobody in America seems to have ever heard of this movie. So far I only found an old German dubbed copy, but I look forward to finally see the original version. I have seen many movies in my time, but Brancaleone seems to always come to my mind when I think of comedy and middle ages. The Monty Python can not reach this one.
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10/10
unforgettable
vaskodanchev26 January 2006
"Branca,branca,branca - Leon,Leon,Leon...Brancaleone da norcha..."Unforgettable... I have seen this film almost 35 years ago and I cannot forget it,and the acting of Gian Maria Volonte.Unfortunately,nowadays it seems impossible to see this movie again.I searched the web for a photo of Gian Maria and found nothing but 2 or 3 photos.This great actor should have a gallery of photos.I would not hesitate to compare this film to Don Quixode and in my own opinion rate it even higher. According to me this film is a world classic and should be available for everyone to see. Using nowadays technology this should be no problem.
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10/10
One of the BEST MOVIES EVER!!!
ruidobranco5 October 2005
Well, i first saw this movie when i was an 8 years old kid, and boy, this movie really made an impression in me. I remember our TV set was an old Phillips 550, a B&W TV set, a valve model( a transistor TV set?, no... It was too expensive then). And, i could never forget it. The movie is perfect, the wardrobe, the scenery, the acting... Well, you see, they don't take their roles too seriously(except for Gassman, but, it's intentional), and this shows a face of history that, could have happened... Say... No heroism (well, a little...) and the rest, cynicism and many conflicts of interests(each one is trying to have his piece of the cake, in this case, the fortified city and it's treasures) Thank god it was released in DVD, here in my country. And here's an advice: Go get yours. You won't regret. It is an ageless movie, that is near forty now, and, does not lose it's impact.
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9/10
Near Masterpiece of Monicelli on mishaps of Brancaleone's shabby army along their journey toward to final glory!!
elo-equipamentos12 February 2023
By the lowest numbers of reviews L'armata de Brancaleone clearly still is unknown picture of the genius Mario Monicelli, oddly enough this flick was widely-known notably in high circles of movie buffs only, for instance I'd heard about it in a special weekly TV show hosted by the movie expert Jo Soares, just in DVD's advent I got a lousy DVD copy available at its time, now at last came out the ultimate restored DVD version, bright colors, great sound, a righteous opportunity to reassess what I'd missed in the first eyesight.

Assuredly mario Monicelli created a near masterpiece when introduces at medieval era a tale with a hard smell of farse black comedy through those weird characters that comprise the L'armata Brancaleone, led by the clumsy Brancaleone de Norcia (Vittorio Gassman) dully monitored by a bunch of losers, aside of the Jewish Abacuc (Carlo Pisacane) whereof portraits the real greedy jew's patten that manage the treasure of L'armata on the financial agreements, along the lenghty journey, including his obligatory Christian baptism at water upon its complaints over so outrageous deed.

Their overring goal is headed to Aurocastro fiefdom due them have a stolen papyrus that ensures the entitlement of such seashore feudatory as long as they defend it from the black ship from Africa by the muslin seasonal invaders, under this auspicious premise these self-called soldier wretchedly wearing rags start a journey toward Aurocastro, nonetheless during the quest they faces many weird happenings that somehow delayed or swerve it for a while, due some unexpected occurrences along the way as when they meeting a warrior Teofilatto dei Leonzi (Gian Maria Volonté) that claiming for a duel, funny in the struggle at wheat field it was so fierce that no one hits anyone, however slicing almost all crops around.

Unforgettable sequence when the mindless Pecoro (Folco Lucci) disappears dragged through stormy river, later he sudden appears living with a female bear at cave, he replays that such animal saves him and henceforth they live together as a couple including she feeding him with frogs and some vegetables, what an elusive sequence, another droll piece occurs when the troop needs a blacksmith aiming for to set free Brancaleone trapped inside the iron cage, freakishly they finding this man over a bridge about to commit a suicide with a heavy anvil in response a betrayal by his unfaithful wife, that hereinafter joined to the shabby army.

One the most sterling idea ever expose in a movie, all nonsense elements are here in vivid colors, also fully of double meaning expressions, openly against religions customs, Monicelli handles with fictional grassroots, targeting the black humor with rare dexterity, having the fabulous ancient Roman ruins as perfect backdrop enhancing the accuracy in this environment.

Thanks for reading.

Resume:

First watch: 2007 / Source: DVD / How many: 2 / Rating: 9.
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8/10
Very funny
gianmarcoronconi17 October 2022
Old-fashioned comic film that nowadays perhaps can also be defined slightly boring at times but which still has something really beautiful and particular that make it still very enjoyable and identifiable as one of the greatest masterpieces of Italian comedy. The plot itself is very simple and deals with a normal journey from point A to point B in the Middle Ages and the latter is obviously studded with misadventures and strange events being it a kind of Italian comedy of misunderstandings but in the Middle Ages. So all in all it is watchable even if you have to overcome the enormous obstacle posed by the dated comedy of the film.
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One of the greatest comic movies of the talkies.
marcprovencher10119 September 2002
Thanks to the french-speaking TV networks of my country (Canada), I litterally grew up with commedia all'italiana - Italy's crazy explosion of satirical comedies (1955-1980). Soon the "quartet of monsters" - Gassman, Manfredi, Sordi, Tognazzi - became my favourite comic stars. But when it comes to L'Armata Brancaleone, it is only two years ago that I finally found this movie, after a decade and a half of frentic research. The old Italian guy who sold me the (used) videocassette for 50 $ thinks he outsmarted me. No he did not! Even for a 1000 $, it would still be a bargain! For L'Armata Brancaleone is no less than a miracle of comic invention. The visceral power of this farce defies any superlatives I could find. Vittorio Gassman's performance as Brancaleone can only be compared to the greatest comics of the century. For their work on this film, scripters Age & Scarpelli, director Mario Monicelli and the whole team down to the most humble go-fer would deserve an enormous trophy.
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An obscure gem, well worth discovering.
Bobs-918 April 2003
This rare film is now available on a Brazilian DVD, which the earlier comments here convinced me was worth getting. I've just watched it, and it is a joy! The earlier commentators are right on the mark in their comparisons to "Monty Python and the Holy Grail," in that it is an episodic, stylishly-realized, broad medieval comedy concerning a motley group of protagonists on a quest. Unlike the Monty Python film, however, this one never deviates from the story line and the actors never break character. It is also not quite as fully anarchic as the Python film. There is, in fact, a very touching death scene near the end of the film. Superbly paced, it seemed to me that there were no weak spots or comedic lulls. The poorly-translated English subtitles on my DVD were often very funny in their own right (unintentionally, I'm sure). But even though I don't understand Italian and missed some of the linguistic humor mentioned here, I still got a great deal of enjoyment out of it. The look of the film is fascinating, particularly some scenes in which the costuming, makeup, and set design evoke Fellini at his weirdest. Also, the use of the spectacular Italian countryside and old villages is outstanding. It's a privilege to have discovered this rare film, and I am thankful to the earlier commentators for helping bring it to my attention. That's one of the great advantages of visiting the IMDb.
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A Gem of Style
csdietrich16 June 2002
I had the distinct good fortune to see L'ARMATA BRANCALEONE at the UCLA Film Archive many years ago, back in the Eighties. Barbara Steele is breathlessly at her best form in the Gassman/S & M fantasy sequences where the two go about lashing each other with whips. "Frustami" was a word used many times. Her costumes were sensational and it's worth a look just for this segment alone. Sexy! Steele! Don't miss an opportunity to see this: it is rare as dragon's teeth. Another feather in the cap of all the UCLA film people and its Italian Department!
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A Pearl
a3xx1 December 2001
this movie is a pearl of comedy and wisdom, I encourage everybody to see it if not for the wonderful middle age reconstitution then for the performance of Vittorio Gassman.The theme of crusades is happily approached and the story itself is quite exciting.
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