The Battle of the Villa Fiorita (1965) Poster

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6/10
Disappointing ending in an otherwise fairly interesting film
vincentlynch-moonoi22 May 2014
Warning: Spoilers
Delmer Daves, director, has to have had one of the most unique careers in Hollywood. Take a look at his filmography, and you'll see there's an unusual spectrum to his films. And quite a few soap-opera-ish films later in his career...and this is one of those, although Daves does 2 things here that make this film work. First, you're never quite sure where the plot is going; so you have to pay attention! Second, once you learn the story is more about the children than the adults, Daves could have gotten maudlin...but didn't...or silly...but didn't.

The nominal stars here are Maureen O'Hara and Rossano Brazzi, who go from an affair to lovers living together in Italy (rather than England where O'Hara is from in the film). The jilted husband -- in a rather short role -- is Richard Todd. But then the kids step in, and historically most interesting is Olivia Hussey, in her first film role, as the daughter of Brazzi; however, I was not impressed.

By the way, the on-location scenery is stunning!

Whether or not you like this film may come down to whether or not you like the ending. I didn't. Still, it was an interesting film, although that ending dropped this from a 7 to a 6.
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7/10
Ms. O Hara's Comment
AndersonWhitbeck22 May 2014
Delmer Daves created some of the great lush romantic dramas of my youth such as A Summer Place, Parrish and Rome Adventure all starring Troy Donahue, and then also at WB directed Spencer's Mountain starring Henry Fonda and Maureen O Hara. Daves then cast the beautiful Maureen in this film shot in Italy. In her book 'Tis Herself Ms. O Hara said she was simply aghast when seeing the rushes she noted that her face was shot with shadows. At first I did not believe a major star would be photographed against her wishes and that the veteran renowned cinematographer Oswald Morris held a grudge against the lovely star because of a football bet! Whether this is true or not, the fact is that La O Hara one of the cinema's great beauties has some scenes that back up her complaint.

I thought the film was fine and the casting of Ms. O Hara with Rosonna Brazzi who was in Daves' Rome Adventure as well- also very fine. The location shot were gorgeous.
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7/10
Views of the villa and surrounding area.
Fushnique23 October 2003
I liked the movie mainly for the picturesque views of the lake,( Lake Como?) the surrounding area, and scenes of the villa itself. So much of the architectural style is remincient of the paintings done by Maxfield Parrish in the early part of the 20th century. You sort of have to look around the actors in the various scenes to get glimpses of ornate retaining walls, stairs and elaborate ballusters around and into the lake. There is an elegance about marble (or granite, or just old concrete?) stairs going down into the water. And old world gardens full of flowers. Itn reminds me of the book "Italian Villas and their Gardens" by Edith Wharton, 1907, Which was illustrated by Parrish. And yes, the children in the movie steal the show; All three have a much stronger determination to achieve their goals than do any of the adults. It's a good story line , dated for the sixties. And is'nt this Olivia Hussey's first feature film?
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4/10
Batty soaper for female audiences of the 1960s...
moonspinner553 August 2014
Maureen O'Hara and Rossano Brazzi are glowing middle-agers in love whose romance is thwarted by their respective pre-teen children: his haughty Italian daughter and her stubborn, bratty British boy and girl. Stories of kids meddling in their parents' love lives are usually successful if played as comedy; here, the melodrama gets to be too much, with the adults continually exasperated and the kids unlikably victorious in their immature pranks. The familial arguments which arise are probably realistic, but here they dissipate interest in the movie, particularly since the love affair between the grown-ups is much more interesting than the finger-pointing. ** from ****
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3/10
Total waste of talented actors
debbiemathers24 November 2022
While this should have been a rousing success given the stars (Richard Todd none other in a support role) it is lamed by a hopeless script in which a selfish woman (O'Hara) runs off to have an affair pursued by her pretty awful kids. The lover has a daughter (Hussey) who for some reason joins in the plot to separate the lovers and falls in love with the boy. The whole thing is unpleasant and it is difficult to know who is worse, the kids or the adults, so when Hussey gets a (well deserved) spanking from her father you just want to boot his backside to wake him up to his own responsibilities. All together a complete waste of time.
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3/10
Gorgeous locations and beautiful color photography can't hide the fact that this is unbelievable melodrama.
mark.waltz4 September 2023
Warning: Spoilers
A weak script and badly conceived characters is to blame for this very disappointing soap opera where even exotic locations can't save it. Maureen O'Hara and Rossano Brazzi are a gorgeous couple but they are hampered by the fact that there's no development of how their love affair begins and how her marriage to Richard Todd (in a thankless teeny part) ends. The local hens warn O'Hara in a gang-up clucking manner that her friendship with Brazzi is causing tongues to wag. Her two children (Elizabeth Dear and Martin Stephens) are greatly affected when she abandons them and follow her to Brazzi's breathtaking villa where more venom than a pit of vipers is revealed.

Even worse, young Dear turns Brazzi's daughter (Olivia Hussey, pre-"Romeo & Juliet") against him, and eventually Brazzi and O'Hara are battling each other as this villa of the damned becomes a toxic paradise. It's an embarrassing film for both O'Hara and Brazzi, and the three young actors are painful to watch. A scene with an interfering young priest is particularly awful. If it wasn't for the gorgeous locations in color and poignant score (in spite of the overuse of constantly crashing cymbals), I'd mark this as a complete bomb.
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9/10
The good old days
lousvr3 April 1999
I saw this movie as a teenager when it came out. Typical of its time and genre. Two kids go alone across Europe to bring their mom, who has left dad for new man, back to dad. Great scenery. O K young teenager travel adventure fantasy. O'Hara and Brazzi OK but film stolen by kids. A young Olivia Hussey prior to her starting in Romeo and Juliet. The result of their attempt is in keeping with the morals of its time.
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4/10
Wiles and strategies
bkoganbing20 November 2015
Watching The Battle Of The Villa Fiorita I was struck at how similar this was to another Maureen O'Hara film, The Parent Trap. This is a great example of how one can take the same plot situation and treat it either comically or quite seriously. In this case the comic treatment was far better.

Maureen O'Hara is a 40 something wife and mother who experiences a mid life crisis. While part of a welcoming committee for concert pianist Rossano Brazzi the two of them begin an affair that breaks up Maureen's home and hearth, the one she shares with husband Richard Todd and children Martin Stephens and Elizabeth Dear.

Todd's not happy, but willing to let things go. But the kids are determined one way or another that the Brazzi/O'Hara marriage will never take place. Curiously enough when they hitchhike to Italy they find a willing ally in Olivia Hussey who is Brazzi's daughter. Brazzi is a widower, still Hussey wants no one taking her mother's place.

The kids use all kinds of wiles and strategies to break their parents up. Nothing with any parent trap like cuteness, this film never would have been done for Disney. It ends with an uncertain future for all concerned.

If there's a message here it misses the mark considerably. If you think you'll be seeing Maureen O'Hara after reading the description in another Parent Trap than The Battle Of The Villa Fiorita will disappoint you greatly. It doesn't quite cut it as drama either.
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5/10
Maureen looks beautiful in her different role
HotToastyRag15 January 2022
If you're looking for a different type of role for the prim and proper Maureen O'Hara, check out the romantic drama The Battle at Villa Fiorita. She has a devoted wealthy husband, Richard Todd, two children, and a place in society in England. But when she meets visiting Italian Rossano Brazzi (no, this isn't a different type of role for him), she realizes her life will be empty without him. A whirlwind romance, and she leaves her family to join him in Italy. Can you believe it?

Richard is devastated and humiliated, but he lets her go without a fight. If she's that determined to wreck their home, nothing he says will convince her to stay. Their children, Martin Stephens and Elizabeth Dear, aren't of the same mind, and they make it their mission to go to Italy and bring Maureen home. Once there, Rossano tries to win them over with great efforts, but they team up with his pre-teen daughter, Olivia Hussey, who also doesn't approve of the match.

For someone like me, who particularly doesn't like children, I wouldn't recommend this movie. I was cringing the entire time, wishing bad things would happen to the kids when they tried to sabotage their parents. I kept thinking that when the children grow up and have romantic relationships of their own, they'll continue to be selfish and mean-spirited. If their own children try to interfere, they'll go right ahead with their own interests and tell themselves they'll be better parents if they're happy - that they'll be setting a good example to put themselves first. Where did they learn that behavior? Certainly not from their own parents. Maureen and Rossano suffer terribly when their children are unhappy, and they don't subscribe to the theory of putting their own happiness first as a good example.
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8/10
Something lacking here
overseer-311 March 2004
Warning: Spoilers
Battle of the Villa Fiorita could have been so much better. The novel by Rumer Godden had more suspense. However, it is hard to make an attractive movie about such an unattractive subject, even with stars of the caliber of Maureen O'Hara and Rossano Brazzi. Their characters were like two overgrown children themselves, there was no emotional maturity there.

Wife (O'Hara) leaves home, deserts her children in England, to take off to Italy with New Lover (Brazzi), leaving husband alone to pick up the pieces. The children are devastated by their mother's betrayal, and secretly travel to Italy to fetch her back, but the father never catches on to their whereabouts until AFTER they arrive in Italy? What kind of father was THAT?

The children here are good actors, but even their story line is unattractive. The two girls starve themselves to frighten the mother and her new lover, and the boy gets red in the face and says he will never forgive his mother, then he secretly brings food to one of the girls and not the other. Most unpleasant.

Then there is the cop-out ending. The boy and one of the girls go out on a little boat in a thunderstorm and the whole town turns out to find them. Because they almost die, the mother decides to leave New Lover and go home to the children's father, whom she no longer loves (and to whom we no longer feel any pity for, since he never bothers to come to Italy to check on his kids and bring them home).

Best thing about the film, as has been pointed out by others, is the nice scenery of 1960's Italy and Europe. But if you want that you can always see an old travelogue; that in and of itself is not enough to keep your interest together for this film.
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9/10
Irresistible Familial Tug-Of-War
dflynch21523 October 2019
This delightful 1965 film appeared at the local theater where I was a 16-year-old usher. Ushers used to tire of repeated film screenings, however, I couldn't get enough of this cinematic gem. An attractive British housewife (Maureen O'Hara) falls for a charming Italian musician (Rosanno Brazzi) and the adventure begins. Her thunderstruck children (Martin Stephens and Elizabeth Dear) become determined to rescue their love-struck mother and to restore family unity. Director Delmar Daves gives the children plenty of opportunities for abundant scene stealing. Olivia Hussey makes an auspicious film debut as the beautiful Donna. Cinematographer Oswald Morris captures the breathtaking beauty of Italy's Lago di Garda. Battle of the Villa Fiorita is an enchanting film that the whole family will enjoy.
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9/10
When children take charge of their parents for their fallacies
clanciai17 November 2020
Maureen O'Hara has a perfect husband (Richard Todd) and two lovely children, a boy and a girl, in a splendid estate outside London, when she falls in love with an Italian (Rossano Brazzi) and decides to leave her family with him. He brings her to his fabulous estate by the Lago di Garda in Italy (with Gabriele d'Annunzio's working place in sight), where they lead a luxurious life in splendour, until we learn that he also has a child, a daughter (Olivia Hussey in her first part), whom he brings to the villa, shortly after Maureen O'Hara's two children have come there on their own, on a special mission to fetch her back to their father in England, entirely on their own initiative - we never learn that Richard Todd was ever informed about it. Now, what is wrong in all this? That's what the battle of the Villa Fiorita is about, the children fighting hard to separate their parents from their lovers, and they will go to any length. This provides the drama of the film, which actually reaches rather critical heights. Rossano Brazzi, this great invincible lover and he-man, has to finally admit, that the children (especially Maureen's very determined daughter) won the moment they showed up at his house. The film is beautifully made, with gorgeous music all the way by Mischa Spoliansky (Rossano plays a successful composer and pianist, and it's Spoliansky's music he is playing,) with splendid colours and cinematography, but the interesting part is the acting of the children. They take charge of the film and their parents and lead them right, in spite of their almost equally determined resistance. It's a great film and story for child psychology, and as all true and good parents know, children always know better.
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