Chasing the Real: Italian Neorealism
One of the most significant post-war developments in cinema, Italian neorealism rejected traditional cinematic canons.
‘…to observe every part of reality, to look at things inside and outside at the same time, to film the aura around things, to reveal that which is elusive, arcane, magical, and possesses life. Isn’t neorealism all of these things?’
– Federico Fellini
Neorealism came to exist out of a moral necessity, following the urgency, as Cesare Zavattini, one of the movement’s architects, put it, to ‘find the hidden drama in everyday life’. When the subject of art becomes ordinary life, reality becomes spectacle. This two-month season features the different formal approaches taken by seven directors who made reality such a spectacle. We present 20 titles, from rarely shown gems to seminal works (such as Vittorio De Sica’s Bicycle Thieves and Luchino Visconti’s Ossessione), alongside a number of peripheral films that assimilated American and Soviet influence, and which expanded the boundaries of neorealism. This decisive decade is ripe for rediscovery; it’s been 80 years since Rossellini started work on Rome, Open City and 70 years since the ‘official’ end of the movement, yet it remains relevant to our current times in its ability to teach us the importance of freedom and to reinforce our capacity for compassion.
Giulia Saccogna, season curator
With thanks to
Camilla Cormanni, Paola Ruggiero, Germana Ruscio, Marco Cicala at Cinecittà.
Carmen Accaputo at Fondazione Cineteca di Bologna.
Releases
Rome, Open City
A foundational Italian neorealist film and a dramatic portrait of a city under occupation.
Rome, Open City + intro by Italian Neorealism season curator Giulia Saccogna
A foundational Italian neorealist film and a dramatic portrait of a city under occupation.
Events
The Women of Italian Neorealism
Actors Anna Magnani and Silvana Mangano, alongside screenwriter Suso Cecchi D’Amico, are some of the Italian neorealist figures considered in three richly illustrated presentations.
Precursors: Pre-Neorealism
Three films categorised as ‘proto-neorealist’, with traces still remaining of the sentimentality that marked films of the fascist era, alongside the first manifestations of a new kind of cinema.
Four Steps in the Clouds
A rural interlude for a city employee turns into an idyllic interruption to the monotony of his life, in one of the first films to display neorealist traits.
Four Steps in the Clouds + intro by season curator Giulia Saccogna
A rural interlude for a city employee turns into an idyllic interruption to the monotony of his life, in one of the first films to display neorealist traits.
The Children Are Watching Us
Family, betrayal and alienation: a masterpiece ahead of its time.
Ossessione
Emerging from the tumultuous climate of Italy in 1943, Luchino Visconti’s sensational debut wipes out years of fascist rhetoric with its bitter, transgressive realism and radical sexuality.
Beginnings: Rossellini’s war trilogy
Everything changes with Rossellini. He rebuilt Italian cinema after the war with this trilogy, which started with Rome, Open City.
Paisà
The second part of Rossellini’s revered war trilogy is a key milestone of Italian neorealism which reveals a truthful simplicity in six searing tales.
Germany, Year Zero
The final part of Rossellini’s war trilogy divided audiences at the time, while Chaplin called it “the most beautiful Italian film” he'd ever seen.
Development of the Movement
The years of ‘pure neorealism’ created many neorealisms, defined by the directors, screenwriters and actors working on each film.
Shoeshine
Distinctly compassionate and humane, De Sica’s foundational neorealist drama was the first ever winner of the Oscar for Best Foreign Language Film.
Shoeshine + intro by season curator Giulia Saccogna
Distinctly compassionate and humane, De Sica’s foundational neorealist drama was the first ever winner of the Oscar for Best Foreign Language Film.
A Tragic Hunt (aka The Tragic Pursuit)
A little-seen gem, set in the chaos of post-war Italy, by one of the crucial voices in the development of neorealism.
The Bandit
The trauma of the Second World War is explored in one of the treasures of Italian cinema.
Bicycle Thieves
The Oscar-winning drama that represents post-war Italy more vividly than any other.
La terra trema
Visconti’s social conscience, impacted by war, prompted this strikingly beautiful portrayal of the unjust humiliation of workers in southern Italy.
The Mill on the Po
Alberto Lattuada achieves a starkly poetic grandness with this variation on the themes of neorealism, set during the historic revolts in the Po Valley.
Bitter Rice
Nominated for an Academy Award and harshly condemned by the church, this drama attracted international acclaim and success, rightfully earning its place in the history of neorealist cinema.
Magic Neorealism
Fantastical and supernatural elements blend with evocations of everyday life in these two allegorical portraits.
The Machine That Kills Bad People
Rossellini’s highly stylised satire is a morality tale that marks a transition in the filmmaker’s career.
Miracle in Milan
Goodness overturns ruthless industrialists in this bittersweet Palme d’Or winner, influenced as much by Charles Chaplin and René Clair as it is by the tenets of neorealism.
Endings: 1950 and Beyond
By the early 1950s, Italy was trying to get back to a semblance of normal life. The initial neorealist label had become, as Visconti put it, ‘absurd’.
Lights of Variety
Fellini’s debut is a picaresque comedy, drawing loosely on neorealism, that presents a caricature-style satire on the seamy world of showbusiness.
Stromboli
The first film in Rossellini’s polyptych with Ingrid Bergman, Stromboli marks his stylistic and thematic evolution that opens the way to masterpieces such as Voyage to Italy.
Bellissima
As a mother’s aspiration for her daughter becomes obsession, we witness the cynical reality of the ‘dream machine’ that is the film industry.
Rome 11:00 (aka Rome 11 O’Clock)
An incisive morality-tale of gritty realism from one of the most important, albeit lesser known, figures in Italian neorealism.
Umberto D.
De Sica mines cynicism and hope in this study of the marginalisation of elderly people, which incurred the rancour of the Italian government upon its release.
Journey to Italy
This study of a dysfunctional marriage, considered by Truffaut, Godard and Rivette to be the first ‘modern’ film, announced the end of neorealism.
Seniors
Seniors’ paid matinee: Rome, Open City + intro
A foundational Italian neorealist film and a dramatic portrait of a city under occupation.
Course
City Lit at the BFI: Italian Neorealism – The Cinema of Everyday Life
Six session course exploring the portrayal of reality in Italian neorealist film.
Relaxed
Relaxed Screening: The Machine That Kills Bad People + intro and discussion
Rossellini’s highly stylised satire is a morality tale that marks a transition in the filmmaker’s career.
The new NFT3 entrance is in the main foyer.
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