Rodolfo and Petrita live in separate quarters in dilapidated Madrid, and each is looking for a little apartment ("pisito" in Spanish dialect), but their low salaries keep them in their old h... Read allRodolfo and Petrita live in separate quarters in dilapidated Madrid, and each is looking for a little apartment ("pisito" in Spanish dialect), but their low salaries keep them in their old hovels. Rodolfo's co-workers start encouraging him to marry the frail old Doña Martina, the... Read allRodolfo and Petrita live in separate quarters in dilapidated Madrid, and each is looking for a little apartment ("pisito" in Spanish dialect), but their low salaries keep them in their old hovels. Rodolfo's co-workers start encouraging him to marry the frail old Doña Martina, the main tenant in his apartment building; according to Spanish rent-control law, he could in... Read all
- Awards
- 2 wins total
- Petrita
- (as Mari Carrillo)
- Hermana de Petrita
- (as Mª Luisa Ponte)
- Dimas - el callista
- (as José Cordero)
- El chico de los recados
- (uncredited)
- Paco
- (uncredited)
- Luisito - el casero
- (uncredited)
- Adelina - secretaria de Don Manuel
- (uncredited)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaDebut of actress Chus Lampreave.
- Quotes
Dimas - el callista: The only thing I understand is that you can keep the apartment, and an apartment in Madrid is worth more than a thousand women. If we lose it, where will we put our clientele, uh?
- ConnectionsEdited into Apaga y vámonos: Episode #1.3 (2013)
Splendid movie that mingles black comedy , drama , urban conventionality , Francoist social habits , criticism and ¨Esperpento¨ . This is a piece of absurdity and nonsense , full of comical situations , family tragedy and strange happenings such as : some children throwing a wheel-chair man , a little boy on a potty while people eating , a cripple young running , among others . Filmed in long shots showing the crude reality by that time , its black tone causes to not be censored by the stiff censorship ; however , other films dealing with the housing shortage , such as : ¨Historias De Madrid¨ (1956) by Ramón Comas , ¨El Inquilino¨(58) by Jose Antonio Nieves Conde and ¨La Vida Alrededor¨ (1959) by Fernando Fernán Gómez were really censored . This is not the typical comedy by that time , here there is a brief social denounce about the repression , shortages , housing problems , dealing with family ambition and egoism . This picture surprises us for the boldness of the social criticism on the situation of the housing and poorness of the the 50s . The origin of this peculiar film "El Pisito" is in the original novel written by Rafael Azcona , this one integrated into a literary trilogy , being completed by "El Cochecito" also adapted by Marco Ferreri and "Los Muertos No Se Tocan , Nene". Here writer Azcona and filmmaker Ferreri give satirical observations of social conventions and the 50's Spanish way of life . ¨El Pisito¨ was badly premiered , it lasted long time to exhibit itself and had awful critics , as Ferreri was really criticized for his stridently bleak view of human nature . José Luis López Vázquez is the central character that moves the whole action , capable of bringing his role a humanity that goes beyond his grotesque portrait , giving a masterful acting , as usual . As most of López's career was synchronous with Francisco Franco's 36-year repressive regime, when it was almost impossible for Spain to create a vibrant film industry and for talented film-makers to express themselves freely, the majority of his films were conveyor-belt comedies and melodramas, strictly for home consumption . Of the remainder of roles there stands out Mary Carrillo as the harpy , ambitious girlfriend who is busily looking for an apartment , at whatever cost . Support cast give sensational interpretation such as Concha López Silva as the understanding old woman , José Cordero as the sympathetic surgeon , Ángel Álvarez as his job colleague , María Luisa Ponte as Petrita's sister with several children and numerous uncredited cameos from a young Chus Lampreave , Almodovar's ordinary .
This classy Spanish movie was compellingly directed by Marco Ferreri . In the 1950s and 60s, despite restrictions, a distinctive Spanish art cinema managed to emerge, led primarily by the directors Juan Antonio Bardem, Luis García Berlanga , Carlos Saura and Ferreri. Marco was born in 1928 , Milan, Lombardy, Italy and died in Paris , 1997 . Marco firstly was a salesman and then , briefly, a journalist. First foray into film work was filming commercials, and as promoter of a cinema magazine . Worked in Spain from 1957 as Ferreri comes to work in the Spanish/Italian co-production titled ¨Toro Bravo¨ (1956) by Vittorio Cottafavi and he meets writer and graphical humorist Rafael Azcona , and he then debuts as filmmaker in ¨El Pisito¨, following ¨Los Chicos¨ and ¨El Cochecito¨ all of them co-written by Azcona . Many of his films are sour comedies achieving successes thanks to his trademark caustic humor and sharp dialogue and he usually gives ironical remarks about middle-class sexual mores . He was at times criticised for his fatalism and black view point . He was a successful writer and director , especially known for ¨The harem¨ (1967) , ¨Dillinger is dead¨ (1969) , ¨Le Grande Bouffe¨ (1973) , "Don't Touch the White Woman!" (1974) ,¨The last woman¨(1976) , and "Tales of Ordinary Madness" (1981) , among others .
Details
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- Country of origin
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- Also known as
- The Little Apartment
- Filming locations
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime1 hour 27 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix