Gold of Rome

Gold of Rome

196192 min
6.5/10
Drama

Plot Summary

Rome 1943. The German Commandant of the city causes a turmoil in the Jewish community by offering them what seems to be an expensive way out of imprisonment and death.

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🎬 Demo Trailer

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👥Cast (25)

Gérard Blain

Gérard Blain

Davide

Anna Maria Ferrero

Anna Maria Ferrero

Giulia

Jean Sorel

Jean Sorel

Massimo

Andrea Checchi

Andrea Checchi

Ortona - father of Giulia

No Image

Filippo Scelzo

Presidente della Comunità Ebraica

Paola Borboni

Paola Borboni

Rosa

Umberto Raho

Umberto Raho

Rabbi Beniamino

Miranda Campa

Miranda Campa

Signora De Santis

Dina De Santis

Dina De Santis

Character

No Image

Gloria Parri

Character

Ignazio Leone

Ignazio Leone

Partisan from Sicily

No Image

Diana Frank

Miss Di Veroli

🎬Crew

Director

Carlo Lizzani

Writers

Lucio Battistrada, Lucio Battistrada, Giuliani G. De Negri

Producers

Giuliani G. De Negri, Henryk Chroscicki

🖼️Gallery (1 images)

Gold of Rome backdrop 1

💬Reviews (1)

C

CinemaSerf

8/18/2025

With the Nazis now firmly in control of the City of Rome, they have come up with a plan to extort 100 lbs of gold from it’s Jewish community else they must deliver two hundred of their most distinguished citizens up as hostage - and they know that will only be a prelude to more wholesale attacks on their faith and their assets. They have barely forty-eight hours to deliver the goods, and so many of them gather together everything of value that they possess to raise this ransom. “Davide” (Gérard Blain) wants none of this appeasement, though. He argues with his leaders that this is but the start of their persecution and that they must leave the city and join the partisans awaiting the arrival of the allies. He also has an eye for “Giulia” (Anna Maria Ferrero) but she is taken by local Catholic lad “Massimo” and a marriage to him might well see her safe from their occupiers - for now, at any rate. What now ensues sees the population divide along the lines of what to do next, but sadly that presentation is a little too superficial. Though Blain does well here as the charismatic lead and Filippo Scelzo also delivers quite poignantly as their conflicted leader determined to do what can to keep some semblance of peace until relief arrives, the other characterisations really only serve to thinly sketch out a scenario but not to really immerse us in it. It’s history, so perhaps Carlo Lizzani was assuming that we all already knew this so felt it unnecessary to fill out the detail, but with so much going on in the city, he determines to focus more on the slightly soapier elements of the storyline rather than the more menacing and intimidatory ones. The photography showcases the city and all that, but aside from one or two more robust scenes towards the end, the substance of this is lacking and I as a bit disappointed.

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