6 out of 6 people found the following comment useful :- The more you know, the more you are in danger., 10 May 2002
Author:
Susan Ascot (susanascot@yahoo.com) from Fiesole, Italia
Paolo Laurana is a kind of leftist intellectual who chances to be
intrigued
by a mysterious double murder in the Sicily of mid Sixties.
In his personal detection for murder's instigators, he will run into a
plot
in which both politicians and mafia racketeers are involved. So curiosity
will become a very dangerous affair.
Taken from a novel by Leonardo Sciascia (1921-1989), A ciascuno il suo
(1967) is a film where high rank acting is at its top. Cast (Gianmaria
Volonté, Irene Papas, Gabriele Ferzetti, Salvo Randone, Luigi Pistilli.
Mario Scaccia, Leopoldo Trieste) is perfect and well-combined, direction
(Elio Petri, 1929-1982) is powerful and impressive.
If compared to the novel, Elio Petri's film (written with Ugo Pirro) may
seem short of that illuministic pessimism that breathes through Sciascia's
books, but Laurana's rationalistic search for truth retains that `bitter
taste of intelligence' which is one of the major feature of Sciascia's
characters. A key film to understand historical condition of Italy in the
Sixties.
A subtle and clever intrigue of fear, power and clamming-up, 17 February 2006
Author:
VanDerGraafCamel from Portugal
At the beginning of the movie a pharmacist receives an anonymous letter
that threatens him of death. And the murder actually happens. Seems
very simple but nothing is what it seems and the journey to the truth
will be long and difficult. The book is excellent and the movie is at
par with it and very faithful to the romance. Great direction.
Incredible cast with Gabriele Ferzetti in his best interpretation
together with the one in "C'era una volta il West" and Gianmaria
Volonté simply beyond reach as always. Many other great actors. Yes I
am an enthusiast 'cause there's not a word or a shot out of place in
this movie and the plot is ingenious. Who is going to see this film for
the first time will be taken away by the developments (the pace seems
to be calm but looking in between the kinks you may realize that many
things are going rapidly on). Trying to figure out what is the kernel
of the happenings and the "reasons" for the murder is a very
interesting exercise but it's highly unlikely for the spectator not to
experience a big surprise at the end. In my opinion Elio Petri at his
best (I mean at the same level of his other masterwork: La classe
operaia va in Paradiso).
4 out of 9 people found the following comment useful :- Midway Between a Mafia Thriller and Sentimental Comedy, 14 April 2003
Author:
Giuseppe Lippi (giulipp@tin.it) from Milan, Italy
Although drawn from a powerful novel by Leonardo Sciascia, this results
in
an oversimplified, well-meaning social mystery set in 1965 Sicily, where
two
men are killed during a hunting party. A leftist professor (Gian Maria
Volonté, a much better actor in the later Petri offering "Indagine su un
cittadino al di sopra di ogni sospetto") decides to investigate the
murders,
only to find himself entangled in a spiderweb of corrupt politicians,
"mafiosi" killers and sinister Church connections: the anonymous letters
received by the victims - and, in due time, by the professor himself -
were
made with clippings from the Vatican newspaper "L'Osservatore Romano".
There
is also a fascinating dark lady character, a victim's widow, played by
the
splendid Irene Papas, whose black-stockinged legs wink through the whole
film to the shy, undecided professor. When he resolves to take the woman,
in
a love scene near the end of the movie, it is unfortunately too
late...
The film can still be seen with some fun, but it's far from a serious
rendition of the novel and it's not perhaps among the best Mafia movies
made
in Italy at the time. It's curious to note how so-called "spaghetti
westerns", for instance, were often much more effective in describing
corrupt politicians and Mafia-governed southern towns than their
"mainstream" counterpart, like this typically engagé movie. I found also
irritating the use of Cinemascope combined with low angles, continuous
camera movements and extremely close shots, so that the narrative pace is
fragmented and, more often than not, disturbed.
Own the rights?
Buy it at AmazonMore at IMDb Pro Discuss in Boards Add to My Movies Update Data
Quicklinks
Top Links
trailers and videosfull cast and crewtriviaofficial sitesmemorable quotesOverview
main detailscombined detailsfull cast and crewcompany creditstv scheduleAwards & Reviews
user commentsexternal reviewsnewsgroup reviewsawardsuser ratingsparents guiderecommendationsmessage boardPlot & Quotes
plot summaryplot synopsisplot keywordsAmazon.com summarymemorable quotesFun Stuff
triviagoofssoundtrack listingcrazy creditsalternate versionsmovie connectionsFAQOther Info
merchandising linksbox office/businessrelease datesfilming locationstechnical specslaserdisc detailsDVD detailsliterature listingsNewsDeskPromotional
taglines trailers and videos posters photo galleryExternal Links
showtimesofficial sitesmiscellaneousphotographssound clipsvideo clipsIMDb user comments for
A ciascuno il suo (1967) More at IMDb Pro »
6 out of 6 people found the following comment useful :-
The more you know, the more you are in danger., 10 May 2002
Author: Susan Ascot (susanascot@yahoo.com) from Fiesole, Italia
Paolo Laurana is a kind of leftist intellectual who chances to be intrigued by a mysterious double murder in the Sicily of mid Sixties. In his personal detection for murder's instigators, he will run into a plot in which both politicians and mafia racketeers are involved. So curiosity will become a very dangerous affair. Taken from a novel by Leonardo Sciascia (1921-1989), A ciascuno il suo (1967) is a film where high rank acting is at its top. Cast (Gianmaria Volonté, Irene Papas, Gabriele Ferzetti, Salvo Randone, Luigi Pistilli. Mario Scaccia, Leopoldo Trieste) is perfect and well-combined, direction (Elio Petri, 1929-1982) is powerful and impressive. If compared to the novel, Elio Petri's film (written with Ugo Pirro) may seem short of that illuministic pessimism that breathes through Sciascia's books, but Laurana's rationalistic search for truth retains that `bitter taste of intelligence' which is one of the major feature of Sciascia's characters. A key film to understand historical condition of Italy in the Sixties.
A subtle and clever intrigue of fear, power and clamming-up, 17 February 2006

Author: VanDerGraafCamel from Portugal
At the beginning of the movie a pharmacist receives an anonymous letter that threatens him of death. And the murder actually happens. Seems very simple but nothing is what it seems and the journey to the truth will be long and difficult. The book is excellent and the movie is at par with it and very faithful to the romance. Great direction. Incredible cast with Gabriele Ferzetti in his best interpretation together with the one in "C'era una volta il West" and Gianmaria Volonté simply beyond reach as always. Many other great actors. Yes I am an enthusiast 'cause there's not a word or a shot out of place in this movie and the plot is ingenious. Who is going to see this film for the first time will be taken away by the developments (the pace seems to be calm but looking in between the kinks you may realize that many things are going rapidly on). Trying to figure out what is the kernel of the happenings and the "reasons" for the murder is a very interesting exercise but it's highly unlikely for the spectator not to experience a big surprise at the end. In my opinion Elio Petri at his best (I mean at the same level of his other masterwork: La classe operaia va in Paradiso).
4 out of 9 people found the following comment useful :-
Midway Between a Mafia Thriller and Sentimental Comedy, 14 April 2003
Author: Giuseppe Lippi (giulipp@tin.it) from Milan, Italy
Although drawn from a powerful novel by Leonardo Sciascia, this results in an oversimplified, well-meaning social mystery set in 1965 Sicily, where two men are killed during a hunting party. A leftist professor (Gian Maria Volonté, a much better actor in the later Petri offering "Indagine su un cittadino al di sopra di ogni sospetto") decides to investigate the murders, only to find himself entangled in a spiderweb of corrupt politicians, "mafiosi" killers and sinister Church connections: the anonymous letters received by the victims - and, in due time, by the professor himself - were made with clippings from the Vatican newspaper "L'Osservatore Romano". There is also a fascinating dark lady character, a victim's widow, played by the splendid Irene Papas, whose black-stockinged legs wink through the whole film to the shy, undecided professor. When he resolves to take the woman, in a love scene near the end of the movie, it is unfortunately too late... The film can still be seen with some fun, but it's far from a serious rendition of the novel and it's not perhaps among the best Mafia movies made in Italy at the time. It's curious to note how so-called "spaghetti westerns", for instance, were often much more effective in describing corrupt politicians and Mafia-governed southern towns than their "mainstream" counterpart, like this typically engagé movie. I found also irritating the use of Cinemascope combined with low angles, continuous camera movements and extremely close shots, so that the narrative pace is fragmented and, more often than not, disturbed.
Add another comment
Related Links