The Machine to Kill Bad People (1952) Poster

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7/10
The Rossellini Touch
boblipton23 March 2013
Rossellini had a wry sense of humor that showed up particularly in L'AMORE and his life of Francis of Assisi. Unfortunately for him, film making is a commercial art, and when people want to see a film by Roberto Rossellini, they want a drama. So this comedy, which owes a lot to E.T.A. Hoffman and Ernst Lubitsch (the preface even borrows from Lubitsch' DIE PUPPE) confounded the audiences. They expected a serious, small scale tragedy, and so didn't laugh. They stayed away and the film vanished for almost half a century. If you wanted a black comedy, you went to see a Billy Wilder film. Rossellini went back to doing what his audiences expected of him.

It's a pity. This is not a ground-breaking film for Rossellini, but it is a beautifully photographed and well-acted comedy with some wonderful pick-up shots.

If you see this movie, I suggest that you go in without any expectation of seeing a Rossellini film. Just give it the chance that you would give a film by some one you've never heard of before. On those terms, I expect you'll enjoy it a lot.

Aren't those the terms we should offer every movie?
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6/10
The Machine That Kills Bad People
henry8-319 July 2021
The photographer in a small seaside village is visited by a spirit who gives him the power to kill people if he uses his camera to photograph photographs of his intended victims.

Rossellini had created a strange and enjoyable moral comedy with the photographer deciding who is bad and who isn't and losing sight of his strict moral compass as he goes about his business. The comedy is quite broadly mixed with some extreme, almost slapstick elements. The cast is enormous and you quickly get to recognise and enjoy the company of both good and bad as in any village. An eccentric pleasure.
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7/10
black-and-white fantasy plus comedy from Italy
myriamlenys2 April 2019
Warning: Spoilers
An unremarkable photographer in an Italian town has an uncanny meeting with an old man. He suddenly finds himself the owner of a strange power, to wit the power to kill with some kind of "death ray" device. Could or should he use this fearsome power ? And who should die ? It's not as if the town were lacking in opportunists, egotists, thieves and frauds...

I liked the acting, which was good ; I also liked the evocation of daily life in a small town, complete with religious processions, political squabbles, secret power deals, real-estate ambitions and so on. (The scenery, by the way, is superb, as is the slice-of-life view of Catholic worship and culture.) I also liked the idea, which was both original and intriguing. What would happen if a random Everyman were given the power over life and death ? Would the man be able to control himself - and all of the time ? Would frequent hearses fill the streets ? Would the president of France drop dead on his meringue pie ? Would the local tax office turn into a giant mausoleum ?

Still, I got the impression that the movie itself did not dare to explore the full potential of this idea, probably out of fear of becoming too dark and depressing. As a result I found the whole too reticent to become fully convincing or successful.

Beware : do not try to build a drinking game around the many times one of the characters says "san'Andrea". You'd end up blind drunk...
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Let your camera kill!
dbdumonteil2 August 2009
Warning: Spoilers
In 1952,Rossellini made one of his very best works:"Europa 51" in which Ingrid Bergman found one of her best -but unfairly not very famous- parts.The same year,he made what I would call his "holiday homework" . To write that "La Macchina...." is a let down is to state the obvious. The Devil coming to Earth was even at the time a hackneyed subject ;the only originality,so to speak ,is that,at the end of the movie,Satan's home seems to be...Heaven as the last picture shows the skies..It may (or may not) be an unexpected twist and perhaps it was the Lord disguised as the devil...But as the Lord said "thou shalt not kill" ..

As for the plot,it's the story of a photographer Satan visits:to kill the "baddies",His Satanic Majesty says "just take a photograph of 'em" ."Even an innocent donkey will be the victim of the machine.

This is not the movie you 've got to show to a young person who would like to discover the great director's filmography.
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7/10
A critique of the Marshall Plan
pendirkle1 May 2015
Warning: Spoilers
I don't think anyone here realizes the message of this movie. It is clearly a criticism of the triumphalism of American imperialism after the war. All you'd have to do is be conversant with the other movies extent in this period, immediately post-bellum. Even Fellini's "La dolce vita" pretty much echoes this idea. This film deals with the distribution of wealth. The Americans here are depicted as uncouth, rapacious tourists. There is even a reference to the atomic bomb. The photographer kills people by taking pictures of pictures, that is by analyzing the "images" that the Americans send to Italy. The mockery here is also of religion and even God. It is reminiscent of Mark Twain's "Mysterious Stranger". The devil is a "povero diavolo".
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6/10
"Because even in hell, some people have friends in high places."
classicsoncall8 May 2022
Warning: Spoilers
The Italian title translates as "The Machine That Kills Bad People", not exactly the most elegant name I would have come up with, with just a little more thought. "The Camera from Hell" kind of says it and supports the plot of the story, but even that seems a bit awkward. This picture employed a pretty unique concept when an apparition mistakenly taken for St. Andrew, the patron saint of the mountain town of Amalfi, empowers a photographer's camera with the ability to strike its subjects dead when their photo is taken. When the photographer Celestino (Gennaro Pisano) discovers what he has, his own sense of morality impedes on his judgment, and he takes pictures of those citizens he deems to be morally compromised, thereby reducing the town's population one by one. Lest this all sounds unusually macabre, the story proceeds in somewhat humorous fashion, until Celestino's guilt has him confront the would-be St. Andrew, who confesses that he's really the devil Farfanicchio, who magnanimously reverses the 'deaths' of all the people that fell victim to the man's camera. Actually, when Farfanicchio made the sign of the cross, I expected him to vaporize like a vampire caught in sunlight, making the 'all's well that ends well' finale somewhat inconsistent with the story that went before.
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9/10
A delightful and highly original comedy.
planktonrules31 March 2013
"La Macchina Ammazzacattivi" ("The Machine That Kills People") is an amazing film. It proves, along with De Sica's "Miracle in Milan", that a Neo-Realist film can be funny as well as surreal. What I mean by 'Neo-Realist' is that there was a style of film popularized just before WWII ended and it continued into about the mid-1950s. Because the studios were broke, they had to content themselves with making films without stars--using locals as well as local buildings and streets instead of sets. Most of these films are rather serious in tone, but this film (as well as the De Sica film) are ridiculously non-serious--and are both charming to boot.

The film is set in a small Italian town. Celestino is a photographer who thinks he's seen the dead patron saint of the village, St. Andrew. This 'saint' bestows on Celestino a great power--a magical camera that can kill! Fortunately, Celestino isn't blood-thirsty. But, when the leaders of the town all show themselves to be a greedy and selfish lot, he reluctantly (at first) uses this gift to punish the wicked. Eventually, however, Celestino goes too far--and this leads to one of the strangest endings I can recall seeing in an Italian film. Suffice to say that I won't say more, as I don't want to spoil the surprise--but it's worth it!

This is a very odd film in that the director, Roberto Rossellini, lost interest in the movie and left it on the shelf. Somewhere along the line, the studio had another director finish it and the film was released--and practically everyone hated it! But, today it's been restored and is a classic. I think that the dark comedy was just ahead of its time, as the film played badly then but works great today due to changing sensibilities. All I know is that I thought the film was wonderful--and it's definitely the best Rossellini film I have seen--and it's filled with many wonderful moments.
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9/10
Combat injustice, but in moderation!
Prof_Lostiswitz18 March 2017
Warning: Spoilers
Utterly brilliant black comedy about an Italian village dominated by selfish and corrupt people. The simple and humble photographer Celestino is unhappy about this until he runs into an old man who is the very image of Saint Andrew, the town's patron. The old man tells him the reason for all the unhappiness is that evil people are allowed to live, thus good people must kill them!

Using magic powers, the old man tells Celestino that his camera now has lethal powers! If he photographs a photograph of someone, that person will die. A perfectly loathsome official pursuing a romantic couple appears on the scene; when Celestino points his camera at a photograph showing the official in a stiff-armed salute, the official freezes dead in this posture.

The greedy councilmen are arguing over a windfall subsidy the government has given the town, and want to use it for everything but the needy. Celestino "photographs" a few of them, but a problem arises: the poor who have benefited by his lethal actions become as greedy and selfish as those who once tormented them. It looks as if our hero will have to kill EVERYBODY in order to purify the world! Celestino is of course too kind a guy to do that, so he then tries to set matters right.

People have certain expectations of Rossellini, but black comedy and slapstick farce are not among them. Give the guy a chance, he made great films in several genres, not just neorealism. Luis Bunuel (whose ironic attitude is similar to what we see here) suffered from the same typecasting: he made some brilliant dramas, but people only want to see his late surrealist works. The neorealists treated the camera as an instrument of social struggle, so it is possible to see this film as an allegory.

This is in the tradition of Commedia dell'Arte, it will help if you have some familiarity with slapstick.
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9/10
Hilarious, fast-paced morality comedy
sgcim29 March 2013
Warning: Spoilers
I had no idea this was a Rosselini film when I saw it on TCM (which has become the last cable channel that still cares about film, now that IFC and Sundance have turned into pale shadows of themselves- the ultimate fate of any artistic endeavor in the US, unless you have unlimited capital like Ted Turner- God bless him), and though it's not one of his masterpieces, we thoroughly enjoyed it, even though the ending seems to have been tacked on by another director.

Apparently Rosselini fell "out of love with it" before he even finished filming, and it had to be finished by someone else.

The ending goes against the black comedic aspect of the rest of the film, and deserves to be replaced by an ending that stays in character with what went on previously. Other than that, you can expect some great comedic dialogue and acting. The film cannisters were lost for some fifty years, but it's been restored very well, digitally.
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