Italian Film in the Light of NeorealismPrinceton University Press, 1986 - 443 lappuses The movement known as neorealism lasted seven years, generated only twenty-one films, failed at the box office, and fell short of its didactic and aesthetic aspirations. Yet it exerted such a profound influence on Italian cinema that all the best postwar directors had to come to terms with it, whether in seeming imitation (the early Olmi), in commercial exploitation (the middle Comencini) or in ostensible rejection (the recent Tavianis). Despite the reactionary pressures of the marketplace and the highly personalized visions of Fellini, Antonioni. And Visconti, Italian cinema has maintained its moral commitment to use the medium in socially responsible ways--if not to change the world, as the first neorealists hoped, then at least to move filmgoers to face the pressing economic, political, and human problems in their midst. From Rossellini's Open City (1945) to the Taviani brothers' Night of the Shooting Stars (1982). The author does close readings of seventeen films that tell the story of neorealism's evolving influence on Italian postwar cinematic expression. Other films discussed are De Sica's Bicycle Thief and Umberto D. De Santis's Bitter Rice, Comencini's Bread, Love, and Fantasy, Fellini's La strada, Visconti's Senso, Antonioni's Red Desert, Olmi's Il Posto, Germi's Seduced and Abandoned, Pasolini's Teorema, Petri's Investigation of a Citizen above Suspicion, Bertolucci's The Conformist, Rosi's Christ Stopped at Eboli, and Wertmuller's Love and Anarchy, Scola's We All Loved Each Other So Much provides the occasion for the author's own retrospective consideration of how Italian cinema has fulfilled, or disappointed, the promise of neorealism. |
No grāmatas satura
1.–5. rezultāts no 78.
... historical period represents an important revolutionary moment , not only of cinema , but of Italian thought , " said Scola , who went on to extol film as the privileged medium for the conveyance of " that new way of thinking and of ...
... was born from the Resistance and from neorealism . " See Fulvio Accialini and Lucia Coluccelli , I Taviani ( Florence : La Nuova Italia , 1979 ) , p . 9 . A historical / theoretical discussion of neorealism and its antecedents PREFACE xvii.
Millicent Joy Marcus. A historical / theoretical discussion of neorealism and its antecedents in earlier concepts of realism will be the subject of my introductory section . Part One includes the officially " terminal " films of ...
... historical circumstance . But the first meaning of realism is an existential one , according to Wellek , derived from Kierkegaard , who was reacting against the historicism of Hegel , the progenitor of Auerbach's sec- ond interpretation ...
... historical development , a corre- sponding vision of the future which will emerge from the movement of history so discerned , and a belief that the social order is modifiable and therefore perfectable.21 As opposed to modernism , which ...
Saturs
The Founding | 33 |
Casting Shadows on the Visionary City | 54 |
A Neorealist Hybrid | 76 |
Dark Victory for Neorealism | 96 |
Transitions | 119 |
Consumable Realism | 121 |
Transcending Neorealism | 144 |
The Risorgimento According to Gramsci | 164 |
The halfway revolution | 245 |
Power as Pathology | 263 |
Fascism and War Reconsidered | 283 |
A Morals Charge | 285 |
The High Price of Commitment | 313 |
A Tale of Two Italies | 339 |
Ambivalent Tribute to Neorealism | 360 |
An Epilogue | 391 |
Abstraction as the Guiding Idea | 188 |
Return to Social Commentary | 209 |
Discrediting the economic miracle | 211 |
Inside the Honor Code | 228 |
of Works Consulted | 423 |
437 | |
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Italian Film in the Light of Neorealism Millicent Marcus,Millicent Joy Marcus,Professor Millicent Marcus Priekšskatījums nav pieejams - 1986 |