Italian Cinema Essay, Research Paper
Filoteo Alberini patented his Kinetografo for taking motion pictures late in 1895, and the first Italian film to charge admission was released the following year: Vittorio Calcini's Umberto E Margherita Di Savoia A Passeggio Per Il Parco, in which King Umberto and Margherita of Savoy could be seen on a stroll in the park. Before the end of the 19th century, the Lumi?re Brothers' Italian representatives, Calcini and his trainer Eug?ne Promio, were making short documentaries in the style of the French pioneers; so were such imitators as Italo Pacchioni (La Gabbia Dei Matti, 1896). In the 1900s Italian film production grew rapidly. Alberini produced his landmark one-reeler La Presa Di Roma in 1905; this historical drama of the annexation of Rome into the new Italian republic set the trend for the period films, whch would typify Italian silent cinema. Producer/director Giovanni Pastrone (aka Piero Fosco) further shaped the genre with such films as Giordano Bruno (1908) and La Caduta Di Troia (1910). Longer works such as Enrico Guazzoni's 8-reel Quo Vadis? (1912) led to Pastrone's classic 1914 epic Cabiria. This opulent 15-reel drama, set in the Second Punic War, was an international hit and persuaded filmmakers that audiences could sit still for lengthy dramas. Italian short comedies were also popular in these years, with stars such as Cretinetti (L'Ultima Monelleria Di Cretinetti, 1911), Polidor (Polidor E I Gatti, 1913), and Kri Kri (Kri Kri, Martire Della Suocera, 1915). But after World War One, Italian cinema was undercut by foreign films. Production shrivelled over the 1920s; Hollywood's use of Italian facilities for films like Ben-Hur (1926) also drained the industry's resources, as did such Italian superproductions as Guazzoni's Messalina (1923). From over 200 Italian films made in 1920, less than 12 were produced between 1927 and '28. Italian film production slowly revived over the 1930s. The first talkie was La Canzone Dell'Amore (1930), directed by Gennaro Righelli. The decade's escapist comedies and musicals usually depicted a life of wealth and leisure beyond most Italians, who snidely called these "white telephone" movies, after their use of a decorating touch favored by the rich; examples include Paradiso (1932), directed by Guido Brignone, and Righelli's Al Buio Insieme (1933). Mussolini's Fascist government also began to be reflected in Italy's films, such as Righelli's L'Armata Azzurra (1932) and director Alessandro Blasetti's Vecchia Guardia (1935). Epic historical dramas were also revived, most notably Blasetti's 1860 (1934) and director Carmine Gallone's Scipione L'Africano (1937). By the start of World War Two, Italian film was under Fascist control, and most films were light entertainment to distract citizens from their sufferings as the tide turned in favor of the Allies. But even before the fall of Fascism, films such as Piccolo Mondo Antico (1941), by novelist-turned-filmmaker Mario Soldati, or Blasetti's Quattro Passi Fra Le Nuvole (1942), co-scripted by Cesare Zavattini, offered a renewed involvement with the realities of everyday life. Vittorio De Sica, a romantic lead in '30s comedies, began to direct and co-script his films in the '40s, such as the delightful Teresa Venerdi (1941) with Anna Magnani; he stayed behind the camera for I Bambini Ci Guardano (1943, The Children Are Watching Us), a realistic drama of a marital breakup as seen from the young son's perspective, which he co-wrote with Zavattini. The year 1943 also marked the release of a grim account of adultery and murder, set against the poverty-stricken Po River valley and delta: Ossessione, the first film directed and co-scripted by Luchino Visconti. This unauthorized version of James M. Cain's novel The Postman Always Rings Twice met with legal difficulties that inhibited its international release; but in Italy it was enormously influential and ushered in the cinematic era of "neorealism." Two filmmakers brought world renown to neorealism. The first was Roberto Rossellini, whose first features La Nave Bianca (1941), Un Pilota Ritorna, (1942), and L'Uomo Della Croce (1943) had supported the Fascist agenda. After the fall of Mussolini, he showed his true feelings when he directed and co-scripted Roma, Citt? Aperta (1945, Open City), filming secretly in Roman streets and apartments while the Germans were still pulling out. Although he'd cast actors such as Magnani and Aldo Fabrizi, Rossellini achieved a stunning verisimilitude in this drama of the Italian Resistance, and the film was an international success. So too were Pais? (1946, Paisan), his multi-episode account of the American liberation of Italy, and Germania Anno Zero (1947, Germany, Year Zero), shot in the ruins of Berlin, in which a German boy poisons his father who is too sick to support the family. Rossellini used real locations and non-professional locals as actors, and gazd directly at the core of human experience; seen together as a trilogy, these classics offer an indelible account of the war's impact on humanity. The other neorealist filmmaker to achieve international acclaim was De Sica. Like Rossellini, he had a genius for drawing real emotions from non-actors; co-scripting with Zavattini, he made two classics of the hardships of postwar life. Sciuscia (1946, Shoeshine) was about street boys trying to survive by shining shoes, who are driven into betrayal and despair by a cruel legal system. Ladri Di Biciclette (1948, The Bicycle Thief) depicted the desperate attempts of a poster-hanger to recover his stolen bicycle so he can keep his job and support his family. Although praised by critics, neorealist films weren't popular with Italians, who were disinclined to see movies depicting the misery all around them. Yet other directors also employed neorealist methods in the late 1940s and early '50s: Luigi Zampa (Vivere In Pace, 1946; Anni Difficili, 1948), Alberto Lattuada (Senza Piet?, 1948, Without Pity; Il Mulino Del Po, 1949; Il Cappotto, 1952, The Overcoat), Renato Castellani (Sotto Il Sole Di Roma, 1948; ? Primavera, 1949; Due Soldi Di Speranza, 1952), Pietro Germi (In Nome Della Legge, 1949; Il Ferrovierre, 1956, The Railroad Man), and Giuseppe De Santis (Riso Amaro, 1949, Bitter Rice; Roma Ore 11, 1952). The other classic of the '40s, however, came from Visconti: La Terra Trema (1948), about a poor Sicilian fishing family torn apart by their exploitative employers. Working strictly with non-professionals (whose Sicilian dialect required that the film be shown with subtitles, even to Italian audiences), Visconti made one of the finest and most absolute of neorealist films. The masters of neorealism began expanding their styles, and lements of satiric fantasy were featured in Rossellini's La Macchina Ammazzacattivi (1948) and in De Sica and Zavattini's classic allegory Miracolo A Milano (1950, Miracle In Milan). Anna Magnani triumphed in two vehicles: Rossellini's diptych L'Amore (1948, Love) starred her in both a filming of the Jean Cocteau play The Human Voice and in Il Miracolo (The Miracle), an original story by Federico Fellini; Visconti's Bellissima (1951), a satire of the Italian film industry, had Magnani as a stage mother promoting the dubious talents of her young daughter. Rossellini's scandalous love affair with married actress Ingrid Bergman resulted in her starring in several of his most memorable dramas: Stromboli, Terra Di Dio (1949, Stromboli), Europa '51 (1952, The Greatest Love), Viaggio In Italia (1954, Voyage To Italy), and La Paura (1955, Fear). De Sica and Zavattini made another neorealist masterpiece with Umberto D (1952), about the plight of the elderly in Italian society. They followed with a weak drama, Stazione Termini (1953), which featured the Hollywood stars Jennifer Jones and Montgomery Clift; released in the States as the dubbed and shortened Indiscretion Of An American Wife, the film would not be seen here in its full-length Italian version until 1983. Their superb multi-episode comedy L'Oro Di Napoli (1954, The Gold Of Naples) made a star of Sophia Loren, but Il Tetto (1956, The Roof), in which a young couple struggles to put a roof on their newly-built house before they can be kicked out of it, was less affecting and became their last neorealist film. Visconti moved outside neorealism for two of his best works: Senso (1954), a lush drama of love and betrayal set against the Risorgimento (Italy's struggle against Austrian rule in the mid-19th century), and Le Notti Bianche (1957, White Nights), a stylish adaptation of the Dostoevsky story, with Marcello Mastroianni. Rossellini also made a superb period film, his account of St. Francis of Assisi, Francesco, Giullare Di Dio (1950, The Flowers Of St. Francis), as well as the memorable satire Dov'? La Libert?? (1952), starring the beloved Italian clown Tot? as a man who finds more liberty for himself in prison than in society. In the 1950s a new generation of Italian filmmakers took the truths of neorealism into new realms of social analysis, psychological drama, and storytelling techniques. Federico Fellini, who'd co-scripted numerous films for Rossellini and Lattuada, debuted as a director with Luci Del Variet? (1950, Variety Lights), a comedy/drama of infidelity among show folk, which he co-directed with Lattuada. His first solo effort was the memorable comedy Lo Sceicco Bianco (1952, The White Shiek), about a young bride obsessed with the dashing White Shiek, who turns out to be just a silly windbag played by comic Alberto Sordi. Fellini's semi-autobiographical I Vitelloni (1953) was a classic look at smalltown young men who are reluctant to grow up; he followed with a second masterpiece, La Strada (1954), with his wife Giulietta Masina as a simpleminded waif kept by a brutish circus strongman, played by Anthony Quinn. La Strada made international stars of Fellini and Masina, and even though their con-men drama Il Bidone (1955) was less successful, they scored again with Le Notti Di Cabiria (1957, The Nights Of Cabiria), one of their finest collaborations, with Masina as a naive prostitute. The other master filmmaker who came into his own in the 1950s was Michelangelo Antonioni, although his slow, icy dramas of frustrated love and personal alienation failed to win the instant praise given Fellini. His first feature, Cronaca Di Un Amore (1950), began exploring the themes that would make him famous in the 1960s, and Antonioni followed with the multi-episode drama I Vinti (1952), the film-industry satire La Signora Senza Camelie (1953, The Lady Without Camellias), and the Cesare Pavese adaptation Le Amiche (1955). His mature style began with Il Grido (1957, The Outcry), a leisurely-paced drama of a man's mental collapse. Antonioni finally achieved international success with his classic L'Avventura (1959), a longer and even more leisurely-paced anti-drama starring Monica Vitti, in which the search for a missing woman trails off into disillusionment and emptiness. More popular with Italians were the comedies of the 1950s, notably two films directed and co-scripted by Luigi Comencini and starring De Sica and Gina Lollobrigida: Pane, Amore E Fantasia (1953, Bread, Love And Dreams) and Pane, Amore E Gelosia (1954, Frisky). Also beloved were the Tot? comedies written and directed by Mario Monicelli and Steno (aka Stefano Vanzina), such as Guardie E Ladri (1951, Cops And Robbers). As a solo director, Monicelli later scored an international hit with the caper satire I Soliti Ignoti (1958, Big Deal On Madonna Street) with Tot? and Mastroianni.In the 1960s, both Fellini and Antonioni made a series of classics which secured their positions in the first rank of world cinema. The fragmentary storytelling style Fellini had explored in I Vitelloni and Le Notti Di Cabiria was used to define La Dolce Vita (1960), a stunning fresco of the decay of Italian society; Marcello Mastroianni starred as a gossip columnist who is as empty as the world around him. 8-1/2 (1963), arguably Fellini's best film, had Mastroianni as a film director incapable of finishing his science-fiction epic; moving invisibly between reality and fantasy, 8-1/2 was funny, heartbreaking, and uplifting. Masina starred in Fellini's first color feature, Giulietta Degli Spiriti (1965, Juliet Of The Spirits), as a betrayed wife whose mental breakdown liberates her from an unreal domestic life. The phantasmagoric Fellini-Satyricon (1969), a surreal adaptation of Petronius' account of ancient Rome, was Fellini's most personal yet least self-referential film. Antonioni starred Monica Vitti in three more minimalist dramas of loss and purposelessness: La Notte (1960), with Mastroianni and Jeanne Moreau; L'Eclisse (1962), perhaps his finest film, in which the characters are eventually displaced by the director's scrutiny of objects in the street; and his first color film, the haunting Il Deserto Rosso (1964, Red Desert). Antonioni then made two English-language films. Blow-Up (1966), with David Hemmings as a London photographer who stumbles onto a murder only to lose the thread of his own investigation, won Antonioni his greatest acclaim. He then got his worst reviews for Zabriskie Point (1969), but today, his look at America's aimless counterculture seems more compelling and original. After making the lengthy, multi-episode documentary India (1958) for Italian television, Rossellini returned to drama with Il Ge
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