Piccola posta (1955)
December 22, 1955Release Date
Plot.
Where to Watch.
Currently Piccola posta is available for streaming online, rent, buy or watch for free on: Amazon Video
Streaming in:🇺🇸 United States
Cast & Crew.
Alberto Sordi
Rodolfo Vanzino
Franca Valeri
Lady Eva
Peppino De Filippo
Pipinuccio Gigliozzi
Sergio Raimondi
Marco Cappelli
Anna Maria Pancani
Franchina
Nanda Primavera
Lady Eva's Mother
Amalia Pellegrini
Donna Virginia
Memmo Carotenuto
Ranuccio
Salvo Libassi
Rocco Tamburello
Nietta Zocchi
Pipinuccio Gigliozzi's Wife
Salvatore Libassi
Rocco Tamburello
Georges Brehat
The English Doctor
Silvio Bagolini
direttore del giornale
Steno
Director
Luciano Salce
Proprietario del cane Wotan
Lucio Fulci
Writer
Sandro Continenza
Writer
Sandro Pallavicini
Producer
Giusi Raspani Dandolo
Donna all'apertura della clinica per animali domestici
Raffaele Gervasio
Composer
Tonino Delli Colli
Cinematographer
Giuliana Attenni
Editor
Eraldo Giordani
Sound
Franco Lolli
Production Design
Gastone Carsetti
Assistant Production Design
Emo Bistolfi
Line Producer
Sergio Bergamini
Camera Operator
Giovanna Natili
Costume Design
Eligio Trani
Makeup Artist
Emilio Trani
Assistant Makeup Artist
Carla Fierro
Script Supervisor
Renato Tonini
Unit Manager
Augusto Tinelli
Assistant Camera
Emanueel Brescini
Production Secretary
Marcella Ramarini
Assistant Editor
Franco Jamonte
Renato Bonifazi
Lia Lena
Mario Siletti
Media.
Details.
Wiki.
The Letters Page (Italian: Piccola posta) is a 1955 Italian comedy film directed by Steno, starring Alberto Sordi. Actually the film's full title is Piccola posta ovvero: cercasi vecchia con dote (translation: "The Letters Page, or Searching for a Rich Older Woman"). Co-writer Lucio Fulci has a cameo appearance in the film (young man with glasses). Cameraman Delli Colli's wife (Alexandra) years later wound up co-starring in one of Fulci's later slasher films, The New York Ripper (1982).Piccola Posta is a sequel of sorts to Steno's earlier film A Day in Court, similarly formatted into a series of short vignettes, each involving different characters, and the stories are all tied together through Lady Eva and her "Dear Abby"-style column. Steno said in interviews that he liked Sordi and allowed him to adlib some of the scenes, Sordi basing his material on past experiences he claimed to have had with older women.