Stay
Visit a locality browsing the menu on the left. In each Italy area you can then choose the best touristical structures we are proposing.
Most viewed in
Italy
-
Located on the famous AmalfiCoast drive, a few minutes from the famous town of Amalfi, the Santa Caterina enjoys a panoramic coastal setting of incomparable beauty. The history of this special resort is as impressive as its surroundings. In 1880, Giuseppe...
-
Situated on the last bend of Amalfi's promenade and beach, this hotel is on four levels. Bright and Mediterranean in style, the Marina Riviera is a converted old noble villa. All rooms are spacious & tastefully furnished, and have open windows or balconies...
-
Hotel Villa Maria - Amalfi's Coast - Ravello Owned by the Palumbo family, the Villa Maria Hotel offers to its guest the romantic atmosphere of the enchanting Ravello. It is located in a central position, in the historic center of the town, among Villa...
-
A path immersed in the colours and scents of abundant Mediterranean flora leads to the viewpoint of PuntaTragara in Capri, the setting for one of the most exclusive hotels in the world. Hotel PuntaTragara reigns over the most dramatically beautiful scenery,...
-
The Hotel Bellevue is a beautiful Mediterranean-style property, totally refurbished in 2007, surrounded by warm colored geranium and bougainvilleas, lush Mediterranean vegetation and lemon groves. It is located along the scenic "Strada Statale Amalfitana"...
Print this page
Send to a friend by e-mail
Roberto Rosselini in Maiori and on the Amalfi coast
"They are crazy, drunk with the sun! But they live using a power known by few of us: the power of imagination!". With these words the famous Italian director, Roberto Rossellini, one of the biggest names of the Italian Neorealism, defined the inhabitants of the Amalfi coast when journalists asked him why he chose this location as a film set of four of his masterpieces: "Paisà" (1946), "Il Miracolo" (the second episode of the film "L'Amore" - 1948), "La Macchina Ammazzaccattivi" (1952) and "Viaggio in Italia" (1953).
The Amalfi coast and Maiori, in particular, framed both the so called "Maiori's period" of the famous Italian director, and the turbulent love affair between Rossellini and Anna Magnani, their refuge in a typical "monazzeno" (fishermen's house) in the fjord of Furore, the letters sent by Ingrid Bergman who wanted to meet the director (in one of those letters she said to him that the only Italian words she knew were "ti amo"), the frequent scenes of jealousy of Nannarella who interrupted their love dream throwing a plate of spaghetti with tomato on Rossellini's face.
After half a century, the Association Maiori Film Festival paid homage to the great Italian director organizing the "Roberto Rossellini International Award", allowing cinema students and young directors to create short films that will be evaluated by a team of experts.