Captain Corelli’s Mandolin movie storyline. In 1941, Italy allies with Germany and ruthlessly conquers the much weaker country of Greece. On a remote Greek island, an Italian artillery garrison is established to maintain order. One Italian officer, Captain Corelli, adopts an attitude of mutual co-existence with the Greeks and engages in such activities as music festivals and courting the daughter of a local doctor. In 1943, however, after Italy surrenders to the Allies and changes sides in the war, Captain Corelli must defend the Greek island against a German invasion.
Captain Corelli’s Mandolin is a 2001 war film directed by John Madden. It is based on the novel Captain Corelli’s Mandolin by Louis de Bernières. The film pays homage to the thousands of Italian soldiers executed by German forces in Cephalonia in September 1943, and to the people of Cephalonia who were killed in the post-war earthquake. The novel’s protagonists are portrayed by actors Nicolas Cage and Penélope Cruz.
The film opened at number six at the US box office, taking on $7,209,345 in its opening weekend. It brought in only $25,543,895 domestically, but brought in an additional $36,569,000 overseas for a total of $62,112,895 worldwide. The movie cost $57 million to produce.
About the Story
Greece’s Ionian Islands are invaded by the Italian army when it brings a large garrison and a few Germans to the tranquil island of Cephalonia, whose inhabitants surrender immediately. Captain Antonio Corelli, an officer of the Italian 33rd Acqui Infantry Division, has a jovial personality and a passion for the mandolin, and trains his battery of men, (who have never fired a shot), to choral sing.
Initially he alienates a number of villagers, including Pelagia, the daughter of the village doctor. She is an educated and strong-willed woman. At first offended by the Italian soldier’s behaviour, she slowly warms to Corelli’s charm, and mandolin playing, as they are forced to share her father’s home after the doctor agrees to put him up in exchange for medical supplies.
When Pelagia’s fiance, Mandras, a local fisherman, heads off to war on the mainland, the friendship between Antonio and Pelagia grows. Her beauty and intelligence have captured Corelli’s heart, and his fondness for the village’s vibrant community has caused him to question his reasons for fighting. Corelli, and his battery of musical troops, becomes a part of the villagers’ lives; but the moment is fleeting. As the war grows closer, Antonio and Pelagia are forced to choose between their allegiances and the love they feel for one another.
The Italian government surrenders to the Allies, and the Italian troops happily prepare to return home. However, their erstwhile allies, the Germans, insist on disarming them, intemperately and violently. The Greeks are also exposed to the brutality of the incoming Germans, and arrange with the Italians to use their arms in a brief but futile resistance.
For this, the German High Command has thousands of the Italian troops shot as traitors. Corelli survives when one of his soldiers shields him from the fusillade of the German executioners’ bullets with his body, and falls dead on top of him. Mandras finds Corelli, still alive among the pile of massacred soldiers, and takes him to Pelagia and the doctor for treatment and recovery, and then to a boat to escape the island.
As a result of Pelagia’s questioning, Mandras admits that he rescued Corelli from the heap of dead soldiers because he wanted to re-kindle their love. But it does no good and the couple part. Earlier, on one of Mandras’s return visits to Cephallonia, he advises Pelagia that the reason he never replied to her many love letters is because he is illiterate.
Captain Corelli’s Mandolin (2001)
Directed by: John Madden
Starring: Nicolas Cage, Penélope Cruz, John Hurt, Christian Bale, David Morrissey, Irene Papas, Patrick Malahide, Viki Maragaki, Gerasimos Skiadaressis, Mihalis Giannatos
Screenplay by: Shawn Slovo
Cinematography by: Jim Clay
Film Editing by: Mick Audsley
Costume Design: Alexandra Byrne
Set Decoration by: John Bush
Art Direction by: Gary Freeman
Music by: Stephen Warbeck, John Toll
MPAA Rating: R for some violence, sexuality and language.
Distributed by: Universal Pictures (International), Miramax Films (United Kingdom)
Release Date: May 4, 2001 (United Kingdom), June 20, 2001 (France), August 17, 2001 (United States)
Views: 136