罗马假日

更新时间:2023-05-29 03:50:40 阅读: 评论:0

In the opening moments of the film, a Paramount News NEWS FLASH announces, with newsreel footage, the goodwill tour of a royal princess, Princess Ann (Audrey Hepburn), a member of the royal family of an unnamed European country. During her formal tour, she waves at the crowds who line the streets for parades, motorcades, and other ceremonial processions:


sm是什么意思 Paramount News brings you a special coverage of Princess Ann's visit to London, the first stop on her much-publicized, goodwill tour of European capitals. She gets a royal welcome from the British, as thousands cheer the gracious young member of one of Europe's oldest ruling families. After three days of continuous activity and a visit to Buckingham Palace, Ann flew to Amsterdam, where her Highness dedicated the new International Aid Building and christened an ocean liner. Then went to Paris, where she attended many official functions designed to cement trade relations between her country and the Western European nation. And so to Rome, the Eternal City, where the Princess'
visit was marked by a spectacular The smiling young Princess showed no sign of the strain of the week's continuous public appearances. And at her country's Embassy that evening, a formal reception and ball in her honor was given by her country's Ambassador to Italy.
During her royal state visit to Rome, Italy, she is prented to the guests during the extravagant ball, escorted into the room wearing a beautiful gown and crown of jewels. Performing her expected diplomatic duties, she appropriately greets the Papal Nuncio, Monsignor Altomonto (Giacomo Penza), Sir Hugo Macy de Farmington (Eric Oulton), the Maharajah of Khanipur (Rapindranath Mitter) and Rajkumari (Princess Lilamani), Prince Istvan Barossy Nagyavaros (Cesare Viori) and many others, but the young foreign Princess reveals her weariness of the proceedings. Under her long gown, she wiggles and itches her foot and then embarrass herlf by losing her high heeled shoe. She retrieves it when she stands to dance with a steady procession of admirers and guests.

Her girlish naivete and modern-day leanings are expresd when she is tucked primly int
o her bed in an old-fashioned nightgown by her lady-in-waiting chaperone, Countess Vereberg (Margaret Rawlings):


Ann: I hate this nightgown. I hate all my nightgowns, and I hate all my underwear too.
Countess: My dear, you have lovely things.
Ann: But I'm not two hundred years old. Why can't I sleep in pajamas?
Countess: Pajamas!?
Ann: Just the top part. Did you know that there are people who sleep with absolutely nothing on at all?
Looking out her window, she catches a glimp of how the other half lives, a scene of Roman nightlife. When she is brought warm milk and crackers before retiring, she scoffs: "Everything we do is so wholesome!" The review of her tightly-arranged royal schedule for the next day (including rules of decorum, how she will act and what she will wear) reveals ceremonial visits to a car factory, a food and agricultural inspection organization a
nd an orphanage, followed by a press conference, lunch with the foreign ministry, and even more affairs of state later in the day. The Princess screams: "STOP!", hysterically exasperated and depresd by the constant control and regimentation of her life. As she is given a dative by a doctor, she tells her guardians: "...I'll be calm and relaxed, I-I'll bow and I'll smile and improve trade relations and " In reality, she is determined to e Rome for herlf and on her own terms.

To escape the endless tedium of the many ceremonial occasions, to find adventure and to experience life beyond the claustrophobic confines of her royal position - without royal control - she slips out of the palatial Embassy that night. Unen, Ann climbs into the back of an open supply truck (Domenico Pizzatti - Rinfreschi -) that is allowed to leave the Embassy grounds. For the first time, unescorted and unchaperoned, she smiles as she watches her liberating passage through the Embassy's gates. When the truck stops, she jumps out and finds herlf in the middle of Rome, becoming increasingly drowsy from the effects of the sleep-inducing dative. She falls asleep on a low park wall.


On his walk home following a late-night card game which has impoverished him with his pals, street-smart American newspaperman Joe Bradley (Gregory Peck), one of the many reporters who was planning to interview the Princess the next day, walks by the sleeping beauty. She is singing to herlf: "So happy." He finds it ironic that she is "well-read, well-dresd" and "snoozing away on a public street" like a drunk. Taking pity on her becau she has no money ("Never carry money"), the protective journalist signals a taxi and they climb in the back at. Perplexed that she sleepily responds that she lives "at the Colium," he directs the taxi to his own apartment and then realizes that she must spend the night there.

In an exquisite scene, he leads her up steps and ushers her into his apartment while muttering to himlf: "I ought to have my head examined." Preparing to sleep at his place, she comments dizzingly about all the new experiences, while he 包含ucts her on sleeping arrangements:



Ann: Can I sleep here?
Joe: Well, that's the general idea.
Ann: Can I have a silk nightgown with robuds on it?
Joe: I'm afraid you'll have to rough it tonight - in the. (He prents her with his own oversized pajamas.)
Ann: Pajamas!
Joe: Sorry honey, but I haven't worn a nightgown in years.可笑的英文
Ann: (regally) Will you help me get undresd, plea?
Joe: (after hesitating a moment and being taken aback) Uh, OK. (He removes one small article of clothing - her necktie) There you are, you can handle the rest. (He pours himlf a glass of wine and rapidly downs it.)
Ann: May I have some?
Joe: (firmly) No. Now look.
Ann: This is very unusual. I've never been alone with a man before - even with my dress on. (She begins unbuttoning and removing her blou) With my dress off, it's most unusual. I don't em to mind. (She gazes directly at him.) Do you?
Joe: (stony-faced) I think I'll go out for a cup of coffee. You'd better get to sleep. (She flops on his bed.) No, no, no. (He leads her toward the couch.) On this one.
Ann: How terribly nice.
Joe: Hey - the are pajamas. They're to sleep in. You're to climb into them, you understand?...Then you do your sleeping on the couch, e. Not on the bed, not on the chair, on the couch. Is that clear?
Ann: Do you know my favorite poem?
Joe: You already recited that for me.
Ann: "Arethusa ro from her couch of snows in the Acroceraunian mountains" - Keats.
Joe: Shelley.
Ann: Keats!四大发明英语
Joe: Now, you just keep your mind off the poetry and on the pajamas, and everything'll be
all right, e.
Ann: It's Keats.
Joe: Now, I'll be - it's Shelley - I'll be back in about ten minutes.
Ann: Keats. (He approaches his front door and hides his wine bottle on the top of the mantelpiece.) You have my permission to withdraw.
Joe: Thank you
When Joe returns to his small apartment about ten minutes later, he finds the princess in his own bed - not on the chair or couch as he had 包含人际交往能力ucted. He rolls her off his bed onto the couch.

The princess' disappearance is classified as a "Top Crisis Secret" when it is discovered that the "direct heir to the throne" is missing at the Embassy. A diplomatic cover-up conceals the real facts: "A SPECIAL EMBASSY BULLETIN REPORTS THE SUDDEN ILLNESS OF HER ROYAL HIGHNESS THE PRINCESS ANN."

The next morning when he awakens, he has overslept past the scheduled 11:45 am interview with the princess. The Rome American newspaper reports:


Princess Ann Taken Ill; Press Interview Cancelled - Embassy Reports Princess Confined to Bed by Sudden Illness: Day's Schedule Cancelled
Joe frantically dress and arrives late at the American News Service where he ineptly tells his boss Mr. Hennesy (Hartley Powers) that he has just left the interview with the princess - a paradoxically true statement, but a gross lie ("a gold-plated, triple-decked, star-spangled lie") in his superior's view:


Hennesy: In view of the fact that our Highness was taken violently ill at three o'clock this morning, put to bed with a high fever, and has ordered all her appointments for the day cancelled
Joe: That's certainly pretty hard to swallow.
Hennesy: In view of the fact that you just left her, of cour.
Hennesy points out Princess Ann's picture printed in the paper: "It isn't Annie Oakley, Dorothy Lamour, or Madame Chiang Kai-shek. Take a good look at her. You might be interviewing her again some day." Joe immediately discovers that he has a major scoop in the works. After discovering the identity of the mysterious girl in his apartment, he hopes to get an exclusive story that will help him with his career advancement that would take him back to the States:


Joe: How much would a real interview with this dame be worth?
Hennesy: Are you referring to Her Highness?
Joe: I'm not referring to Annie Oakley, Dorothy Lamour, or Madame ... How much?
Hennesy: What do you care? You've got about as 落寞的英文
Joe: I know, but if I did? How much would it be worth?
Hennesy: Oh, just a plain talk on world issues, it would probably be worth two hundred and fifty. Her views on clothes, of cour, would be worth a lot more, maybe dollars.
Joe: I'm talking about her views on everything!...The private and cret longings of a Princess. Her innermost thoughts as revealed to your own correspondent in a private, personal, exclusive interview. (His boss' mouth drops, awe-struck by the thought) Can't u it, huh? I didn't think you'd like it.
Hennesy: Come here! Love angle too, I suppo.
Joe: Practically all love angle.
Hennesy: With pictures.
Joe: Could be. How much?
Hennesy: That particular story will be worth five grand to any
Joe: ...You said five grand? I want you to shake on that.
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Back at his apartment, Ann finally awakens at about 1:30 in the afternoon, but she is thoroughly disoriented:



Ann: Would you be so kind as to tell me where I am?
Joe: Well, this is what is laughingly known as my apartment.
Ann: Did you bring me here by force?
Joe: No, no. Quite the contrary.
Ann: Have I been here all night, alone?
Joe: If you don't count me, yes.
Ann: So I've spent the night here - with you?
Joe: Well now, I-I don't know that I'd u tho words exactly, but uh, from a certain angle, yes.
Ann: (beaming with a smile) How do you do? (She extends her hand for a handshake)
Joe: How do you do?
Ann: And you are - ?
Joe: Bradley, Joe Bradley.
Ann: Delighted.
weisuoJoe: You don't know how delighted I am to meet you.
Ann: You may sit down.
Joe: (sitting on the bed) Thank you very much. What's your name?
Ann: You may call me Anya.
The newspaper reporter pretends ignorance of her identity, initially having a strictly mercenary interest in the Princess. While she takes a bath, he phones his carefree, bearded photographer friend Irving Radovich (Eddie Albert), hinting: "It's front-page stuff. That's all I can tell ya. It might be political or it might be a nsational scam. I'm not sure which. But it's a big story, and it's gotta have pictures."

Everything is exciting for Ann: "It must be fun to live in a place like this." But she feels compelled to leave and wander around. After lending her a little money, he follows her through the crowded streets and marketplace filled with small motorcycles, bicycles, vendors, and pedestrians. She walks the streets of Rome incognito, experiencing things
as an ordinary commoner and doing things exactly the way she wants to. At a salon, she has her hair drastically cut shorter after ordering the Italian haircutter (Paolo Carlini): "All off." Afterwards, she tells the flirtatious barbiere who cropped her hair to make her unrecognizable: "It's just what I wanted."

She begins her day of freedom by ordering a gelati cone at a roadside stand and accepting a single flower from a flower vendor. Joe accidentally runs into her to keep in contact with her and get the inside information for his story. She confess her predicament of playing hookey from school and her desire to "live dangerously":


Ann: I ran away last night, from school.
Joe: Oh, what was the matter? Trouble with the teacher?
Ann: No, nothing like that.
Joe: Well, you don't just run away from school for nothing.
Ann: It was only meant to be for an hour or two. They gave me something last night to make me sleep.
Joe: Oh, I e.
Ann: Now, I'd better get a taxi and go back.
Joe: Well look, before you do, why don't you take a little time for yourlf?
Ann: Maybe another hour.
Joe: Live dangerously. Take the whole day.
Ann: I could do some of the things I've always wanted to.
Joe: Like what?
Ann: Oh, you can't imagine. I-I'd do just whatever I liked all day long.
Joe: You mean things like having your hair cut,
Ann: Yes, and I'd sit at a sidewalk cafe and look in shop windows. Walk in the rain, have fun and maybe some excitement. Doesn't em much to you, does it?
Joe propos to spend the day with her and experience everything she has always wanted to:



Joe: Tell you what. Why don't we do all tho things, together?
Ann: But don't you have to work?
Joe: Work? No. Today's gonna be a holiday.
Ann: But you want to do a lot of silly things?
Joe: (He takes her hand) ...First wish? One sidewalk cafe, comin' right up. I know just the place. Rocca's.
At the cafe, Ann orders costly champagne for lunch, and then describes, in disguid terms, her father's fortieth anniversary of the day he got his job:


Ann: Well, mostly you might call it public relations.
Joe: Oh, well, that's hard work.
Ann: Yes. I wouldn't care for it.
Joe: Does he?
Ann: I heard him complain about it.
Joe: Why doesn't he quit?包装设计需求
Ann: Oh, people in that line of work almost never do quit, unless it's actually unhealthy for them to continue.
To conceal his own identity to her, Joe describes his own line of work:


Ann: What is your work?
Joe: Oh, I'm, ah, in the lling game.
Ann: Really? How interesting. What do you ll?
Joe: Fertilizer. Chemicals. You know, chemicals. Stuff like that.
When Irving arrives, he repeatedly tries to mention that Ann is a "ringer" for the Princess, but Joe blocks him by kicking him under the table, dumping a drink in his lap, and finally by knocking his chair over. When Joe gets Irving away for a few moments, he tells his ph
otographer friend about Anya Smith's ("Smitty's") real identity and the promi of five grand (including a percentage of the take if there are pictures): "She doesn't know who I am or what I do. Look Irving, this is my story. I dug it up. I've got to Your tin无效s are gonna make this little epic twice You're in for twenty-five percent of the take." Then, he asks his friend to loan him thirty thousand lira ("that's fifty bucks") so that he can entertain the Princess for the rest of the day.

Ann smokes her "very first" cigarette, while Irving surreptitiously takes pictures of her with his hidden-camera cigarette lighter. Meanwhile, "plain-clothes" men are retained to arch the city for the missing princess, as Joe, Ann, and Irving begin their carefree tour of the city on a "fun schedule." She rides on the back of Joe's motorcycle to e the famous sights, including the ruins of the Colium. After Ann recklessly drives them through the streets, they are arrested by the polizia but relead after Joe's clever alibi: "Going to church to get married on a scooter." Ann brags about her own deceitfulness:



Ann: I'm a good liar too, aren't I, Mr. Bradley?
Joe: The best I ever met.
In a memorable scene, Joe shows the Princess a sculpture which he names 'The Mouth of Truth.' He tests the legend with her:


Joe: The Mouth of Truth. Legend is that if you're given to lying, you put your hand in there, it'll be bitten off.
Ann: Oh, what a hard idea.
Joe: Let's e you do it.
Ann: (she nervously moves her hand toward the mouth, but then pulls back) Let's e you do it!
Joe scares the Princess into believing he has lost his hand inside the sculpture's mouth. Later during her guided tour, they visit a wall covered with in脚本ions:



Joe: Each one reprents a wish fulfilled. It all started during the war. There was an air raid, right out here. A man with his four children was caught in the street. They ran over against the wall, right there, for shelter and prayed for safety. Bombs fell very clo, but no one was hurt. Later on, the man came back and put up the first of the tablets. Since then, it's become a sort of a shirine. People come and whenever their wishes are granted, they put up another one of the little plaques.
Ann: Lovely story.
Joe: Read some of the in脚本ions. (Ann moves clor toward the wall) Make a wish? (Ann nods). Tell the doctor?
Ann: (declining) Anyway, the chances of it being granted are very slight.
Ann suggests going dancing that evening on a barge down by Sant' Angelo on the Tiber River, where she was invited to meet the salon barber:



Ann: At midnight, I'll turn into a pumpkin and drive away in my glass slipper.
Joe: And that will be the end of the fairy tale.
When Irving leaves to develop the pictures he has been snapping all day, Joe and Ann wind up dancing on the barge that night. While on the barge, some of the men dispatched to find the Princess spot her. Bradley quickly falls in love with the Princess' naivete, radiance and beauty, and begins to question his original mercenary interest in her:


Ann We spent the whole day doing things I've always wanted to. Why?
Joe: I don't know. It emed the thing to do.
Ann: I never heard of anybody so kind.
Joe: It wasn't any trouble.
Ann: Also, completely unlfish.
After dancing with Mario Delani, the barber who cut her hair, one of the royal agents take
s hold of Ann and proceeds to drag her to a waiting car. During the ensuing melee, Joe and Irving struggle to prevent Ann from being taken away. Ann hits the royal agents over the head with beer bottles and then with a guitar taken from one of the band members. To avoid capture, both Joe and Ann jump in the water and swim for the shore. On dry land, they congratulate themlves on their successful escape and then kiss each other - they both find themlves desperately falling in love.

Back at Joe's apartment, after changing into drier clothes, he confess that he has no kitchen and always eats out, pointedly thinking: "Life isn't always what one likes, is it?" After their long day together, she admits having had a tiring, but "wonderful day." A radio news broadcast informs them that the Princess' 'illness' is causing "alarm and anxiety among the people in her country." Although they dream of becoming clor to each other, Ann also knows she will inevitably have to part from him and return to her other life and duties:



Ann: I'm a good cook. I could earn my living at it. I can w too and clean a hou and iron. I learned to do all tho things. I just haven't had the chance to do it for anyone.
Joe: Well, looks like I'll have to move. I'll get mylf a place with a kitchen.
Ann: Yes. (after a long pau) I will have to go now. (They hug each other)
Joe: There's something that I want to tell you.
Ann: No plea. Nothing. I must go and get dresd.
Joe drives her back to a street corner within sight of the imposing, imprisoning gates of the Embassy. In a memorable goodbye scene, she gives him difficult-to-hear directions:


Ann: I have to leave you now. I'm going to that corner there and turn. You must stay in the car and drive away. Promi not to watch me go beyond the corner. Just drive away and leave me as I leave you.
Joe: All right.
Ann: I don't know how to say goodbye. I can't think of any words.
Joe: Don't try. (They sadly hug and kiss each other for the last time)

The Princess leaves the car and he watches her disappear down a dark, empty little street as she runs back to the Embassy, returning to her cloistered and protected world.

The returning Princess is questioned about her long, twenty four hour abnce, but she offers no explanation other than: "I was indispod. I am better." With a strong, lf-confident voice, she tells the Ambassador (Harcourt Williams) that she realizes her royal duties (and rights) more clearly:


Your Excellency, I trust you will not find it necessary to u that word again. Were I not completely aware of my duty to my family and my country, I would not have come back tonight, or indeed ever again.
She dismiss them, and then with a commanding prence, reflecting her capability as a future ruler, orders: "No milk and crackers. That will be all, thank you, Countess."

Becau of his affection for Ann, Joe decides to give up his 'exclusive' story about the Princess and not violate her privacy or exploit her. Hennesy, who "knows too much" thinks Joe is playing "hard to get" to rai the price of his story: "A deal's a deal. Now, come on, come on, come on, where is that story?" Joe refus to divulge his story scoop: "I have no story." And then he tells Irving who has excitedly brought the developed photographs: "In regard to the story that goes with the (the pictures), there is I mean that as far as I'm concerned."

Nonetheless, Joe is amud by the pictures which show Ann with her first cigarette, her experience with the Mouth of Truth, the in词根词缀大全脚本ion "wall where wishes come true," their izure at the police station ("Police inspects Princess"), dancing on the barge, and the climactic shot of Ann hitting one of the cret rvice over the head with a guitar ("Crown
初二英语下册单词ed Head"). Irving wishes to convince his friend that his paparazzi photos should be ud: "She's fair game Joe. It's always open ason on Princess. You must be out of your mind."

In the film's bittersweet, moving ending, in the day's press corps interview, she notices Joe and Irving in the front of the other reporters. In front of the asmbled reporters, she answers the first few political questions with double meanings directed particularly toward Joe, especially one question about the outlook for friendship among nations:


Ann: I have every faith in it as I have faith in relations between people.
Joe: May I say, speaking for my own press rvice, we believe that your Highness' faith will not be unjustified.
Ann: I am so glad to hear you say it.
She is asked by another reporter which city in her tour she enjoyed most. The princess o
ppos her advisors who want her to give equal weight to every city on the tour. They coach her by whispering the acceptable answer to her. She abruptly changes her answer mid-stream and obliquely tells them all (and Joe) that she will never forget Rome (or him), expressing her own personal prerogative as a Princess:


Each in its own way was unforgettable. It would be Rome, by all means, Rome. I will cherish my visit here in memory as long as I live.
When photographs are allowed to be taken during the ssion, Irving steps forward and surpris the Princess by revealing that his cigarette lighter is really a miniature camera. She steps forward to personally meet and shake hands with members of the press corps. Irving prents the Princess with some "commemorative photos" of her visit to Rome. She views the one of her smashing a guitar over an agent's head, smiles discreetly, and then formally thanks Irving: "Thank you so very much." And then when Joe and Ann meet, she can only be polite and impersonal: "So happy Mr. Bradley." Princess Ann cann
ot reveal the cret of her day with both of them.

As she gives a final goodbye, she slowly turns toward the audience, gives a wide smile toward everyone (and then directly toward Joe), holds the tear-inducing gaze, and then departs. After the press corps has left, Joe stares at the door through which she left, never to e her again. With echoing footsteps, he slowly walks out of the room - the camera with a backward-moving tracking shot follows his retreat from the girl he loves. He turns one last time at the end of the hall to sadly look back before leaving.

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