Never Take No for an Answer
Never Take No for an Answer

Never Take No for an Answer (1951)

6.0 ? Dec 18, 1951 1h 22m

Overview

It's a story about a young Italian orphan boy taking his pet donkey to the Vatican to be blessed.

Genres

Drama

Release Date

December 18, 1951

Rating

6.0 /10

Runtime

1h 22m

Vittorio Manunta

Vittorio Manunta

Peppino

Denis O'Dea

Denis O'Dea

Father Damico

Guido Celano

Guido Celano

Strotti

Nerio Bernardi

Nerio Bernardi

Father Superior

Henri Vidon

Monk

Edward Hitchcock

Old Workman

Frank Coulson

Dr. Bartolo

Eliso della Vedova

Sergente dei Carabinieri

CinemaSerf avatar

CinemaSerf

7.0/10

Feb 05, 2024

I'm not usually the greatest fan of children topping the bill in a film, but I really enjoyed the engaging effort here of the ten year old Vittorio Manunta. He, "Peppino", is an orphan who is a regular sight in his famed town of Assissi at the head of his donkey. They collect firewood and do some basic odd jobs to keep the wolf from the door, and it's all going fine until one morning the creature just doesn't feel like moving. "Peppino" fetches the vet who is concerned that "Violetta" is about to give up the ghost. The youngster, pretty devastated, hits on the idea of having her talk to St. Francis but the friendly, but firm, clergy tell him that animals cannot go into the church. There must be a away, he thinks - and after a conversation with the friendly "Fr. Damico" (Denis O'Dea) is left with just one option. The Pope! Only he can authorise "Violetta" to get into to talk to the saint. Now, in best "Mudlark" (1950) fashion, he sets off on a seemingly impossible quest. His arrival at the Vatican sees him repeatedly seen off by the Swiss guards, but he is a shrewd wee fella, and soon realises that perhaps there is more ways than one to skin a cat. Perhaps a bouquet of flowers might just succeed where his noisy persistence has not. It's Mantuna's charm that helps this stand out. He is a natural for the part - a caring and tenacious young man who wants to do right by the only thing he loves - or, quite possibly, has ever loved him. There's some fine photography illustrating the down-at-heel post war Italy and the beauty of the Vatican architecture, and if - at the end - you don't well up ever so slightly, well then... This is one of those life-affirming eighty minutes of cinema that tugs at the heart-strings without being cloyingly sentimental.

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