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Amarti è il mio peccato (Suor Celeste)

From The Internet Movie Plane Database
Amarti è il mio peccato (Suor Celeste) movie poster.

Movie (1954)
French title: Les amants du péché
English title: Loving You Is My Sin

Starring:
Rosetta Calavetta (Elena Galassi Monti / Suor Celeste)
Giuseppe Rinaldi (Count Giorgio Danieli)
Lydia Simoneschi (Countess Danieli - Giorgio's mother)
Renata Marini (Valeria Ferri)

The young Count Giorgio Danieli loves Elena, the illegitimate daughter of the former estate manager. A fact disapproved of by his mother, the Countess. When war breaks out, Sergio, now a pilot, learns that Elena is pregnant. Unfortunately, he does not return from his next mission.

Transparency on Press Titles

Action is starting in 1939 at Rome, Italy. Later, action is set in 1943 and 1944. A careful examination of the newspapers reveals some anachronistic publications, as they headline stories about Senator McCarthy (1950).

Heinkel He 111

Dornier Do 17

Unidentified Aircraft

Unidentified single-engine aircraft diving straight into a crash (missing screenshot).

Airspeed Horsa

After a (failed) operation during winter in Norway, the type's first operation occurred on 10 July 1943 during Operation Husky... the Allied invasion of Sicily!

Junkers Ju 87 Stuka

Caproni Ca.148P

Reg. I-AECI Caproni Ca.148P MM (Italian s/n) 61180 seen here in her last life (with a civil registration) but acting a military transport at the beginning of the war.
This aircraft was built in Vizzino as the last one for the Luftwaffe; coded SP+CM, and on 22 July 1944, the German test crew flew it to Switzerland. Wearing the Swiss roundel lasted three years before it was returned from internment in 1947 (by railroad) and briefly served in Lecce (on the Salentine Peninsula, at the heel of the Italian Peninsula) as a flying classroom (actually with new MM168 when used by Min.Difesa Aeronautica and so the new Italian roundel). In 1952, it was converted to civilian use and lost its third roundel for the I-AECI registration. It was probably scrapped in 1954 (or 1956?).

Note the fuselage registration code, which has been covered by a large piece of paper.

Note on the hangar's threshold what seems to be an AVIA FL.3 (or Lombardi FL.3).

But... ECI could be guess under the wingtip.

Fiat BR.20

Macchi C.200 Saetta

CANT Z.501 Gabbiano

Loading a bomb on a CANT Z.501 Gabbiano flying boat used for armed reconnaissance throughout the war (despite being outdated when war breaks out - first flight dated back to 1934).

Fiat CR.32

Fiat CR.32s of the Aviazione Legionaria(*)… anachronistic to illustrate Italian fighting during World War Two.
(*)Expeditionary corps from the Italian Royal Air Force which ceased operations on 10 March 1939 and was back to Italy on 12 May 1939; the scenario is actually considering September 1939 (if not 10 June 1940 when Italy declared war on Britain and France).

Junkers Ju 88A


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