Professional Documents
Culture Documents
(Traditions in World Cinema) Torunn Haaland-Italian Neorealist Cinema-Edinburgh University Press (2012)
(Traditions in World Cinema) Torunn Haaland-Italian Neorealist Cinema-Edinburgh University Press (2012)
TORUNN HAALAND
General Editors: Linda Badley and R. Barton Palmer
Founding Editor: Steven Jay Schneider
This series introduces diverse and fascinating movements in world cinema. Each volume
concentrates on a set of films from a different national, regional or, in some cases, cross-cultural
cinema which constitute a particular tradition.
‘In recent years, Italian cinema – and in particular its highest moment, neo-realism – has enjoyed
a revival within international scholarship. This has contributed to emphasize Italian cinema’s ITALIAN NEOREALIST CINEMA
centrality and its fertile influence on all world cinema of the postwar period. Within this
panorama, Torunn Haaland’s book appears as one of the most brilliant and most capable of
An engaging and informative read for students and scholars in Italian Studies, Italian Neorealist
Cinema presents a new approach to a key cinematic tradition, and so is essential reading for
everyone working in the field of Film Studies.
Edinburgh
www.euppublishing.com
ITALIAN NEOREALIST CINEMA
Torunn Haaland
www.euppublishing.com
A CIP record for this book is available from the British Library
List of figures vi
Acknowledgments viii
Filmography 219
Bibliography 222
Index 233
Figure 1.1 Bruno and Mariuccia in Camerini’s Gli uomini che mascal-
zoni! Courtesy of the Fondazione Centro Sperimentale di
Cinematografia. 10
Figure 1.2 Gino and Giovanna in Visconti’s Obsession. Courtesy of
the Fondazione Centro Sperimentale di Cinematografia. 17
Figure 1.3 Pricò and his father in De Sica’s I bambini ci guardano.
Courtesy of the British Film Institute. 20
Figure 2.1 Caterina Rigoglioso and her son in Amore in città.
Courtesy of the Fondazione Centro Sperimentale di
Cinematografia. 56
Figure 3.1 Chiara Samugheo’s ‘Le baraccate di Napoli’ (Cinema
Nuovo, 1955); Courtesy of Chiara Samugheo. 64
Figure 3.2 Renato Guttuso’s Crocifissione, 1940–1. Courtesy of
Archivi Guttuso. © 2012 Artists Rights Society (ARS),
New York / SIAE, Rome. 65
Figure 3.3 Carlo Levi’s La Santarcangelese, 1935–6. Courtesy of
Raffaella Acetoso. © 2012 Artists Rights Society (ARS),
New York / SIAE, Rome. 86
Figure 4.1 Dale shortly before he is killed by Nazi soldiers in
Rossellini’s Paisà. Courtesy of the Fondazione Centro
Sperimentale di Cinematografia. 114
Figure 4.2 Edmund in Rossellini’s Germania anno zero. Courtesy of
the Fondazione Centro Sperimentale di Cinematografia. 120
vi
vii
This project would not have been started nor certainly completed without the
unreasonable faith and patience of the series editors, Linda Badley and Barton
Palmer. I thank them for the relentless enthusiasm with which they have par-
ticipated in my languid progress.
I am thankful to Gillian Leslie and Rebecca Mackenzie at Edinburgh
University Press for their encouraging assistance and to my copy-editor Sally
Davies for her meticulousness.
Many practical and financial issues were solved thanks to library staff at
Gonzaga University and The Pennsylvania State University as well as to funds
from the College of Arts and Sciences at Gonzaga University.
I am grateful to the Archivi Guttuso, Raffaella Acetoso and Chiara
Samugheo for their generosity in providing access to illustrations.
Warm thanks go to senior colleagues who at various stages supported this
and my other endeavours: Gabriella Brooke, Stefania Nedderman, Sherry
Roush and Maria Truglio.
If, in the text, one can sense the choral quality of neorealist narratives, it
stems from professors whose voices of wisdom continue to inspire, direct
and merge with my own: Paula Amad, Gill Branston, Andrea Ciccarelli, Sara
Gwenllian-Jones, Chris Holmlund, James Naremore and Massimo Scalabrini.
If, on the other hand, there are imprints of the disconnected spaces that
extend into new life, for these I am indebted to friends who in a particular way
have opened their homes and unravelled their cultural heritage to me: Marta
Moretto, Nadia Nocchi and Angela Porcarelli.
viii
With the exception of Open City, Shoeshine, Bicycle Thieves, Miracle in Milan,
Obsession, The Earth Trembles and Bitter Rice which many readers will know
by their English titles, all Italian films are referred to by their original title and
English translations are provided in the filmography. All other translations,
unless otherwise stated are mine.
ix
xi
xii
‘. . . one feels that everything was done too fast and with too fierce a sin-
cerity to run the risk of bogging down in mere artistry or meditativeness
[. . .] The film’s finest over-all quality [. . .] is this immediacy.’
James Agee, review of Open City, 1946 (2000)
Viewing history
What affinities there are between cinema, urban streets and history had been
amply explored before Roberto Rossellini (1906–77) shot Rome, Open City
(1945; Roma, città aperta), whose heroine is killed during a Nazi raid in the
winter of 1944, a few months before the city is liberated. From the Lumière
brothers’ pioneering views on work and quotidian moments in 1890s’ France,
to the emergence of urban documentaries in 1920s’ Russian and German
cinema and noir cities in 1940s’ Hollywood, the spatiotemporal capacities
of the moving image to evoke the life that flows, privileging social milieu
and collective events over individual conflict, had made filmmakers look to
the streets the way Rossellini did only months after the events he depicted
had taken place. Few moments in world cinema had, however, captured
with such an immediacy those intrinsically cinematic streets where ‘history
is made’ that Siegfried Kracauer singled out as a characteristic of cinematic
realism (1960: 72; 98). When Pina falls lifeless in via Montecuccioli in front
of her son; her fiancé; a partisan priest, who will soon face the same fate; and
a neighbourhood unified in the claim to freedom, the world is brought to a
in interwar cinema could move into the realm of neorealism without seeking
to excuse past affiliations. While there was a shared sense that theirs had
been a professional rather than an ideological compromise, there was also
an awareness that the cinema during fascism had offered a ‘neutral ground’
and a ‘free harbour’ for exchanges of ideas and influences that somehow set
their work apart from the political context (Brunetta 1987: 74–6). The rela-
tive freedom Italian directors enjoyed compared to their German and Russian
colleagues is not ultimately measured by a few cases of state intervention and
prohibitions; this reflected, according to Cesare Zavattini (1902–89), efficient
self-censorship rather than tolerance among the fascist hierarchy (quoted in
Faldini and Fofi 1979: 24). Most illuminating is the conviction espoused by
Luigi Freddi, the Director General of Cinema during the 1930s, that a propa-
ganda machine on the German model would harm not only the industry, but
also the ultimate purpose of imposing totalitarian structures on a nation that
still, some sixty years after its unification, was marked by enormous regional
and socio-economic disjunctions.
To foster unity and a sense of nationhood, the cinema should not merely
offer ‘bread and circuses’, although most films of the ventennio were produced
under this banner; the new Italian cinema should also create celebratory
images of current and concrete local realities. From a neorealist perspective,
authenticity and immediacy are synonymous with an anti-fascist stance and
demystifying intentions, but a realist aesthetic had already been advocated
by fascist leaders and intellectuals to create a unique, national, culture that
was social, yet not socialist (Ben-Ghiat 1995: 631–2). Politically, as well,
Mussolini and Gentile wrote, ‘fascism aims at realism’, crucially implying
that the anti-liberal and anti-socialist revolution they envisioned would be
embedded in the ‘actual historical conditions’ of a corporate state formed by
hard-working Italians (2000: 48–9). Related ideals of ‘Italianness’ and ‘the
fascist man’ created a web of collective myths that sought to encourage iden-
tification between the people and fascism.8 Mussolini’s public appearances
were unmistakably keyed towards this perspective: when interacting with
small-town and rural communities he would emphasise his rustic origins and
the rural essence of the ‘Italian race’; during encounters with urban audiences
the Duce’s public image was crafted to perpetuate ideals of antique roots and
imperial rebirth. While both the folkloric and the colonial myths reproduced
visions of fascism as the outcome and the protector of the people’s roots and
values, they also aimed to fabricate and align rhetorical practices with their
everyday experiences.9
Within artistic and intellectual life, these strategies of consensus-making
found parallels in two opposite, equally essentialist, movements – strapaese
(Ultra-Country) and stracittà (Ultra-City) – that both emerged independently
of, but in conjunction with, Mussolini’s declaration of dictatorship in 1925.
The first, associated with the Tuscan periodical Il Selvaggio (founded 1924)
would denounce bourgeois and urban elements in fascist culture by promoting
rural traditions and community structures. By contrast, stracittà grew out of
the Rome-based, French-language periodical Novecento (founded 1926) and
celebrated the modernist aspects of fascism within a cosmopolitan perspec-
tive, spreading its ideas abroad while also challenging the europhobic and
anti-American stance of the fascist state. Both were, however, essentially anti-
bourgeois tendencies driven towards the dual objective of influencing fascist
leaders and bringing the people closer to the regime.10 Considered as comple-
mentary consolidating forces, they responded to fascism’s twofold exigency of
establishing populist relations with the masses without excluding the middle
class from which it drew both political and financial support.11 Considered,
instead, as myths that could also be contested, strapaese and stracittà created a
space of negotiation where non-hegemonic influences could intrude and where
critical views could masquerade as legitimate discourse.
That the promotion of realism became a far more ambiguous endeavour than
fascist hierarchs may have wanted was partly due to concurrent and ideologi-
cally contradictory realist practices in European and American culture (Ben-
Ghiat 1995: 632). The interwar years, marked by social crisis and unrest, the
rise of socialist movements in wake of the Bolshevik revolution and the effects
of the Great Depression, but also the transition to modernity and the emer-
gence of urban societies, created a wide-ranging and manifold urgency among
artists and intellectuals to give pressing social realities a voice and an image. In
Weimar Germany, disillusioned artists formulated a Neue Sachlichkeit (New
Objectivity) of concreteness to voice a cynical critique of post-World War
I conditions and solidarity with the lower classes, whereas Soviet directors
conveyed revolutionary propaganda of proletarian unity through dialectical
realism. Among French filmmakers, radical opposition to the rise of Nazism
forged the bleak forms of ‘poetic realism’, whereas American writers and
directors sought forms of reportage and documentation, as well as stylised
depictions of pre- and post-war anxieties. What role these and other influences
played in the formation of neorealist poetics shall be explored more closely in
Chapter 2. At this point, it is clear that whether realism involved social com-
mentary (Walter Ruttmann’s experimental documentaries), or an endorsement
of social realism (Sergei Eisenstein), or whether it articulated anti-fascism and
pacifism within the Popular Front (Jean Renoir), or social awareness within the
parameters of Hollywood entertainment (King Vidor), it contradicted every-
thing fascism stood for. Yet such realist discourses circulated among Italian
artists and critics and were in part officially endorsed as aesthetic and indus-
trial models for a cinema of the fascist revolution.
One of the first signs in Italy of the turn towards the real is Alberto
Moravia’s (1907–90) novel Gli indifferenti (1929). Giving concrete images
tions and local structures left for alternative influences. The film was drawn
from a short story Mussolini had requested from the internationally acclaimed
dramatist Luigi Pirandello (1867–1937) and Walter Ruttmann was commis-
sioned to direct it. With his experience of Neue Sachlichkeit documentaries
such as Berlin: The Symphony of a City (1927), he was considered capable of
fulfilling Cines’ twofold objective of internationalising Italian cinema and of
communicating more current images of Italy abroad (Garofalo 2002: 240).
Shot in and around Terni’s steelworks, the story of modern machinery and
destructive passions follows Mario, who upon his return from military service
finds his best friend Pietro engaged to his sweetheart, Gina. His selfish behav-
iour at the factory where they work provokes a conflict that causes Pietro’s
death and suspected of murder, Mario escapes. It is ultimately Pietro’s father
who brings him back – to Gina and to the community – so that order is restored
and individualism is condemned in favour of collective production. Enacted by
local and non-professional actors, the narrative is conveyed through sophisti-
cated variations in shots and lighting, a constant juxtaposition of images, and a
suggestive harmony between the visuals and the musical score that reproduces
the rhythms of the factory machines (Garofalo 2002: 241). All of this attests to
Ruttmann’s sense of montage-cinema and its ability to convey social and inter-
personal tensions, but as the rather traditional storyline moves unambiguously
towards the norm of the community, these techniques ultimately fail to affirm
the dialectical thought he would have aspired to communicate.
Their innovations notwithstanding, neither Blasetti nor Ruttmann changed
the standardised codes of interwar Italian film, but they suggest the range of
influences and interests involved in the twofold project of national and cin-
ematic revitalisation. Both films engage with ideals of bonifica (reclamation):
a socio-cultural project of rustic revival launched to raise demographic and
agricultural growth, something that became increasingly urgent following
Italy’s Colonial War against Ethiopia in 1935–6 when economic autarchy
was introduced in response to sanctions from the League of Nations. Another
objective of this ‘reclamation of soil and souls’ was to reduce an increasing
migration to the cities, since fascist hierarchs feared that urbanisation would
facilitate the formation of a political opposition (Ben-Ghiat 2001: 80–1). It
was precisely the growth of Northern cities, which with their long traditions
of workers’ unions and political radicalism in effect would see the first initia-
tives to resistance, that inspired Mario Camerini’s (1894–1980) Gli uomini che
mascalzoni! (1932).
Shot on location in the rapidly expanding centre of Milan, this romantic
comedy features the city as protagonist and setting for social analysis with a
basis in the romance between Mariuccia, a salesgirl in a luxurious drugstore,
and Bruno, a soon-to-be-unemployed driver eventually re-employed as a
street-advertiser. Both aspire to the wealthy and degraded world that keeps
Figure 1.1 Bruno and Mariuccia in Camerini’s Gli uomini che mascalzoni! Courtesy
of the Fondazione Centro Sperimentale di Cinematografia.
them employed, but ultimately they find happiness with each other. While the
morally evaluative representation of social classes and denial of social mobil-
ity in favour of the lower-middle-class family does little to contest official
discourse, the treatment of unemployment and economic dependence exposes
social inequalities, while also emphasising the individual private and profes-
sional opportunities offered by urban modernity. Ultimately, notions of collec-
tive revitalisation are undermined by an individualistic view of the present as a
question of finding one’s place.
The twofold search for concrete portrayals and popular appeal is encapsu-
lated in the prominence given to an ordinary romantic couple, and contem-
porary box-office figures relied to a great extent on the presence of De Sica
who starred as a whimsical, but solid hero in several of Camerini’s comedies.
In Mister Max (1937; Il Signor Max) he portrays a newsstand attendant who
masquerades as well-off and sophisticated to pursue a rich lady, before falling
in love with her maid. In Grandi magazzini (1939), we see him as a delivery
10
11
12
Teresa Venerdì ‘to set free, with itself, a humanity now afraid to manifest itself
[. . .] now highly expansive’ (1942: 198). Retrospectively, we can see not only
which humanity De Santis referred to a year before Northern workers’ protests
announced the emergence of an organised Resistance movement, but also that
the sympathetic presentation of such marginalised characters foreshadowed
De Sica’s future commitment to the underprivileged. If, during the war, the
repertoire of romantic comedy served to obfuscate messages that may, at the
time, have been received as a form of political opposition, we should also
expect to find comic elements in his postwar films the way we do in Open City
and in a series of ‘minor’ neorealist works (Landy 2000: 110–11; Wagstaff
2007: 93). In part, this reflects the authorial contributions of the extraordinar-
ily imaginative Zavattini – unaccredited but as palpable in Teresa Venerdì, as
in De Sica’s successive films – but it also suggests that past experiences with
comedy continued to shape his vision of the cinema, even when it produced
stories of victimisation.
13
prevalent in the post-war years, but for the ‘choral quality’ and ‘spirituality’
that often subvert the films’ bellicose and ideological thematics.13
La nave bianca is introduced by a caption presenting us with the film’s theme
and the director’s method: the characters are the actual crew of a warship, and
they are captured – ‘dal vero’ (from real life) in their own environment and
with verismo in sentiment. Both the authenticity of locations and characters,
as well as the rapid editing that structures documentary footage of actual
naval combats in the first part of the film reveal at least an indirect knowledge
of Eisenstein’s Battleship Potemkin (1925) and of his theories of dialectical
montage (Rondolino 1989: 58). More specifically, the film’s claim to authen-
ticity evokes Verga’s commitment to provide verisimilar representations by
assimilating the characters’ speech patterns and collective voice, radically
reducing authorial comments on the world portrayed. The camera works with
similar strategies of detachment, observing the navy operatives’ singular fea-
tures of regional speech and individual interests within the frame of their col-
lective life. It also captures their union when they work together to defend the
ship under attack and when they pay tribute to the king and the Duce (‘Viva il
Re’ ‘Saluto al Duce’) once the battle is won. Like the sequence covering their
fraternal relations with German sailors, these were diplomatic elements that
would have been obligatory less than a year into the war (Rondolino 1989:
58). Such semi-documentary tendencies fade, however, in the second half
of the film, which is sentimental and patriotic in tone and which is centred
around Elena, a school teacher serving as a nurse on the hospital ship, Arno.
She decides to suppress her secret love for a wounded sailor since such feel-
ings would compromise her duty to serve all the naval heroes equally.14 The
dialectics between the individual and the collective, between self-interest and
self-sacrifice, find no unequivocal synthesis. The melodramatic narration may
reinforce heroic commitment, but the detached, overall view of social ambi-
ence also encompasses severe injuries and deaths occurring during the attack,
and while these disquieting ‘facts’ are left to ‘speak for themselves’, as Verga
prescribed, they unavoidably come to speak for all those who lost their lives
to the fascist war and, by extension, for those whose individual freedom was
suppressed by totalitarian structures.
A success among audiences and critics alike, La nave bianca aroused little
enthusiasm among fascist officials, and Un pilota ritorna, which Vittorio
Mussolini scripted, depicts, as a result, all the rhetorical heroism Rossellini
sought to avoid, ignoring entirely that at the time of production the war was
practically already lost (Rossellini 1987a: 93–5). To showcase the air force,
the film moves to Italy’s invasion of Greece, omitting the details of a campaign
that was launched as a sure ‘walk-over’ in the autumn of 1940, only to end
disastrously in a rescue by Hitler the following spring (Corni 2000: 157).
Although the attention to collective life and hierarchical structures within the
14
air force and the inclusion of spectacular battle scenes partly constructed from
documentary footage achieves a verisimilar representation of pilots at war that
is reinforced by the presence of lesser-known actors and non-professionals,
this tentatively unbiased perspective is ultimately undermined by anti-Allied
messages and by the patriotic-romantic endeavours of Lieutenant Rosati to
whom Massimo Girotti (1918–2003) lent his latent stardom. Escaping from
a British prison camp on the Greek front, he leaves his new-found love Anna,
who looks after the prisoners, to take off with an Allied aircraft and return
to duty in Italy. Although the portrayal of innocent victims and the solidarity
within the prison camp can be said to condemn the war, questions of guilt and
responsibility are unequivocally related to the enemy’s cruelty without ever
challenging fascist ideals of sacrifice or the legitimacy of a rapidly declining
regime.
Encapsulating the contradictions between a political order unwilling to
recognise its defeat, and a tired population longing for freedom, L’uomo dalla
croce is just as far-fetched in its bellicose propaganda as it is prophetic of
Rossellini’s future work. Scripted by the fascist ideologist Asvero Gravelli, it
glorifies the Italian expedition to Russia in the summer of 1942 – a disastrous
event that more than any other marked the failure of the fascist war. Once it
was released in June 1943 it was already passé and enjoyed a limited run. It
is important to recognise that both the extensive battle scenes and the anti-
communist stereotypes are challenged by the historically far more accurate and
ideologically rather ambiguous story of an army chaplain, modelled on Father
Reginaldo Giuliani who was actually killed on the Russian front (Rondolini
1989: 60–5). Determined to prove a hidden spiritual vision in everyone, the
‘man with a cross’ presents himself in apolitical terms as God’s soldier and
dies while absolving a Russian adversary. Like Un pilota ritorna, L’uomo
dalla croce was shot in natural, if not authentic locations, and it adopts the
same reserved style, but its focus on a figure of unconditional charity, invested
with the anonymity of an non-professional actor and the community gathered
around his Christian humanism, ultimately leads us away from any purely
patriotic heroism, demonstrating better than any other film the many uncer-
tainties and contradictions in which neorealism was formed.
15
for narrative cinema and a ‘revolutionary art inspired from a humanity that
suffers and hopes’. Besides having created ‘a country, a time, a society’ (Alicata
and De Santis 1941b), Verga’s stories about farmers, fishermen, fallen women
and brigands contained, beneath their formal elaboration, elements traceable
in oral culture and popular novels and had therefore the power ‘to communi-
cate with a vast audience’ – an invaluable lesson for cineastes determined to
support a ‘national reawakening’, a detachment from ‘all that which merged
in fascism’ and a ‘maturation of a new way of feeling and of being’ (Argentieri
1996: 112). The article provoked a wave of responses within the periodicals
Bianco e nero (founded 1937) and Cinema (founded 1936); the former was
the organ of the Centro Sperimentale, the latter was co-founded by Luigi
Freddi, but both operated with considerable liberty from official polices. In the
politically critical years 1938–41, Cinema enjoyed the ideological legitimacy
of its director, Vittorio Mussolini, who called for images of the beauty (not
the possible ugliness) of the ‘Italian race’ (1980: 33) and for documentaries
showcasing ‘the power and greatness of Italy’ to promote the government’s
‘actions’ while leaving relative room for alternative views (1965a: 7). It became
therefore much more than a periodical, enabling encounters and exchanges
for critics and future filmmakers gathered around the collective objectives that
made Cinema the cradle both of neorealist thought and of Rome’s Resistance
movement. That critics in these years looked beyond their cultural objectives
transpires from Visconti’s critique of a film industry that tied the hands of
young directors with ‘loads to say’: for a new cinema to take form, he wrote
in 1941, certain conformist ‘cadavers’ would have to be buried (1986a). The
funeral he prophesied as a presupposition for rebirth indexed, in its purifying
scope, a new political order wherein the cinema would serve as a socio-politi-
cal as well as cultural agent devoted to engage and activate spectators around
critical viewing experiences.
Visconti’s initiatives towards cinematic renewal were programmatically
outlined in his article ‘Anthropomorphic Cinema’, which discusses the ideal
of freedom of artistic ‘specialisation’ as a ‘human responsibility’ to tell stories
about real people in real-life situations. Rather than allowing the artist to
evade society as had traditionally been the case, creativity should serve reali-
ties constantly made and changed by humanity (1943: 108). This perspective
inspired several projects that were censored, but it was intrinsically connected
to Obsession (1943; Ossessione) wherein Verga’s regional poetics and social
pessimism encounter James M. Cain’s The Postman Always Rings Twice
(1934), which Visconti had obtained from Renoir.15 Having inexplicably
passed preliminary censorship, this film about adultery and murder emerged in
1941–2 as a collective manifesto among De Santis, Alicata and other Cinema
critics, and while Visconti’s private funds guaranteed freedom from industrial
‘cadavers’, their work was closely observed as police control intensified pro-
16
Figure 1.2 Gino and Giovanna in Visconti’s Obsession. Courtesy of the Fondazione
Centro Sperimentale di Cinematografia.
17
discontent. She feeds her broke and attractive guest and will soon talk him
into plotting against her old husband, Bragana. This representation of Clara
Calamai (1909–1998), a stylish diva of 1930s film, and of Massimo Girotti,
known to many as Rossellini’s patriotic aviator (from whom Visconti’s wan-
derer has inherited the name Gino), and the atmosphere of melancholy without
the sense of meaning and purpose would have had a de-familiarising effect and
is clearly aimed at destroying their previous, conformist characters.
Split by divergent interests, the miserable lovers are unable to enjoy the life
insurance, not to mention the freedom they killed for, and their attempt to
run away towards a new start ends with a car accident that kills the pregnant
Giovanna. Besides italianising Cain’s errant characters, the scriptwriters also
invented Lo Spagnolo, a travelling artist who, like the prostitute-figure, Anita,
distracts Gino from Giovanna. Conceived of as an ex-partisan from the Spanish
Civil War whose frequent (dis)appearances are meant to simulate a political
conspirator on constant missions (Ingrao 2002: 16), he would, according to
Alicata, have signified a proletarian vagrant who in professing anti-fascist and
communist ideals seeks to direct Gino towards more important matters, but
censorship made him so ambiguous that he has often been read in terms of
sexual transgression rather than as ‘the film’s political conscience’ (quoted in
Faldini and Fofi 1979: 65–6). Two years later, the unprecedented freedom of
speech unleashed by the Liberation nurtured illusions that a revolutionary art
founded on a hopeful suffering humanity was possible, but there were ‘cadav-
ers’ ready to succeed those buried with fascism and they would continue, we
shall see, in many ways far more efficiently, to tweak, distort or mute, the voice
of those with too much to say.
Mussolini would not have recognised political subtleties and certainly not
himself in the decapitated Signor Bragana, because while local state representa-
tives banned Obsession as soon as it appeared and archbishops blessed the
theatres where it was screened, he extended its tormented distribution by a
few weeks before it was removed and eventually confiscated by Nazi troops.16
More representative of official views was Mussolini’s last Minster of Culture,
Gaetano Polverelli, who denounced it as a ‘bomb of anti-conformism [. . .] it
mirrors an Italy immersed in misery and in pain that has nothing in common
with the official face spread by governing authorities’, without evidently realis-
ing that these were the very reasons for the film’s success (quoted in Argentieri
1974: 57–8). What most troubled an already edgy establishment may not
have been Visconti’s sympathy towards the murderous lovers, but that the
ordinariness of his gallery of outcasts and the unmistakable socio-geographic
anchorage made it impossible to ignore the country’s unofficial truths. More
than its ‘realism’, debatable considering the narrative rigour, the implausible
coincidences and the frequent use of close-ups and expressionist lighting to
dramatise inner and interpersonal tensions, what marked the film’s novelty
18
was its concreteness and the contact it sought with the nation. The cast, the
basis in American noir, the story of sex, murder and tragic death, and the cin-
ematography of the innovative Aldo Tonti all imply an intent to make a ‘soft
impact on spectators’ in order to engage them in a new culture of confronta-
tion and social consciousness (Argentieri 1996: 111).
No other film before Open City manifested such a break with contemporary
cinematic paradigms or with rhetorical images of Italy’s natural and human
landscapes and few artefacts conveyed the sentiments of a nation exhausted
by the war as well as Obsession. Nonetheless, a similar sense of unease drawn
from unspectacular and un-narratable realities infuses I bambini ci guardano
(1942) which bridges the tentative critique of Teresa Venerdì with the narra-
tives of children’s exposure to moral degradation, poverty and social injustice
in De Sica and Zavattini’s post-war films. Based on Cesare Giulio Viola’s
rather obscure novella Pricò (1924), the melodrama depicted in De Sica’s
retrospective view is a compromise between the old and the new cinema, and
certain though it is that the story of a middle-class woman whose infidelity
drives her husband to suicide is both moralistic and abstracted from the war
and its casualties, their seven-year-old son Pricò’s isolation and abandonment
to unspeakable suffering are as far from cathartic resolution as they are from
Depression-era comedies (De Santi and De Sica 1999). As implied in the title
(The Children Are Watching Us), we follow perceptions of a world denounced
for its false respectability through the foregrounding of a child as the focaliser
and source of a study of inner life. This innovative approach to cinematic nar-
ration is encapsulated during a nocturnal journey in which Pricò reviews the
events that have caused his present trauma. Looking out into the dark, the
feverish boy sees images of his mother walking away with her lover and also
superimposed images of his incomprehensible grandmother yelling at him and
these merge with his own and his father’s reflections in the rainy train window.
This visualisation of a psychological state of mind is reinforced by subjec-
tive shots that align our viewing with the child’s gaze, inviting us to share his
ambiguous feeling of not seeing clearly and yet of having seen far too much.
Like Obsession, I bambini announced convictions shared among a new
generation of cineastes and critics, as well as the poetic visions of its authors.
Although no references are made to the war except for the sense of economic
scarcity that hits even Rome’s bourgeoisie, the film moves through differ-
ent contemporary environments, from the city to the provinces and to a
decadent seaside resort, laying bare the hypocrisy and judgemental attitudes
that prevail everywhere without excusing anybody’s neglect of the sensitive
child. Socio-geographical markers and thematic concerns are enough to make
us perceive 1940s’ Italy as a time, above all, when children were suffering
because of adults and, as such, as a time when actions obfuscated by deception
and pretence were revealed as betrayals. Herein lies also the premise for the
19
Figure 1.3 Pricò and his father in De Sica’s I bambini ci guardano. Courtesy of the
British Film Institute.
20
the father of the child she is expecting. The celebration of their alleged union
creates an ironic exposition of provincial power-relations and repressive ideals
of family honour, all of which are juxtaposed in evaluative terms to Maria’s
innocence and sincerity. When their deception and her moral fall are disclosed,
Paolo delivers a polemical speech on true honour that saves her position in the
family, while he returns to the humdrum life of a travelling salesman and a
loveless marriage.
Paolo’s transient immersion in peaceful pastoral landscapes establishes
an evaluative opposition between the lost Eden of his childhood which this
unexpected encounter evokes and the mundane city life he now lives, but the
melancholy and uncertainty inherent in the protagonists and in their story,
are ultimately not associated with the disintegration of traditional societies.
Rather, they point to an existential condition that, like Gino’s rootlessness
and Pricò’s pain, may be interpreted as the expression of disillusion and quiet
dissent. Wrapping illicit relations and social commentary within the comic
framework of identity deception and a search for authenticity in natural and
human ambiences, Quattro passi avoids both the scandal and the destructive
fatalism of Obsession and Children, but by uncovering the more general impli-
cations of its immediate concerns, reading the critique of intolerant traditions
as a denunciation of totalitarian structures, the film appears equally suggestive
in its call for political and cultural renewal. All of these works demonstrate a
significant re-elevation of the cinematic potential of ordinary life, throwing
glossy telephones out in favour of dusty roads, milk bottles and kitchen cur-
tains, and the rejection of escapist formulas is reinforced by the prominence
given to marginalised characters that are allowed to view History from the
perspective of those who had suffered the most from and had the least impact
on its course. The production of these films in in the years 1942–3 – a difficult
time market-wise, as well, that hindered immediate mass distribution and the
critical acknowledgment they later acquired – is a testimony to a hunger for
freedom that after decades of muted existence could no longer be held back.17
Voices of Resistance
Anti-fascist forces had been officially non-existent since Mussolini declared
Italy a totalitarian state in 1925 and the socialist deputy Giacomo Matteotti,
who was assassinated by the fascists in 1924, had been one of the last to
openly criticise the anti-democratic laws introduced during Mussolini’s first
years as a ‘democratically’ elected prime minster. Of the parties that had stood
in opposition to fascism before 1925, only the Italian Communist Party (PCI;
founded 1921) survived and L’Unità (founded 1924), its official party organ,
circulated clandestinely in Italy and France during the ventennio. Communists
who were not jailed, as was the case of the Marxist thinker Antonio Gramsci
21
(1890–1937), or killed, would like other anti-fascists keep a low profile and
still risk political internment, or seek exile, as did the legendary party leader
Palmiro Togliatti, who in 1943–4 started to broadcast to Italy from Moscow.
Along with the PCI, the French-based exiled groups Concentrazione anti-
fascista (founded 1927) and Giustizia e libertà (founded 1929) had already
organised clandestine units in Italy when Mussolini was arrested on 25 July
1943 (Corni 2000: 158–62). More than national unrest and the vote of no
confidence in the fascist Grand Council, however, it was Allied bombing that
made King Vittorio Emanuele III regret having appointed this man to lead
the country two decades earlier. An armistice was reluctantly signed on 8
September 1943, while the King and the newly elected cabinet led by Marshal
Badoglio, Italy’s commander in the Ethiopian war, flew to the South where
Allied forces offered protection from vengeful Nazi troops pouring in from the
North.
Having split the country into two and reduced it to a battleground for
foreign forces, the highly anticipated and for many desired defeat saw a revival
of fascism in northern-central areas where the Germans established the neo-
fascist Italian Social Republic. While its administration was in the town of
Salò and Mussolini was rescued by Hitler’s men to act as its pro-forma leader,
neither the ‘decapitated’ Duce nor the Italian soldiers who joined the Nazis’
scheme of violence and persecution, or fascist leaders who sought to restore
the ‘old’ fascism, left much doubt about the republic’s dependence on The
Reich (Mack Smith 1997: 414–19). Attempts to revive the cinema in Venice
after Cinecittà was destroyed by Allied bombing and most equipment was
confiscated and shipped to Germany, failed, since all actors and directors with
any degree of credibility went into hiding. Rossellini embarked on months of
wandering and became attached to the Cinema critics who now constituted the
centre of Rome’s Resistance movement, whereas Visconti was arrested when
he was about to enter the partisan war. In refusing summonses both from
Mussolini and Goebbels, De Sica found an alibi in La porta del cielo (1945);
a film produced but never released by the Catholic Film Centre. His major
concern in the winter of 1944 was to prolong production until Rome had been
liberated and to house as many refugees as possible in the Basilica of San Paolo
where shooting took place (Faldini and Fofi 1979: 70–8).
While it was far from the case that the entire nation suddenly became
anti-fascist or indeed that all of those who did, or who had long nurtured
anti-fascist sentiments, now let thought materialise into action, the months
of lawlessness following Mussolini’s arrest created a climate of enthusiasm
and opposition against a background of mass demonstrations and strikes in
the Northern cities and appeals in the anti-fascist press for peace and soli-
darity between workers and soldiers returning from the front (Pavone 1994:
6–13). The state of unrest intensified following the armistice which rather than
22
peace and defascistation brought the war closer to home, and while soldiers
on the run from German capture formed the first partisan groups, commu-
nists, socialists and Giustizia e libertà devotees came out of hiding to face the
logistics of systematising anti-fascist sentiments and action (Cooke 2011: 5).
The Resistance movement was subsequently centralised under the multi-party
CLN (Committee for National Liberation) and by the winter of 1944, it had
reached out from organisational centres in Rome and Milan to most of the
German-occupied areas. Partisan action ranging from guerrilla wars; attacks;
sabotage; weapon smuggling and intelligence provision tended however to
be concentrated in the Alps, the Po Valley and the Apennine Mountains, and
as several towns in these areas reclaimed temporary liberation from Nazi-
fascist control, they were transformed into provisional Partisan Republics
lead by the CLN and the local populace (Corni 2000: 158; 175). Besides such
concrete accomplishments, what made post-war political activists and artists
celebrate the revolutionary potential of the popular war for liberation was its
democratic constitution. Of the 200,000 formally recognised as members of
the Resistance, 35,000 fighters and 20,000 patriots were women, and while a
majority belonged to the political left, it also included liberals and conserva-
tives, and Catholics collaborated with Jews just as much as intellectuals and
students fought alongside workers, peasants and ex-soldiers.18 Some partisans
had joined the Republicans’ battle against Franco in the Spanish Civil War in
1937 and considered the two anti-fascist struggles as continuous; others found
inspiration in the revolutionary forces of the Risorgimento and the peasant
protests and working-class activism that fascism had emerged to suppress; but
many were driven to the mountains by opportunism and taste for adventure
rather than by ideological or patriotic intentions.19
If a common motivation among those who first took up arms against Nazi-
fascist violence was the instinctive freedom to choose and to express disobe-
dience towards those who illegitimately claimed obedience, the increasingly
centralised struggle developed, as the ex-partisan Claudio Pavone relates, into
three distinct wars. Besides the war for national liberation, there was a class
struggle, wherein workers and peasants saw an occasion to claim freedom
from an exploitative bourgeoisie, and a civil war where the neo-fascists who
had gone on to fight for Mussolini’s republic were often considered a fiercer
enemy than the Nazis themselves (Pavone 1994: 23–39; 225ff.). In the years of
the Reconstruction, these two facets of the Resistance which were both moti-
vated by a vision of socio-political reorganisation were largely undermined by
an opposite interest in reclaiming the Resistance as a unitary national battle
against the German enemy – as if fascism and social disjunctions had not and
did not continue to divide the country. Although the Resistance was a far
less harmonious and consequential force than the myths of national memory
account for, this does not diminish its contribution to the Allied war effort or
23
24
25
Recent stories, already turned legend, of loss, betrayal, repression and sac-
rifice inspired Rossellini to go out into the streets and cast citizens who had
lived through similar events, but with scarce equipment, hazardous funding
and a disintegrated industry, he had little choice but to improvise solutions
and ‘invent’ a technique that proved perfect for the urgency of the material
(Rossellini 1987a: 107). The same artistic freedom – inconceivable within
conventional systems of production – and commitment to lived experiences
saw De Sica embark on a film project based on Rome’s street kids a year
later, but Shoeshine offers a thematically and formally very different image of
Rome during the last year of the war. Their successive films, Germania anno
zero (1948) and Bicycle Thieves, incidentally both trace life in destroyed cities
through the eyes of young boys, but what strikes us is their affirmation of a
personal poetics rather than a certain set of norms, an impression that the
radically different The Earth Trembles, produced in the same year (1947–8),
certainly reinforces.
What unifies these films, which all represent the ‘artistic freedom and com-
mercial disarray’ of the first phase of neorealism, is the search for a relation
of immediacy between the cinematic eye and current socio-historical realities
(Wagstaff 2007: 13). To some extent they all address the ideals formulated in
pre-neorealist criticism, but not even Visconti let theoretical preconception of
realism exclude his lyricist and often stylised approach to an underprivileged
community at the country’s remotest margins. As a result, the question as to
whether a neorealist visual language actually existed came to occupy critics as
soon as the phenomenon itself was recognised. Tired of being referred to as the
father of neorealist literature, Elio Vittorini objected in 1951 that ‘there are as
many neorealisms as there are principal authors’, an argument Bazin evoked a
couple of years later, insisting that ‘neorealism per se does not exist, but there
are more or less neorealist directors’ (1975: 690). More recently, Pierre Sorlin
has recognised the homogeneous nature of the phenomenon while suggesting
that only for those ‘critics, intellectuals and politicians’ who grouped certain
films and labelled them as neorealist did they represent a genre (1996: 91–3).
26
27
well as in other visual arts form a web of aesthetic, thematic and narrative
continuities and move, with ‘unitary convergences’ within a ‘cultural, moral,
social and ideological space’ virtually open to all anti-fascist forces (Brunetta
2001b: 347–8). Considering Zavattini’s notion that the only rule neorealism
knew was ‘Don’t do today what you did yesterday’ (2002: 887), the fusion of
styles and conventions and individual articulations of something essentially
collective appear in themselves programmatic, implying a collective ‘refusal’
of the culture of the ventennio (Bettetini 1999: 136); a reaction to the ‘cultural
standstill of fascism’ (Pasolini 1965: 231) and an antithesis to the aestheti-
cism of epic spectaculars, Italian and American alike (Bazin 2002: 260–2). To
capture both coherent forms of opposition and variations of individual expres-
sion, neorealism will be considered an optique, a term that etymologically
denotes both vision and option and that as such will direct our focus towards
correlations between a given ocular and ideological perspective and a set of
aesthetic and thematic possibilities available within a moment of cultural
history. As Dudley Andrew writes in an exquisite study of French ‘poetic
realist’ cinema, the concept of optique has the advantage of accounting for ele-
ments both of style and genre, while going beyond these in distinguishing ‘the
specific type of experience offered by a set of films to the public’ (1995: 19;
233). As such, it will enable us to appreciate the specific choices and solutions
that distinguish not merely individual directors but singular films, while also
tracing coherences in the critical practice with which they sought to engage
post-war audiences.
Among the constants that allow us to view neorealism as something coher-
ent is the search for an anti-rhetorical language with which to redefine rela-
tions with the people, an imperative that in particular motivated those who
had witnessed and even actively engaged in the popular anti-fascist forces. An
unprecedented experience of democracy and socio-geographical representa-
tion, the Resistance fostered an awareness, first, of the need to reach a social
mass that for the first time had claimed the position of a historical agent
and, subsequently, to create politically creative art without renouncing the
aesthetic uniqueness and spontaneity of the first neorealist works (Asor Rosa
1975a: 1607). These motivations may have proved illusory or defective, but
they were nonetheless authentically felt, and they allow us to see why Open
City, anchored as it was within the themes and ethics of the popular war for
national liberation, achieved the status of a sudden invention and, at the same
time, why Obsession may be considered an anti-fascist, but not yet neorealist
film insofar as it preceded the fall of fascism and the Resistance. These events
had seen the lower classes imposing ‘themselves as protagonists of history and
of the destinies of our country’, De Santis wrote in 1951, and assimilating
this new reality, the cinema had opened its screens to ‘orphans [. . .] widows
[. . .] a suffering and ruffled humanity’ (quoted in Fanara 2000: 83). Along
28
these lines, Italo Calvino emphasised the oral culture that had evolved among
partisans like himself, spreading out through the nation and giving life to the
choral, anonymous mode of the neorealist narrative. More than a ‘school’,
he wrote in the retrospective preface to his Resistance novel Il sentiero del
nido dei ragni (1947), neorealism had been ‘a togetherness of voices, in major
parts peripheral, a manifold discovery of the different Italies’ (Calvino 1993:
vi). The search for a truthful art conducted as an act of resistance had, as
we have seen, engaged filmmakers before the armistice and writers since the
early 1930s, but not until it emerged from clandestinity and assumed a reborn
freedom of speech; a national identity to construct from zero and hopes,
however short-lived, of reform and justice, did the thought of renewal manifest
itself as a journey of national and cinematic discovery that radically changed
perspectives on the nature and scope of cinematic narration.22
Moving from the streets of war and sacrifice in Open City, to the quest for
freedom that leads from Sicily via Naples, Rome and Florence, to the Po Valley
in Paisà and returning to a cultural and existential quest in Naples in Viaggio
in Italia, the journey that is illustrated here by Rossellini’s trajectory but that
takes multiple paths, alongside, across and far beyond his, proceeds as a socio-
geographical investigation and finds a constant in the concern of recomposing
the landscape and rebuilding the city in relation to processes of modernisation
(Shiel 2006: 15). Tracing this act of reclamation and redefinition through
its manifold pathways and common destinations, Italian Neorealist Cinema
begins with a discussion of realism as a mode of representation and with an
outline of the traditions and critical thought that led towards neorealism, as
well as the theoretical reflections it provoked in the works of Bazin, Zavattini,
and Gilles Deleuze. The complexity of the terrain is mapped out further in
Chapter 3 through an exploration of Resistance writing and neorealist fiction,
whereas Chapter 4 examines Rossellini’s project of chronicling war-ridden
cities in Rome, Open City, Paisà and Germany Year Zero. Chapter 5 follows
walks at the margins of the post-war city in De Sica’s Shoeshine, Bicycle
Thieves, Umberto D. (1950) and Miracle in Milan (1951; Miracolo a Milano),
whereas Visconti’s vision of historical action in country and city is discussed in
Chapter 6 with reference to The Earth Trembles, Bellissima (1951), and Senso.
Chapter 7 explores films that bring neorealist spaces and practices into contact
with conventions of popular genres, focusing on Alberto Lattuada’s Il bandito
(1946) and Senza pietà (1948), Pietro Germi’s Gioventù perduta (1947) and
Il cammino della speranza (1950) and Giuseppe De Santis’ Bitter Rice and
Non c’è pace tra gli ulivi (1950). The dialogue with neorealism leads towards
its most immediate as well as its more recent inheritors, moving from Fellini,
Michelangelo Antonioni and Pasolini to Lina Wertmüller, Gianni Amelio and
Nanni Moretti, among others. In following some of the many ways in which
the concretised narratives, anti-heroic characters, dislocated spaces and civic
29
engagement have found new life in the works of such very diverse directors,
it reinforces the sense of neorealism as having constituted a vast, hybrid and
travelling phenomenon that recreates itself through cinematic experimentation
and in confrontation with individual or shared struggles as well as the univer-
sal human condition.
Notes
1. See Brunetta (1996: 37; 23). The title refers to the fact that although the Holy City
had been declared ‘open’ or a demilitarised zone, and the Germans had agreed to
maintain this status, as soon as city was occupied in September 1943 it became
subject to military command and to Allied bombing. ‘Open city’ subsequently
became a slogan of the anti-fascist and popular resistance that Open City celebrates
(Forgacs 2000: 33).
2. The historical-pathology thesis is associated with the philosopher Benedetto Croce
(1856–1952) – one of few openly non-fascist intellectuals who escaped jail and
exile – while the Marxist thesis represents the view of fascism as a universal expres-
sion of capitalist forces and bourgeois means of self-preservation, denying the
quintessentially Italian and anti-bourgeois revolution that fascism often presented
itself as (Gentile 2002: 36–7).
3. The loss of collective memory that Brunetta describes was far from exclusive to
the cinema (2001a: 359–60). The major voice of consciousness with regard to the
country’s fascist past and to past compromises belongs, as ever, to Cesare Zavattini
whose writings will be studied more closely in Chapter 2. A few months after Rome
was liberated, he called for a collective confession as the start to a new cinema:
‘All the same, it is not a question about liquidating demagogically the work of
twenty years but to identify what our individual sins were [. . .] we will not load
onto fascism all individual responsibilities [. . .] We no longer have the right to be
hypocritical and poverty will provide us with all privileges’ (2002: 663–4).
4. Spurred by the post-1968 climate and contemporary cultural debates, the revision-
ing of fascism that took place in the 1970s involved historians, social scientists and
cultural critics, as well as a community of filmmakers and critics whose ‘paradigm
shift’ was marked by a convention held in 1974 in Pesaro, which confronted both
the many continuities that exist between films made during and after fascism, and
the nature and shortcomings of neorealism itself (Farassino 1989a: 22). In the
cinema, which after the war had approached fascism in various, mostly stereotypi-
cal ways, and with scarce historical analysis, the 1970s saw a tendency to evoke the
past for the parallels it offered to the present (Zinni 2010: 179–237). This connec-
tion will be illustrated with reference to Lina Wertmüller in Chapter 8.
5. For recent works on the cinema during fascism, see in particular Jacqueline Reich
and Piero Garofalo (ed.) (2002), Re-Viewing Fascism. Italian Cinema, 1922–1943,
and Steven Ricci (2008), Cinema and Fascism. Italian Film and Society 1922–1943.
6. For studies of the Duce’s status as ‘divo’ see Gundle (2000) and Brunetta (2001a:
110–11). Vittorio Mussolini discusses both his father’s viewing habits and his
awareness that the scarce success of the only truly fascist films produced during the
ventennio – Camicia nera (Forzano 1933), Vecchia guardia (Blasetti 1934) and also
Il grande apello (Camerini and Soldati 1936) – proved the people’s low tolerance
for propaganda (quoted in Faldini and Fofi 1979: 22; 32).
7. Besides De Santis (quoted in Faldini and Fofi 1979: 42), among the students of
the Centro Sperimentale we also find Michelangelo Antonioni, Pietro Germi and
Carlo Lizzani, as well as critics and actors such as Gianni Puccini, Mario Alicata,
30
Leopoldo Trieste and Alida Valli. Several others who were not enrolled in the
school, such as Visconti, took part in its cultural exchanges and debates (Faldini
and Fofi 1979: 40–7).
8. Whereas italianità evoked the singularity and self-sufficiency of Italy’s imperial
past, Gentile’s idea of the loyal and consistent uomo fascista drew on Nietzsche’s
Übermensch and aimed at producing soldiers and workers: ‘the ideal fascist man is
the Black Shirt. He is the soldier ready to risk everything [. . .] he aspires to become
Mussolini’s new Italian who corresponds to the great, dynamic fatherland . . .’
(Gentile 2000: 264).
9. I have explored this topic in ‘The “I” and the “We” in Mussolini’s Bread and
Circuses: Performing a Fascist Communitas’, La Fusta. Journal of Italian Studies,
Fall, 2006: 53–66. The Duce’s speeches are published in Benito Mussolini (1959),
Opera Omnia, ed. Edoardo Susmel and Duilio Susmel, 36 vols, Firenze: La Fenice;
and U. Hoepli (1934), Scritti e discorsi, Dal 1932–1933, Milano: U. Hoepli; or can
be viewed in Balconi e canoni: i discorsi di Mussolini. Istituto LUCE, 1990.
10. The concepts of ‘strapaese’ and ‘stracittà’ are dealt with in Franco Masiero’s 1975
article (‘Strapaese e stracittà’ in Problemi: Periodico Trimestrale di Cultura, 44:
260–90), and, more recently, in Ben-Ghiat (2001: 26–7). Anti-bourgeois tenden-
cies were recurrent not only within singular nationalist and fascist writers and
ideologists, among whom may be included the Duce himself, but also within official
fascist organs such as the periodical, Il Bargello which in particular attracted young
intellectuals (Asor Rosa 1975b: 111).
11. The collaboration of the privileged middle class was essential to fascism from its
beginnings in the 1920s when the fascist squadristi (armed squads) were set up to
suppress popular insurrections that emerged following World War I in rural com-
munities as well as in the northern cities (Gentile 2002: 11–12). In relation to the
lower middle classes, the regime introduced economic redistribution that guaran-
teed a fixed income and permanent social distinction from the proletariat (Candela
2003: 24).
12. Renzo De Felice’s understanding of the Ethiopian war as Mussolini’s ‘political
masterpiece’ was grounded in the consensus it allegedly met within the public (De
Felice 1974: 642).
13. Rossellini’s statement dates back to 1952 (1987b: 85) – decades before critics
started to explore the ‘Fascist War Trilogy’ and its continuity with his neorealist
films (Rondolino 1989; Bondanella 2004); and, as Ben-Ghiat has recently dem-
onstrated (2000), with films such as Luciano Serra, pilota (Alessandrini 1938) to
which he contributed as scriptwriter and assistant director. Reception has other-
wise ranged from Visconti’s insistence on separating Rossellini’s ‘fascist films’ from
other pre-neorealist cinema (quoted in Faldini and Fofi 1979: 67) to Gallagher’s
assessment of their opposition to fascist ideals (1998: 72).
14. The division of the film into a ‘documentary’ first half, where montage editing is
frequently used, and the sentimental storyline in the second half reflects the dual
contribution to the film by De Robertis and Rossellini respectively (Faldini and Fofi
1979: 60; Bondanella 2004).
15. One of these was a script based on Verga’s epistolary story about a woman’s
relation to a brigand in L’amante di Gramigna (1880), but Cultural Minster
Alessandro Pavoloni had had ‘Enough of these brigands!’ (Faldini and Fofi 1979:
61).
16. The negatives of Obsession were confiscated by Nazi forces along with other pre-
cious films and equipment stored at Cinecittà and the version we see today is a copy
Visconti had made for himself (1976a).
17. Having enjoyed brief distribution before Mussolini’s arrest in 1943, Obsession
31
and Children were shown in cut versions in Venice during the Salò Republic, but
both lacked publicity due to the cancellation of the Venice Film Festival that year
and once they were screened in Rome after the Liberation, they could not rival the
immediate popularity of Open City. Both were re-released between 1948–50 along
with Four Steps and other pre-war films that somehow seemed to anticipate neore-
alist cinema, including the popular comedies Avanti c’è posto (Bonnard, 1942) and
Campo de’ fiori (Bonnard, 1943), both of which starred Anna Magnani and Aldo
Fabrizi, as well as remakes of the Neapolitan silent films Assunta Spina (Mattoli;
1948; originally Serena, 1915) and Sperduti nel buio (Mastrocinque, 1947; origi-
nally Martoglio, 1914), which had been destroyed during the German occupation
(Lughi 1989: 54–8).
18. See Jane Slaughter (1997), Women and the Italian Resistance, 1943–1945, Denver:
Arden Press, 33. Corni (2000; 164) estimates that 9,000 men were actively fighting
in the winter of 1943–4 and the following year the number had grown to 12,000–
13,000. The largest faction of the armed Resistance was the Communist Garibaldi
brigade. See also Cooke (2011: 6).
19. See Corni 2000: 165. Carlo Roselli’s famous motto ‘Oggi in Spagna, domani in
Italia’ (‘In Spain today, in Italy tomorrow’), suggests both what a formative, anti-
fascist experience the Spanish Civil War was for young Italians and the continuity
in solidarity, modes of warfare and objectives to be achieved that connected the two
Resistance movements.
20. See Micciché (1999b: 20–2). Christopher Wagstaff has usefully observed that,
while most of the critically acclaimed neorealist films individually failed at the box
office, as a group, they did no worse and at times better than generic groups such
as melodrama and comedy (2007: 18).
21. See Grignaffini (1989: 42). As will be shown more clearly in Chapter 5, in 1947 the
Under Secretary of Culture Giulio Andreotti reintroduced censorship and preven-
tive review commissions as practiced during fascism. The objective was to discour-
age producers, who freely presented scripts to the commissions, from investing
money in projects that would later face obstacles from censors and, in the worst of
cases, not be granted release permission. The infamous Andreotti laws, which also
had a fascist precedent promised incentives to artistically qualified films on the basis
of their box-office profit (Grignaffini 1989: 40–2).
22. Initially presented in Zavattini’s writings (2002), the view of neorealism as a
journey of national rediscovery is elaborated in Melanco (1996); Brunetta (1996);
and in Fanara (2000: 101) and post-neorealist continuities of this discovery are dis-
cussed in Italian Locations: Reinhabiting the Past in Postwar Cinema (Steimatsky
2008).
32
‘. . . a true and proper revolution: a film about a man who sleeps, a film
about a man who argues, without editing and I would dare add, without
story treatment. [. . .] Certain film lengths obtained placing the camera
in a street, in a room; looking with an insatiable patience [. . .] Nothing
magical [. . .] We shall renounce the truca, the transparancier, the infinite
subterfuges dear to Méliès. The marvel must be in us to express itself
without marvel.’
Cesare Zavattini, in Cinema, 1940
33
tragedy. How do we recognise the film’s realistic aspirations, and how can we
think of them as a neorealist optique? Questions relating to the coding and
decoding of the real are the focus of this chapter. To look at neorealism as a
moment of cultural history involves an awareness of the socio-political cir-
cumstances dramatised in Pina’s scene, but it also requires accounting for the
cultural influences and traditions that inspired their cinematic representation
as well as the prescriptive and descriptive theoretical reflections they provoked.
The critical terrain and its historical context can usefully be framed by two
classic studies whose appearance respectively in 1921 and 1946 incidentally
bracket the rise and fall of fascism and, more symptomatically, the emergence
of trends that announce neorealism: Roman Jakobson’s essay ‘On Realism in
Art’ and Erich Auerbach’s Mimesis: The Representation of Reality in Western
Literature.1 Realism, Jakobson writes, is ‘an artistic trend which aims at con-
veying reality as closely as possible and strives for maximum verisimilitude;’
thus, works which ‘accurately depict life by displaying verisimilitude’, may be
considered realistic. The problem with this definition is, as Jakobson observes,
its intrinsic ambiguity, in that the author’s aspiration to accuracy may not be
recognised as such by the reader. A range of artists, from the Classicists and the
Romanticists to avant-garde artists such as the Futurists, have claimed faithful-
ness to reality, but few of us would think either of Ugo Foscolo or of Marinetti
as seeking verisimilitude (Jakobson 1971: 38–3). Even Open City may be
denied its realist status on several counts, among which the Manichean divi-
sion between characters and the alternation between semi-documentary takes
on the city’s exteriors and expressionist lighting of devilish interiors. Why
do these elements of the work strike us as unrealistic, and why is it that the
‘serious, problematic and even tragic representation [of] random individuals
from daily life in their dependence on current historical circumstances’ assures
us of the film’s realist intent? The latter is Auerbach’s formulation of modern
realism as it first took form in Balzac’s and Stendhal’s novels, but it could very
well have been a description of neorealism, as could the primacy he assigns to
moral over formal features. Only when faced with neglected and suppressed
realities does realism, according to Auerbach, assume stylistic features (1953:
489).
There is no single standard against which to measure the degree of realism
in a work, Jakobson argues. Rather, it is a question of conventions which we
have learned to recognise and by which we can also discern the author’s aspira-
tions to verisimilitude and accuracy. The generic hybridisation of Rossellini’s
Resistance drama is highly unconventional; it contradicts our expectations
of a historical reconstruction, whereas the various choices of representation
Auerbach outlines reconfirm them. Partly, this is what the neo in neoreal-
ism refers to: while defying conventions, neorealist film and fiction elaborate
on the moral and social components of traditional realism, and of verismo,
34
more specifically, thereby extending and reformulating its borders. Far from
being unique to Italian post-war culture, this dialectic between old and new is
what permits realism to constantly take on new forms. Gogol and Dostoevsky
experimented with unessential detail, an unrealistic trait by nineteenth-century
conventions, whereas in the 1910s the Futurists and the German Expressionists
indulged in excessive distortions; and they are all, in Jakobson’s view, ‘neore-
alist’. Deforming outmoded codes that due to their very conventionality,
had lost meaning, these writers and artists captured contemporary realities
more tellingly by modes of exaggeration which delay recognition and make
the object represented clearer, or ‘more real’ (1971: 40–3). Formulated from
within the ambit of Russian formalism, Jakobson’s evaluation of deformation
as the basis for a ‘revolutionary realism’ (1971: 40–3) refers to the ways of
‘“estranging” objects’ that, as Viktor Shklovsky outlined in his 1917 essay
‘Art as Device’, serve to break the ‘automatization’ through which ‘life fades
into nothingess’ by drawing attention to the ‘artfulness’ of common objects. It
is not for the objects’ own sake that we have ‘been given the tool of art,’ but
to make perception so ‘long and “laborious”’ that we experience ‘the process
of creativity’ (original emphasis 1990: 5–6). For artists in post-war Italy,
subjective moods, surreal occurrences, deformed images and explorations of
dead time and empty spaces, became, as Lucia Re has shown with specific
reference to Calvino, means to question accepted perceptions of history (1990:
198). Similar techniques did, however, also define the existential realism Luigi
Pirandello and Italo Svevo (1861–1928) had experimented with since the turn
of the century as well as the ‘analytical and psychoanalytical’ proceedings and
the ‘occasional complacency over the morbid’ that critics of Gli indifferenti
referred to as ‘neorealist,’ indicating the opposition such deformations of the
present formed both to past realisms and to contemporary ‘art-for-art’s sake’
movements (Milano, quoted in Brunetta 1976: 32). The latter was more spe-
cifically associated with Gabriele D’Annunzio’s (1863–1938) aestheticist prose
and poetry and with costume dramas such as Cabiria, which D’Annunzio
scripted, as well as with the solipsist and convoluted ‘prosa d’arte’ (art-prose)
and Futurism, the movement closest to fascism. None of these trends could
inspire ‘a new Italian spirit’, Elio Vittorini complained in 1929, polemically
directing the search for innovation towards the European and American lit-
erature he, like Moravia and other current or aspiring writers, were active in
translating and publishing.2 A few years later Vittorini would re-appropriate
realist conventions to camouflage calls to political opposition, but he initially
embraced cultural interchanges and renewal as a means to make fascism a
modern, anti-bourgeois and cosmopolitan culture. This radical change in ideo-
logical objectives and continuity in intellectual direction illuminate the contra-
dictory influences and intentions involved in the formation of a new realism as
well as the conditions that allowed anti-fascist views and neorealist sentiments
35
to emerge within, and in some respects share codes with, the official culture to
which it reacted.
Myths of foundation
Among the critics and cineastes who already in the war years called for a revo-
lutionary film culture and whose thoughts in many ways were formalised in
Obsession, there emerged a point of unity in the principle of authenticity and
where to look for its models. Whether the source of ‘inspiration and education’
was identified in Verga’s ‘essential and violent language’ (Alicata and De Santis
1941a) or in the unmediated manifestation of ‘life itself’ (Montesanti 1941:
281), it was clear that the modernist avant-garde practices of Vertov, Eisenstein
and René Clair, and the realist tendencies of Jean Renoir, Marcel Carné, Buster
Keaton and King Vidor exemplified the ‘love and practice’ of a truth (Alicata
and De Santis 1941b) apt to give ‘meaning to human existence and its travails’
(Pietrangeli 1942: 20). Albeit of secondary importance compared to such
masters, the disillusioned Neue Sachlichkeit – artists who opposed the abstract
forms of The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari (Wiene 1920) and other expressionist art
with an obsessive concreteness – must also be considered among the roots of
neorealism (Brunetta 2001a: 203; Re 1990: 15–18). Conventionally translated
as ‘New Objectivity’, an accentuated ‘matter-of-factness’ (Sachlichkeit) in the
approach to ‘things’ (Sachen) describes more precisely the often cynical rather
than objective portrayals with which writers, directors and figurative artists
exposed the socio-economic and political conditions of defeated post-World
War I Germany. Otto Dix’s painting Card-playing war-cripples (1920) clari-
fies both this crucial distinction and why someone like Hitler would purge the
public sphere of such ‘degenerate art’.
The defamiliarising practices associated with Weimar culture may be best
seen in the theories and plays of Bertolt Brecht. Starting from the ‘epic’
(narrative) theatre which Luigi Pirandello had already formulated in opposi-
tion to the illusionism of conventional, bourgeois theatre, Brecht applied
the Marxian concept of Entfremdung (alienation) to develop a dramaturgic
method of Verfremdung (estrangement) wherein non-mimetic effects such as
direct addresses to the audience work to exclude a passive and emotional
identification with the characters. Such techniques would alienate the spec-
tators from what appears obvious in the play and their everyday life, thus
making the stage a place devoted not to cathartic relief but rather to expos-
ing the effects of modern capitalism and to the instruction of the masses
(Brecht 1964: 71–6). Only a few neorealist films demonstrate aspirations to
the didactic intent Brecht envisioned, but his works, published in Italy after
the Liberation, would have reinforced both the sense of the artist’s social
function, and the awareness that realism emerges in the intersection between
36
37
ways of seeing will also foster new ways of thinking, were among the greatest
influences upon the critical debates that preceded and accompanied the forma-
tion of a new film culture in post-war Italy, leading, as we shall see, towards
Zavattini’s idea of a cinema of encounters and of national discovery.
Vertov and other Soviet directors were banned from commercial theatres,
but their works were screened at the Venice Film Festival and among the
Gruppi Universitari Fascisti (GUF: Fascist University Groups) and constituted
accepted didactic material at the Centro Sperimentale where promising cine-
astes and critics received a cinematically and ideologically far more eclectic
education than fascist officials certainly would have desired.3 The spirit of
this openness was Umberto Barbaro, a professor at the school who, just as
Mussolini raised walls around the ‘Italian race’ and Stalin imposed socialist
realism, advocated ‘cultural exchanges’ without prejudice to either Marx or
Freud (1976: 105). A relative tolerance towards prolific intellectuals consid-
ered more beneficial than harmful may have been what hindered close control
of Barbaro’s lectures and writings on Russian film and literature, although
more significant still was probably the prestige the Soviet cinema enjoyed in
fascist culture.4 Fascist leaders may themselves have been inspired by Barbaro
without realising that, when in the 1930s he spoke of the cinema as ‘the univer-
sity of the people’, it was with the conviction he later made explicit, that com-
munism is a question of denying ‘truths imposed as eternal and unchangeable
[. . .] what matters [. . .] is a continuous research [. . .] a constant thinking dia-
lectically’ (1976: 429; 607). It was, accordingly, the use of dialectical montage
where antithetical shots are juxtaposed to form a synthetic signification that
Barbaro praised in Soviet directors whose works in the late 1920s he had
already had defined as ‘neorealist’, indicating, in Jakobson’s sense of the word,
the function of their deforming strategies in encouraging a critical reception.
Drawing on Eisenstein and Pudovkin whose theories he translated, Barbaro
considered editing the very basis of cinematic art: only in their encounter did
shots achieve a meaning and a vigour capable of emancipating spectators from
the pacifying and exclusive world views foregrounded in conventional cinema
(Barbaro 1976: II, 456–9).
Looking back at the neorealist experience, Barbaro would observe the
didactic role films such as Battleship Potemkin, or Pudovkin’s Mother (1927)
and The End of St. Petersburg (1927) had played in ‘opening the eyes of
young Italian directors’ and indicate realism as the way towards an anti-fascist
cinema (1976: 212–14). As it appears from his increasingly polemical con-
tributions to war-time criticism, this had always been his intention. It was to
denounce a ‘degraded’ cinema in ‘crisis’, content to serve up easy spectaculars
and, indirectly, to leave the regime sadly unchallenged, that he promoted an
academic and cultural knowledge of anything opposed to fascism (Barbaro
1939: 12). The dialectical realism of Eisenstein’s ‘cinema of attraction’ which
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40
41
social analysis infuses Buster Keaton’s films too, but, as illustrated by the story
of newly-wed house builders in One Week (1920), his world is more concen-
trated around lower-middle-class characters and based on gags derived from
recognisable episodes of everyday life. This apparently natural form of comedy
appears in some of the most dramatic sequences of Open City and the most
languid moments of Shoeshine and Bicycle Thieves, as well as of several lesser
known neorealist films, but only in Miracle in Milan are non-mimetic modes
adopted systematically to forge a social commentary. This inability to conform
to spectators’ search for entertainment was clearly one reason why neorealism
remained a generally unpopular and short-lived phenomenon.
The paradigms of commercial film are challenged further in Robert
Flaherty’s Nanook of the North (1922), which follows Eskimos in the
Canadian Arctic with the detachment and temporality of naturalistic obser-
vation. Both the documentary feel and the ethnographic interest in a human
world subjected to natural forces resonates in the portrayal of Sicilian fisher-
men in The Earth Trembles, and in the partisan scenes, in particular, of Paisà,
but Visconti and Rossellini both pay more attention to the dialectics between
socio-geographical life and economic as well as historical circumstances. No
less inclined to confront unspoken realities, King Vidor traces the losses and
disillusions involved in modernisation in The Crowd, in which an ocean of
skyscrapers, pressing crowds, anonymous office buildings, and threatening
vehicles provide evidence of the structural changes that transformed inter-
war America into a truly urban society (McArthur 1997: 25). Captured
with a sense both of documentary observation and surrealist accentuation,
Vidor’s sequences of urban impressions reflect links between Hollywood and
European avant-garde films, but whereas Vertov and Ruttmann captured
urbanites without tailing them, The Crowd follows a young provincial into
New York and presents the kaleidoscopic, impersonal city as both the socio-
cultural ambience and the narrative frame for the protagonist’s repetitious
days as an office clerk and family man. As anonymous as his name, John
Sims disappears in the crowd, and only when his daughter is hit by a car and,
disheartened, he loses his job, does he reflect on the destructive nature of city
life. Saved from attempted suicide, John is engaged as a street advertiser and,
costumed as a clown, is finally able to laugh at the petit-bourgeois ideals he
once had and his lack of social mobility. The struggles of ordinary people
against antagonistic and hostile forces can be traced to Camerini’s city films,
where De Sica’s clumsy characters tend to be portrayed in similar clown-like
terms, but it is in De Sica’s own works that Vidor’s conflicting view of urban
modernity comes to the forefront, in particular in the portrayal of the trauma-
tised child of I bambini ci guardano and, more eloquently still, in the irreso-
lution of the unemployed bill-poster in Bicycle Thieves. Like Gino, these are
characters who fight with a feeling of uncertainty, discontent and resignation
42
43
noir sought to give graphic form to was ultimately not the mean streets and the
underworld of the American city, but the pessimism, the uncertainty and the
complete lack of purpose and meaning troubling the post-war subject.
Rarely do aesthetic and psychological darkness correspond so perfectly as in
Hitchcock’s Shadow of a Doubt (1943) which for its articulation of historical
disconcertedness, of evil lingering nearby and within us, offers an illuminating
comparison to Obsession, released in the same year. Both films are set in local
communities where nothing happens until an external force breaks in. The
shadows that introduce the charming but fatally psychotic Uncle Charlie to his
niece, Charlotte and her tedious life are similar to those that bring Gino into
the murky monotony of Giovanna’s untidy kitchen. In both cases, expression-
ist lighting conveys a crescendo of tension culminating in the accidental death
of the serial killer and of the murderous wife respectively. The suspense film
seeks, however, to purge evil and reconsolidate the bourgeois family, forging at
least a seemingly pacifying conclusion. Gino’s despair in confronting the body
of his lifeless lover makes, on the contrary, for a tragic closure that betrays
Visconti’s sympathy for his lawless characters and his intention to unsettle and
raise awareness. No other adaptation of Cain’s novel transfers the fragmen-
tary and ambiguous narrative, or the characters’ marginal status and impris-
onment within their social and natural surroundings, as well as Obsession
does, and, bridging the concurrently developing anti-illusionist practices in
American and Italian cinema, no other film illustrates so clearly what function
American culture played in providing new perspectives and modes of expres-
sion.7 Incidentally, the influence of film noir also reinforced the revitalisation
of Italian artistic traditions. In the world of the cinema, chiaroscuro lighting
may have emerged with Dr Caligari, serial murderers and gangsters, but it
originated in the ‘myth of light and dark’ that infuses Caravaggio’s world of
biblical beheadings, crucifixions and martyrdoms, and it is this visual lineage
that interconnects and gives a stylised shape to the most verisimilar of the neo-
realist films (Barbaro 1976: 313).
To consider Obsession the point where all roads of rupture and regenera-
tion, theoretical and creative, political and institutional met (Brunetta 2001a:
297), highlights the amalgamation this seminal film formed from all previous
realisms, and its intention to embrace the hidden and suppressed social realities
that for Auerbach created realist art. It also articulates the ‘lived experience’ and
‘certain disagreeable realities’ that the French critic, Nino Frank discerned as
the elements by which the Hollywood thriller fundamentally changed the rela-
tionship between the cinema and the audience (quoted in Dimendberg 2004:
5–6). Elaborating on this notion of lived experience as a sensitivity to radical
twentieth-century socio-cultural transformations, Edward Dimendberg locates
film noir within ‘the violently fragmented spaces and times of the late-modern
world;’ a violation it reproduces and intensifies through disjointed narratives
44
and settings within centripetal or centrifugal urban space (2004: 5–6). Both
the emphasis on existential verisimilitude and affinity with spaces of modernity
allow us to anticipate further parallels between film noir and neorealism, sug-
gesting, as will become clear in the chapters that follow, that the latter formed
a far more modern film culture than has often been recognised. What we think
of as typically neorealist (real locations, non-professionals, natural light, rejec-
tion of fabricated stories) never excluded anti-realistic elements. Improvised
studios, highly professional actors, expressionist lighting and criminal melo-
drama feature with variations both in Open City and Shoeshine, the two films
that most suffered, and benefited, from scarce funding and a disintegrated film
industry. On the other hand, the documentary tendencies that more by choice
than by necessity became a way to authentically portray social realities and
lived experiences were not exclusive to Italian directors. Shot in the streets, in a
private residence and in local business buildings, with the inhabitants of Santa
Rosa, California, as extras, Shadow of a Doubt brought Hitchcock back to the
old days of location shooting (McGilligan 2003: 312). These techniques cru-
cially anticipated the presence the American metropolis would acquire in film
noir where it acts, like the neorealist city does, as a fictional character, as a spe-
cific socio-topographic milieu, and, finally, as a confirmation of the director’s
intentions of establishing an altogether different relation with the audience.
These affinities, and to some degree also the cross-influences of immediately
distributed and widely acclaimed Italian films, are more easily identifiable in a
cycle of semi-documentaries that emerged from Hollywood in the wake of the
war and of which Jules Dassin’s The Naked City (1947) forms the most repre-
sentative example. Combining melodramatic themes of greed and destructive
relationships with a realist aesthetic to reconstruct the most ‘noirish’ of recent
criminal cases, it is also the one film of the genre that most critics have linked
to neorealism.8 Manhattan Island is introduced with night-for-night aerial
cinematography and a voiceover claiming authenticity of location and with
New Yorkers cast as themselves, before the film approaches deserted streets
and buildings, introducing the weariness of a cleaner and a nocturnal radio
presenter, and finally arriving at the killing of a femme fatale. In the morning,
the victim, Jean Dexter, is all over the tabloids, causing much frustration for
the New York Police homicide squad. The investigation techniques are scru-
pulously observed by the film’s story writer Malvin Wald and are dramatised
by unknown actors lead by Barry Fitzgerald. Offices, crowd scenes, private
homes and small shops, as well as Williamsburg Bridge where the killer meets
his own death, underline aspiration to verisimilitude but despite the fact that
narrow interiors and crowded exteriors demanded improvisation in shoot-
ing and freedom from studios, the film is far from achieving the critical tone
Dassin aimed for (Prime 2008: 146–9). This is partly due to the distributor
cutting images that Dassin had included to juxtapose wealth and poverty, but
45
more decisively it stems from the nature of such police procedural films which
privilege the panoptical powers as well as the human integrity of the city’s
law enforcement over the citizens’ social and human conditions (Dimendberg
2004: 65–7). Open City, which would have formed the most obvious neoreal-
ist model, takes the exact opposite approach: avoiding the panoptical aspira-
tions of aerial perspectives, it moves along the ground, away from institutions
towards characters observed within the totality of their everyday life and the
indefinite nature of open space and everyday tragedies.
Both the human ethos and the social critique of neorealist film find
more eminent expression in The Wrong Man (1956): the most atypical of
Hitchcock’s films and, according to some critics, a failure, but also a project
for which he at the peak of his career, waived his salary to complete.9 As his
cameo-prologue declares, the story of ‘truth’ and ‘gloom’ is not the usual,
invented suspense thriller, but a real story narrated in expressive black-and-
white that in many ways brings the noir cycle to a coherent conclusion of
visual texture and dramatisation of despair and delirium. Based on a 1953 Life
magazine article about Manny Balestrero, a New York musician who was tried
and jailed for robbery in a case of mistaken identity, the film involved exten-
sive local research and interviews before it was shot with no overt artifice, in
the ordinary locales where the events had transpired (McGilligan 2003: 532).
What is most reminiscent of De Sica’s unfortunate worker who loses and steals
a bike – a story Hitchcock appreciated precisely for its ‘perfect double case’
(McGilligan 2003: 533) – is the instance of chance that causes the nightmare
based on Manny’s being the double of the actual robber. Other points of
contact are the complete helplessness, conveyed with genuine incomprehen-
sion and bitterness by Henry Fonda, before the New York Police officers – far
less sympathetic than those in The Naked City – and the strain the Kafkaesque
trial causes him and his family, leaving him exonerated of charges and his wife
in a mental hospital. Like Bicycle Thieves and other neorealist films treating
individuals neglected or threatened by society’s institutions, Hitchcock depicts
powerlessness from the victim’s point of view, asking us not merely to identify
with his despair, but to live his social and psychological disempowerment by
being drawn through dedramatised moments of frustration, waiting, formal
procedures, futile searches for witnesses and anguish over his wife’s aliena-
tion, so as to fully understand that when another chance occurs and Manny’s
double is caught, certain disagreeable realities are already so strong that they
overshadow the relief of newborn freedom.
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48
duration of the event’, evoking the infinite nature of reality itself (2002: 80).
Drawing on Henri Bergson’s concept of duration and intuitivist theories
of the possibility of experiencing succession without distinction, past and
present as a totality, Bazin establishes an overarching understanding of human
consciousness and life itself as an unfixable flux. A cinematic exploration of
spatiotemporal continuity is able to reproduce our perceptive encounters with
reality in that it registers the spatial relations of objects and the duration of
events the way we perceive them in the real world (Aitken 2006: 173–4). The
perceptual thesis presupposes in fact that reality is subjective and ambiguous
and that a truthful cinema should therefore reproduce the inconclusive nature
of the world, instead of forging an exclusive interpretation of it. Depth-of -field
directs the cinema away from action towards senses of being, from the closed
to the open-ended, from the definite times and constrained spaces of painting
and of the theatre, toward the unconstrained spaces and the imperfect tense
of the novel (Aitken 2006: 269). That the cinema is a narrative and temporal
medium was also what Alicata and De Santis emphasised when they called
for a return to Verga’s holistic look at underprivileged realities. Indicatively,
among the signs of national artistic heritage that Bazin discerned in post-war
Italian film, including short stories, frescoes and commedia dell’arte, there
were also cinematic techniques of narration he saw as equivalent to those
that in the 1920s had already created a realist revolution in the modern novel
(Aitken 2006: 282–5).
It was, as we shall see more closely in Chapter 4, precisely the episodic and
discontinuous composition of Paisà and its ability to respect the continuous
nature of reality that formed the starting point for Bazin’s discussion of neo-
realism. Moving in time and space without constraints of unity or resolution,
the detached, durative and inclusive cinematography creates a similar spatial
realism to that of Citizen Kane. Narratively, Rossellini’s innovative chronicle
of national liberation recalls Faulkner and Hemingway whose fragmentary
anti-literary writings integrate social documentation and psychological intro-
spection with techniques of reportage. The cinematic collection of short stories
is composed with an oral, journalistic ease that shows and alludes to the
‘facts’ collected without imposing a unity of meaning. Besides these literary
and cinematic models – Rossellini would often refer to Welles as a source of
inspiration, their stylistic differences notwithstanding – Bazin shows how the
Resistance has offered not merely source material but also a tone and spirit.
Forming ‘reconstituted reportages’ of recent national events when their social,
political and moral effects were still vividly felt, Paisà and other neorealist
films achieved an exceptional documentary value, but they were ultimately
products of an ‘aesthetics of reality’ and a manifestation of no documentary
truths, but of a ‘revolutionary humanism’ carried on from the popular expe-
riences of the Resistance and the Liberation as moments of unprecedented
49
solidarity and claims to social justice (Aitken 2006: 262–3). As is the case with
reportage writing, neorealist film seeks openness to the reality represented,
improvising scenes and letting stylistic properties emerge from the encounter
with the human material. More than a sign of regression or lack of technical
refinement, the apparent simplicity and lack of unity conceals a complexity
and an originality that, as Bazin perceptively foresaw in 1948, laid the founda-
tions for modern cinema.
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806). The starting point would be a public confession of sins committed either
out of fear or in collaboration with fascism, initiating a ‘human dialogue’
wherein the cinema would no longer figure as a ‘socially privileged zone’, but
as a source, available and infinite, of knowledge of self and of others:
This conscience will have to constitute the unity of the Italian cinema
also with regard to foreign cinemas where professionalism [. . .] prospers
without the urgency of the humble narrative that we Italians have to start
[. . .] Our stories will communicate with the world via a language that
transcends the limited antinomy between vanquished and victor. By now,
we no longer have the right to be hypocritical, and poverty offers us all
privileges. (Zavattini 2002: 663–4)
This evaluation dates back to the end of 1944, when Northern Italy suf-
fered the bloodiest battles for liberation, and the cinema lingered in a limbo
between the largely unseen Obsession and the recently started project of Open
City. Neorealism was therefore not yet born. Eight years later, when war and
Resistance for some were history, when the street kids Zavattini and De Sica
had featured in Shoeshine were gone, and certain critics announced the ‘death
of neorealism’ in favour of nice pictures, great themes and traditional struc-
tures, Zavattini declared that ‘we are not yet at neorealism’ (Zavattini 2002:
724). There was still a gap between reality and spectacle, between ‘verb and
action’, that according to one of Italy’s most imaginative scriptwriters could
only be bridged if one eliminated scripts and actors and started to narrate ‘that
which is happening’, avoiding the exceptional and the illusory for an explora-
tion instead of the spectacular and the poetic qualities of what usually escapes
attention (Zavattini 2002: 694; 705).
Moving between acute descriptions and polemical prescriptions, Zavattini
praised the achievements of neorealism in terms very similar to those of
Bazin, emphasising its ethical position and dialectical dynamics. As an anti-
conformist, egalitarian opposition to hierarchical fascist structures, neorealism
knew no stratification of forms or subject matter, although the imperative of
truthful narration had inevitably led towards ‘hunger, misery, exploitation
on behalf of the wealthy’. In approaching spaces and experiences unseen in
the movies, it had reached beyond the national here-and-now, appropriating
the cinema’s intrinsic capacity to look into ‘a country and a conscience’ so as
to allow all spectators, regardless of their cultural background, to share the
‘common punishments and hopes’ projected onto the screens (Zavattini 2002:
742; 737; 714). Furthermore, Zavattini welcomed a much longed for end to
the ‘nightmare of heroism’ and to pacifying endings, whether sad or happy.
Relating the predilection for illogical and unresolved narratives to a post-
fascist awareness of being ‘neither good nor bad [. . .], we are: we are only
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moral responsibilities for their predicaments and to reflect on what their future
might look like. Less confrontational in tone and theme is Antonioni’s inves-
tigation into amorous despair. ‘Attempted Suicide’ begins and ends against
white, sterile walls in a studio where people have met allegedly to ‘examine’
their past suicidal inclinations. Some young women reconstruct the nearly fatal
act where it took place: one at the Tiber, another in her room, revealing scars
on her wrists, while a seduced and abandoned mother-to-be relates how she
threw herself in front of a car. Driven, according to Antonioni, by ‘exhibition-
ist complex’ and opportunism rather than a need to process common suffering,
their testimonies do not convince nor do they fulfil the exploration of interper-
sonal and psychological relations that such a thematics might have produced
(quoted in Faldini and Fofo 1979: 243).
Far more authentic is Dino Risi’s visit to a modest dance hall in ‘Paradise
for Three Hours’, which, as the time frame aims to convey, captures the fugi-
tive sense of independence among young men and women who seek escape on
Sunday afternoons at the end of a tedious working week. Whereas information
in the two previous episodes is relayed through interviews, the lively atmos-
phere in this segment is reconstructed by verbal, tacit and physical exchanges
that convey the role such venues play in changing patterns of social interaction
and in fostering a distinct youth culture. The light-hearted approach to social
change carries over into ‘Marriage Agency’, which Fellini scripted entirely
without Zavattini’s intervention and Fellini’s conviction that ‘everything must
be invented’ clashes, notably, with the project’s ethos (Kezich 1988: 208). The
narrator-protagonist is a journalist engaged to investigate a marriage agency.
To achieve the desired authenticity, he presents himself as a client, inventing
a story of a rich, but lunatic friend whom no-one wants to marry. The profit-
seeking marriage-entrepreneur would like to match him with Rosanna, who
wishes to marry to help her impoverished peasant family, but the ingenuous
girl stirs so much compassion in the journalist that he withdraws the fake
proposal, confirming the girl’s presentiment that the prospect of a rich, albeit
sick, man was too good to be true. While the social investigation is eclipsed
by Fellini’s predilection for the bizarre and the grotesque, the exploitation of
poverty and the disconcerting lack of a resolution clearly address the film’s
moral impetus and contemporary critique.
By contrast, Zavattini and Francesco Maselli’s ‘The Story of Caterina’
reconstructs a recent headline story and is the closest the film gets to realis-
ing the poetics of the pedinamento. Rejected by her Sicilian family, Caterina
Rigoglioso fled to Rome and gave birth outdoors to a son whom she abandoned
in a park one day, unable as she was to find a job or any form of assistance.
The endless queue at the services for ‘illegitimate children’ they visit con-
firms the impression we have acquired of Rome as a city full of ‘seduced
and abandoned’ mothers, disenfranchised by what the narrator defines as
55
Figure 2.1 Caterina Rigoglioso and her son in Amore in città. Courtesy of the
Fondazione Centro Sperimentale di Cinematografia.
56
57
Distinguishing Italian post-war cinema from its French and German counter-
parts which only in subsequent decades saw the emergence of the ‘time-image’,
Deleuze’s assessment crucially identifies the structures and the historical
circumstances that both facilitated and demanded a reaction to conformist
filmmaking and an opening up to those uncertainties that make for episodic,
ambiguous, and disconcerting compositions. Deforming conventional codes
of spatiotemporal representation, this break encompasses the duration Bazin
emphasised as the basis for realistic viewing experiences and which Deleuze
extends to include memory and dreams in a Bergsonian vision of time as
the only form of subjectivity (Deleuze 1989: 82; Arnaud 2011: 88–9). This
‘new type of tale’ also leads to empty and undefined spheres that break the
‘spatial coordinates’ by which conventional film establishes logical passages
from one specified place of action to another. Anchored to the destruction
58
Notes
1. My discussion of the two texts is indebted to Lucia’s Re’s study on Italian neorealist
literature (1990: 7–11).
2. The quotation is from (Ben-Ghiat, 2001, 51). When Francesco Jovine talked of
neorealism as ‘a tendency to reclaim reality [. . .] a polemical antithesis to a stylistic
literature void of content’, he referred precisely to the artistic, rather than ideologi-
cal, motivations that drove young writers like himself, towards concreteness in lan-
guage and imagery (quoted in Milanini 1980, 8). For a reading that instead focuses
on Moravia’s ambiguous engagement with fascist discourses, see Ben-Ghiat (1995,
and 2001: 55–7).
3. See Garofalo’s essential study on Italo-Russian relations during fascism as well as
on the status of Bolshevik cinema and the direct influence it had on 1930s Italian
cinema (2002: 223–49).
4. Besides the theories of Eisenstein and Pudovkin, Barbaro’s vast corpus includes
translations of Russian, French and German writers. While he was briefly under
police observation in 1940, when it was discovered that there was a ‘dangerous
communist’ at the Centro Sperimentale, all it took to let Barbaro stay was a guar-
antee of responsibility from the school’s director, Luigi Chiarini, and an assurance
that the communist was not only harmless, but also a most capable teacher. Only
after the 1948 elections when the Under Secretary of Culture, Andreotti, sought to
purge the cinema and other cultural sectors of anything that threatened his Cold
War sensitivities, was Barbaro removed (Chiarini, quoted in Faldini and Fofi 1979:
40).
5. Vittorio Mussolini later recalled having invited the anti-fascist and ‘least likely’
director to take on the project of Tosca (1941) out of the conviction that it is pref-
erable to ‘earn the friendship of intelligent adversaries rather than the interested
sympathy of stupid friends’ (quoted in Faldini and Fofi 1979: 50). Renoir was,
however, forced to leave when the war broke out and the film was completed by
his collaborators, Visconti and Carl Koch.
6. That there runs a line of continuity from the ‘cinematographic naturalism’
Renoir developed through The Bitch (1931), Toni and The Human Beast to
Italian neorealism (Andrew 1995: 104) was suggested by Renoir himself, who
saw Toni as announcing techniques that would be perfected in neorealist films
(Renoir 1975: 193–4). Elaborating on this, Bazin observed in ‘Il profeta del
neorealismo’ that the experimentation with an anthropological and documentary
approach in Toni caused a lack of psychological verisimilitude that Italian direc-
tors – and, we must add, the later Renoir – would know how to avoid (Bazin
1975a: 195–6).
59
7. Visconti appears not to have seen Le Dernier tournant (Chenal 1939); the aspira-
tion both to glamour and comedy makes Tay Garnett’s 1946 version with Lana
Turner and John Garfield a less sinister noir, whereas Bob Rafelson’s 1981 version
with Jack Nicholson and Jessica Lange gives graphic form to the novel’s most
savage material.
8. Richardson’s study of The Naked City relates its history of production and recep-
tion, noting the influence Open City would have had on Malvin Wald’s writing of
the story treatment (1992: 95–7); Dimendberg’s study of the film’s use of space in
relation to post-war socio-geographical transformation and political turmoil points
to the anticommunist ‘witch-hunt’ as having worked antagonistically against its
production (2004: 72–3) in effect hindering a development of the social objectives
Dassin aimed to achieve (Prime 2008: 142–51).
9. Warner Brothers were ambivalent about the non-cinematic and politically edgy
material, according to Patrick McGilligan who also emphasises Hitchcock’s admi-
ration for Rossellini and the neorealist aspirations of this project. Seeking absolute
authenticity and the exclusion of fantasy in reconstructing the story, however, he
realised the difficulty such an ‘anticlimactic’ approach to filmmaking meant for a
director used to adding to reality as he found fit. Starting with a less than satisfac-
tory script, Hitchcock was never too fond of the film (2003: 532–8).
10. Barbaro’s idea of a visual realism with roots in the figurative arts appeared first in
his review of the 1939 Venice Film Festival, and thus, as an explicit denouncement
of the ‘crisis’ and ‘decadence’ he had observed among the Italian films presented. In
the same year, André Malraux wrote in his article ‘Esquisse d’une psychologie du
cinéma’ that ‘the cinema is nothing but the most evolved point of plastic realism,
the principle of which appeared in the Renaissance and found its ultimate expres-
sion in Baroque painting’. Quoting Malraux’s article, Bazin could note that ‘pho-
tography, in completing the Baroque, has liberated plastic arts from their obsession
with resemblance’ (2002: 12).
11. The ‘Convegno internazionale di cinematografia’ was held from 24–29 September
1949 in Perugia, hosting Italian as well as foreign cineastes and film critics
(Zavattini 2002: 682). Besides the oft-cited ‘A thesis on Neo-Realism’ (in Overbey
1978: 67–85), which synthesises three of Zavattini’s most central articles, and the
memoiristic Zavattini: Sequences from a Cinematic Life (Weaver 1959), the vast
corpus of his writings has not been translated.
12. The dependence, Zavattini writes, on invented stories, is nothing but a ‘subcon-
scious need to masquerade human defeat’, and, like heroic characters, it serves
to hinder identification and exclude seers from the fake reality presented : ‘I have
always felt an instinctive hatred towards them [heroes]. I felt offended, excluded
together with a million other individuals’ (2002: 694; 730–1).
13. Brunetta corroborates Zavattini’s critique. In the 1950s, ‘compared to fascism,
the work of censorship had taken another step towards centralisation of powers
and of controls in the hands of bureaucrats immediately responsible to the Under
Secretary of Culture (sottosegretario per la stampa, lo spettacolo e il turismo)
[. . .] The techniques of censorship ideated by Andreotti and followed and
applied for years to come [. . .] radiate a powerful light of intelligence’ (2001b:
74).
14. ‘Neorealism said: “Don’t do today what you did yesterday”’ Zavattini recalled,
while also observing the need, in the mid-1960s, for avant-garde cinema to
be ‘moral in the sense that it can be transformed into action’ (2002: 887;
928).
15. See Zavattini (2002: 782, xxxv; 32; 45), Aristarco (1980: 12) and Brunetta (1996:
45; 2001b: 74–87) among others note all the ideated and sometimes fully scripted
60
films that, like Italia mia, were never produced due to what Argentieri, describes
as a censorship that ‘whoops up, slaughters every film of every nationality and pre-
ventively discourages Italian producers from embarking on inconvenient projects’
(quoted in Zavattini 2002: 739–40). For an overview of the Italian cinema industry
both prior to and after the Liberation, see Wagstaff (2007: 7–40).
61
‘The need to tell “the others”, to make “the others” participants, had
achieved, among us, before the Liberation and afterwards, the quality of
an impulse so immediate and violent as to rival other elementary needs;
the book was written to satisfy this need; thus, first of all, the objective
of interior liberation.’
Primo Levi, Se questo è un uomo (1947)
The present attempt to revisit neorealism six decades after apocalyptic intellec-
tuals denounced its traitors and their reactionary opponents invoked its death
is motivated by what this moment in Italian cultural history reveals, more
generally, about the art of cinema and its socio-political ramifications. If the
films devoted to war, resistance and the post-war crisis were long considered
miraculously new and entirely disconnected from the country’s recent cultural
history, this also reflected their capacity to turn the Italian cinema into, on the
one hand
Precisely for its power to represent collective experiences and to change ways
of thinking and seeing within and beyond the cinema, this anti-illusionist
62
film culture has helped generations of international directors ‘to escape the
aesthetic and political limitations’ of Hollywood and a handful of cinematic
masterpieces have therefore enjoyed the eternal life of global influence.2 Little
is however known outside of Italy about the ways in which neorealism mani-
fested itself in the other arts.
It was, in fact, both more prolific and enduring among photographers
such as Chiara Samugheo (1935–) whose photo-documentaries from the
South privileged children and women to confront alarming inequalities the
Reconstruction had left unresolved. Her exploration in the mid-1950s of
the denunciatory potential of the visual arts found a celebrated precedent in
Renato Guttuso’s (1911–87) Crocifissione (1940–1) – a work that both for
its specific strategies of disfiguration and exposure of human suffering evokes
Pablo Picasso’s depiction of the Spanish Civil War in Guernica (1937). Pope
Pius XII threatened to excommunicate all those attending the 1942 Bergamo
competition where the allegedly heretical painting won second prize thanks
to Giuseppe Bottai, the Minister of Education to whose periodical Primato
(founded 1940) Guttuso had contributed.3 The Nazi-fascist violence he
subsequently witnessed as a liaison officer between partisans informs both
Fucilazione dei patrioti (1944) and the drawings of Gott mit Uns (1944) which
he made while hiding in a press office in Rome (Calvesi 1987: 25–6). The
popular participation in the Resistance is celebrated in Luciano Minguzzi’s
(1911–2004) Monumento al partigiano e alla partigiana (1947) whose iconic
features became a symbol of communication between the ex-partisan sculptor
and the people. These individually very distinct works all accentuate realities
the public would recognise as their own or as occurring around them while
also fulfilling the twofold aspiration of preserving national memory and
operating as agents in the present.
63
Figure 3.1 Chiara Samugheo’s ‘Le baraccate di Napoli’ (Cinema Nuovo, 1955);
Courtesy of Chiara Samugheo.
64
indifferenti, engaged young Italian writers whose novels were often those that
would later inspire neorealist directors. Carlo Bernari’s (1909–92) Neapolitan
novel Tre operai (1934) appeared to contemporary critics as a sign of the ‘new
objectivity’ associated with the social documentation of Alfred Döblin’s Neue
Sachlichkeit novel Berlin Alexanderplatz (1929). Among Bernari’s sources of
inspiration there were the alienating poetics of Vidor, Dreyer, Eisenstein, and
Buñuel whose works he had seen in France (Bo 1951: 245–52). To determine
in which medium neorealism first originated is therefore rather problematic as
film and fiction prove to have evolved contemporaneously, drawing on shared
roots and objectives and, to some extent, on cross-influences.
Born as a reaction to the culture of the ventennio, neorealist fiction
65
demonstrates the role the war and the Resistance played in fostering an
awareness of the intellectual’s duty to be present as a witness and promoter
of change. Like the cinema, however, it emerged from realist discourses that
flourished within and beyond national culture in the inter-war years, whether
they offered occasions for continuity and elaboration, as exemplified by
Moravia and other writers who had resolutely broken with contemporary
traditions, or they became objects of categorical rejection, as did the regime’s
folklorist populism. That an anti-rhetorical immediacy to post-war society
would demand an entirely new literary language was clear to those who, like
Cesare Pavese (1908–50), faced the writer’s task as a question of giving voice
to the need for a new sense of nationhood and a reformed society of popular
representation, without however going ‘towards the people’, which had been
fascism’s major strategy of propaganda and consensus-making:
Fascists go towards the people [. . .] We are the people. Even the intellec-
tual. Even the ‘gentleman’ [. . .] are the people and prepare a government
of the people [. . .] Democracy means this government. (Pavese 1968:
214–15)
Like many other anti-fascist intellectuals, Pavese was in search of a ‘new legend
[a] new style’ that, if anything, would go ‘towards man’ (1968: 198), seeking
a closer proximity to the world through a twofold line of enquiry that sought
something essentially human and, as such, universal, within the singular story
of the disenfranchised and the under-represented. Fascist use of realist codes
was, in contrast, profoundly nationalistic and ideologically exclusive. Moving
between stracittà and strapaese, from imperial ideals of italianità and roman-
ità, to rural simplicity in the ideals of the bonifica, it excluded not only the
beliefs and lived experiences that implied an individuality in opposition to an
imposed collective, but also the actual social conditions of the very populace
it allegedly sought to protect – poor peasants or workers displaced to the
outskirts and to underdeveloped villages and for whom the country’s leaders
represented nothing but another force of exploitation. Both acts of denial – of
ideas and of social justice – were at stake when a generation of writers identi-
fied new means to make the familiar look strange and to make the foreign and
apparently unfamiliar appear as a long desired home of freedom and shared
human experiences.
When Gli indifferenti is considered the basis for such practices, it is in par-
ticular for the unadorned language used to conduct a social and psychological
analysis of a morally corrupt society. Only two of Moravia’s characters –
Carla, and her brother Michele – feel contempt for the world they belong to,
but they remain impassively entangled in their mother’s web of opportunistic
relationships. Carla accepts the imperative of marrying her mother’s lover who
66
threatens to defraud the family and her dreams of an honest life fade into a
vision of complete annihilation in the world’s immobility, whereas Michele –
himself brought to abandon ideals of true love by his mother’s seductive friend
– arrives at a rational understanding of the necessity to overcome, once and
for all, ‘one’s own indifference and act’, but a vain attempt to shoot Carla’s
future husband is the only form of opposition he can show to hypocrisy and
conformism (Moravia 1991: 201). The destructive portrayal of fascist Italy
offered no solutions or initiatives to action, but there was little doubt among
contemporary readers about the call it presented for a completely new, anti-
literary form of writing that while moving decisively away from the lyricist
and introspective conventions of the bourgeois prosa d’arte (art-prose) which
dominated post-World War I literature, revived national traditions the way
Visconti would do in Obsession. If Moravia’s denouncement of contemporary
morality revived the moralist realism of Alessandro Manzoni’s historical novel
I promessi sposi (1828), the inquiry into a collective state of indifference and
nihilism evoked the existential realism of Luigi Pirandello and Italo Svevo
(1861–1928) whose novels depicted pre-World War I sensitivities of modern
consciousness (Candela 2003: 49). While the political intentions Moravia
may have had found camouflage in his apparent adherence to official realist
discourses (Ben-Ghiat 2001: 55–7), later critics have tended to see the result
as an anti-fascist statement and, more specifically, as a ‘phenomenological and
psychological study of the fascistizzazione [fascistisation] of the Italian bour-
geoisie and a forerunner of neorealist narrative’ (Re 1990: 114–15). While this
act of literary innovation and social analysis presents none of the commitment
we associate with neorealism, there is little doubt that Moravia was already
seeking the truer image of ‘man’ that both Pavese and Zavattini aimed for as
the moral basis for a critical and socially engaged art.
Gli indifferenti inspired both established and aspiring writers to seek a defa-
miliarising concreteness when writing about not only current actualities, but
also their own local environments in order to give voice, the way Verga had
done, to experiences normally excluded from official or artistic representations
of the country. Reversing Moravia’s portrayal of urban decay, Corrado Alvaro
(1895–1956) turns to a small village in Calabria in Gente in Aspromonte
(1930) – a collection of short-stories that all feature a closed, archaic world
at the verge of de-feudalisation. While both autobiographical and folkloric
elements tend towards mythic idealisations of harsh, rural realities, the stories
also juxtapose a miserable, hard-working and honest peasantry with the cul-
turally degraded aristocracy, creating a critical vein that culminates in the title
story, ‘Gente in Aspromonte’. The story follows an exploited shepherd’s son,
Antonello, who grows up in tacit obedience to the ferocious laws of a few land-
owners. Only when he is forced to seek work in the city does he experience a
gradual formation of consciousness. Upon returning to the village, Antonello
67
incites the other peasants to a ferocious rebellion that brings the wealthiest
family to ruin, an achievement he faces with the satisfaction only destructive
revenge can offer. The suggestion that aggression and material destruction is
the only means to social justice points to the limits of this call for reform, as
does Alvaro’s nostalgic vision of the peasantry as possessing an authenticity
lost in more developed social formations. Nevertheless, his sincere attempt to
represent the characters’ worldview by relocating the voice away from autho-
rial discourse to their own language laid a fundamental ground for the criti-
cal discourse of social representation that increasingly would engage young
writers.
The signs of a new tendency of committed, regional writing are even more
evident in Bernari’s contemporary Tre operai, where the bleakest areas of
Naples set the scene for a portrayal of the equally grey and depressing life
of factory workers. Going back to the years between 1914 and 1921 when
Naples experienced waves of political radicalism and popular unrest, the nar-
rative traces Teodoro from unemployment and temporary jobs, to studies and
the achievement of a class-consciousness that nevertheless fails to provoke
effective collective action. Neither a conscious search for a new literature nor
an overt attack on fascism, this portrayal of unemployment, losses and fruitless
struggle expresses an indirect opposition that escaped fascist censors, some-
thing Bernari related to his way of ‘deactualising’ the events as a ‘memory’ of
pre-fascist times, while also casting a destructive light on both collective ini-
tiatives to social reform and on individual attempts to material improvement
(1965: 240–6). The crude, colloquial language and matter-of-fact narrative
might also have passed for being supportive of intellectuals who called for
realism as a way to advance fascism as an anti-capitalist and anti-bourgeois
revolution. Writing in the fascist periodical Il bargello (founded 1929), sig-
nificantly, Vittorini did not criticise Bernari’s subject matter, but his style and
the limitations of his attempt to represent the lower classes.4 Against such
a verdict, we must recognise the novelty inherent in the complete alignment
of the literary language with the vernacular expressions of the lower-class
characters, among whom there is also an independent young woman, and the
frequent change from third-person narrative to interior monologue that allows
us insight into the lives and futile desires of exploited workers.
Tre operai may not have matched the literary qualities of Moravia and
Alvaro, but by focusing on the class struggles that provoked the rise of fascism
and by democratising the narrative, it came closer to a revival of Verga’s
attention to neglected socio-geographical realities. An equally significant
critical dimension runs through the contemporary Fontamara (1933) which
Ignazio Silone (1900–78), a founding member of the Communist Party, pub-
lished during his exile in Switzerland.5 The novel looks back at the first years
of fascism as they were experienced in a village called ‘Fontamara’ (‘bitter
68
69
70
71
Berto starts where Frank ends up – in jail, guilty of having run into a cyclist –
and would have preferred to enjoy his release among the prostitutes of Turin,
but Tolino, a peasant jailed, and mysteriously released, for having set fire to
a neighbour’s farm, insists he accompany him home to shield him from his
father’s violent welcome, and to work during the harvest. The juxtaposi-
tion between city and country is a constant in Pavese that most often reflects
his own connections to Turin and the Turinese hills, but here, it accentuates
Berto’s exposure to what he calls ‘deformed peasants’, implying that they
are uncivilised, and his attraction to this world which moves him to stay on
despite himself, while enjoying secret encounters in the fields with Tolino’s
sister, Gisella (Pavese 2001: 8). Allusions to an incestuous relation between
the two siblings are consolidated by Tolino’s bestial jealousy when he discov-
ers Gisella’s passion for Berto and stabs her in the neck with a hayfork. This
explosion of primal passions is apparently condemned within the community,
but the doctor can only lament the girl’s healthy physique, and the harvest
continues, suggesting that it is accepted within a circular logic of ritualistic
sacrifice and vitality, against which Berto, disgusted and ready to return to
civilisation, remains powerless and ultimately indifferent. Hiding his authorial
voice behind Berto’s unadorned language and regional structures and alter-
nating between free indirect discourse and truncated dialogue, Pavese takes a
naturalistic approach and lets the facts narrate themselves according to Verga’s
dictum, destroying not only the solipsist techniques of bourgeois literature,
but also the fascist myths of the ‘rustic man’ and of national revival. While
shedding light on the deformation of hidden provincial realities as well as on
the darkest sides of human consciousness, Paesi tuoi also uses alienating lan-
guage and an unreliable narrator to convey a stance of opposition and a claim
to freedom the way Vittorini did in Conversazione. Alongside Obsession,
which a few years later would adopt similar techniques of defamiliarisation,
these novels illuminate the nature of neorealism as a product of national tra-
ditions and current trends that in its reaction to current artistic and political
realities also sought to formulate a new language suited to incorporate and
communicate lived experiences.
72
which neorealism took form and the socio-geographical and also the human
discoveries its multiple sources inspired, we can also understand why Calvino
would deny it the programmatic unity of a ‘school’ and talk instead of ‘a
togetherness of voices, in major parts peripheral, a multifaceted discovery of
different Italies’ (Calvino 1993: viii). These voices comprised a celebration of
the end of twenty years of forced silence and a manifestation of the physical
and existential need to tell and bear witness not only, as Calvino recalled, to
the unprecedented and devastating circumstances of war, but also to the expe-
rience of solidarity and collective action that the Resistance had promoted.
Besides restoring considerable freedom of expression and artistic inspiration,
the events of 1943 brought at least a temporary end to collective indifference,
challenging everyone to reject comfortable conformism and to choose a posi-
tion. No longer was anti-fascism an intellectual and clandestine tendency, but
a marker that divided the population into two major groups. Relating people
across boundaries of ideology, religion and class, the Resistance changed the
social function of the anti-fascist elite. What mattered was not so much to
defend, in theory, an ideological position, but to extend the unprecedented
proximity to the lower classes into a dialogic exchange around shared ‘new
duties’, as called for by Vittorini (Calvino 1949; Asor Rosa 1975a: 1588).
An amalgamation of a complex set of historical circumstances and diverse,
often contradictory, cultural influences, literary neorealism emerged, as Maria
Corti has shown, spontaneously and collectively as an ‘involuntary movement’.
Following no programme or doctrine besides the opposition to ‘a certain
cultural-literary past’, it tended to reflect the essentially choral quality of par-
tisan narratives that circulated within and beyond spheres of action and that
frequently appeared as fiction or documentary pieces in clandestine papers,
memoirs, diaries, and letters (Corti 1978: 27–42). A celebrated example of
these testimonial writings is the ‘last letter’ Giaime Pintor (1919–43) wrote
three days before he fell victim to a German mine while trying to reach par-
tisans in Rome. Pintor, who in 1941 had already denounced Nazi violence in
Primato (Candela 2003: 30), saw joining the Resistance as a question of the
intellectual’s duty to renounce class privileges and work for collective libera-
tion.9 Similar ideas inspired Visconti’s vision of an ‘anthropomorphic cinema’,
which presupposed that the freedom to formulate a creative specialisation
should serve not to isolate the director, but to interact with the concrete reali-
ties of the people (1943: 108). Such sensitivities recall Gramsci’s ideas of the
bourgeois intellectual’s historical function and although his prison writings
were published only after the war, those who during the ventennio called for
engagement and a new culture would at least indirectly have known the com-
munist leader’s earlier anti-fascist writings and probably also his essay on the
‘Southern Problem’, which identified the intellectual’s duty to promote an anti-
capitalistic solidarity between Southern peasants and Northern proletarians.10
73
The discovery of the long-neglected South that came from early 1930s fiction
via Vittorini’s journey in Sicily to the Cinema writers’ revival of Verga indi-
cates, furthermore, the instinctive notion of these thoughts. As critic and direc-
tor Carlo Lizzani recalls, ‘we barely knew a few lines of Gramsci’s notes, but
his problems, our generation lived them in full, and there was nothing in what
we subsequently would have read that we had not obscurely felt’ (quoted in
Fanara 2000: 177).
That Gramsci presented a reaffirming sense of the déjà vu was implied by
Calvino when in a 1949 review of contemporary Resistance writing he identi-
fied Lettere dal carcere (1947) and Quaderni del carcere (1948–51) – com-
posed under the surveillance of fascist jail guards between 1929 and 1935 – as
the first manifestations of this tradition. Those who after years of war and
civil war sought either political or artistic means to act on the revolutionary
potential of the Resistance would in particular have recognised Gramsci’s
notion of a historical absence of a true ‘national-popular’ literature. With few
exceptions, he wrote, Italian intellectuals had been distanced from the ‘nation’,
their ‘bookish’ and ‘abstract’ tendencies bringing them closer to writers of past
traditions than to a ‘Sicilian or Pugliese peasant’, and they had therefore failed
to forge relations of identification and solidarity with the exploited classes
(Gramsci 1996: 72). These are ideas we recognise in Zavattini’s view of the
cinema’s ability to incite empathy and consciousness around victimisation.
Although they became available too late to inspire the formation of neoreal-
ism, Gramsci’s status as an anti-fascist martyr would have awakened those
who, like Visconti, combined clandestine activity, militant criticism and cin-
ematic experimentation and those who had seized the turbulent years prior
to and after the armistice as an opportunity to confront and reject, intellectu-
ally and socially, past fascist sympathies and of working for socio-political
reorganisation, as was the case with Vittorini.
Written in proximity to a Resistance group in central Italy and with a nod to
Hemingway’s account from Spain in For Whom the Bell Tolls (1940), Uomini
e no (Vittorini 1945) draws on partisan battles Vittorini had witnessed in
Milan before going underground in 1944. It follows confrontations between
anti-fascists and Nazi-fascists through divergent points of view, thus allowing
insight into both adversaries, whereas a more contemplative narrative thread
privileges the perspective of Enne 2, an intellectual Resistance leader caught
up in guerrilla fights, and Berta, who is too involved with her husband to start
a new life. Both dramas evolve within the boundary of Milan: the industrial,
commercial and financial capital where the fascist squads were first founded in
1919 and which later became a centre for anti-fascist forces and a home for the
partisans that would bring Mussolini to justice on 28 April 1945 (Borgomaneri
2000). The city is delineated by ideological divisions, directing the reader from
private and clandestine interiors and areas of patriotic action, via infiltrated
74
75
76
soldier, escapes fascist jail alongside the partisan leader Red Wolf and seeks
safety in the proletarians’ camp. His imaginative mind leads to the paths
where spiders build their intricate nests, whereas his intruding voice intensi-
fies the expressivity of the camp, encapsulating both the polyphonic culture
and the fusion of landscapes and human stories that for Calvino constituted
the roots of the neorealist narrative (Calvino 1993: viii–x). The dysfunctional
brigade is eventually dissolved when its apathetic leader, Dritto, in the heat of
his affair with Giglia, the cook’s wife, sets fire to their camp and is executed.
Pelle, the weapon hunter turned fascist, is mercilessly killed by Red Wolf, the
only ideologically motivated partisan we meet apart from Kim – the Marxist
commissioner who voices Calvino’s reflections on historical action. Closest to
Pin is the serious, albeit disillusioned and cynically misogynist, Cousin; once
betrayed, he discerns a spy in every woman and kills Pin’s prostitute-sister for
her espousal of the Nazi-fascists. Mediating between the eccentric comrades
as well as between anti-fascists and Nazi-fascists, Pin gives at least a narrative,
if not a human and ideological unity, to Calvino’s disintegrated world of war
and Resistance.
As the novel’s major focaliser and source of its paratactic, vernacular lan-
guage and distorted depictions, the child character enables Calvino to deper-
sonalise the material and dramatise the intersection between individual and
collective history in a story of lost innocence and initiation (Re 1990: 259).
While Pin’s naiveté serves to uncover both the Resistance and the adult world
as inconsistent and treacherous, his marginal social status also directs the story
towards the less glorious edges of the Resistance; to a world of grotesque,
anti-heroic characters not modelled on the truly heroic partisans Calvino had
known in the legendary Garibaldi brigade, but on Sartre’s understanding of
the revealing and alienating potential of negative portrayals (Re 1990: 65).
Calvino’s notion that ‘neo-expressionism’, rather than neorealism, more suit-
ably describes this moment in Italian cultural history, suggests the essence
and the objectives of his negative poetics, but his detached perspective moves
within both registers (Calvino 1993: xii–xiii). Capturing Pin and his world
from an omniscient and distanced position, the narrator can report interac-
tions and movements at the level of the collective, while also ‘zooming in’,
the way neorealist films tend to do, on singular characters and facts, framing
small histories that all compose national ‘History’. Nevertheless, this filter-
ing lens attains no verisimilitude: while the depersonalised narrative aspires
to objectivity in its inclusion of voices, the act of visualisation is deliberately
distortive and presents the choice of joining the Resistance as a question of
chance, convenience or at best, a way of escape, where anti-fascist hatred
and revolutionary intentions rather than patriotic sentiments form the only
motivating factors.
Calvino’s study in distortions was polemically directed towards both radical
77
and reactionary factions of post-war culture. Against the Left’s calls for posi-
tive portrayals of the partisans, he objected that pro-communist idealisations
are no less rhetorical than fascist myth-making; whereas against the Right’s
understanding of the partisans as elements of social unrest, he suggested that
even the most unmotivated of Resistance fighters had played a more decisive
role in the course of ‘History’ than the indifferent, conformist, middle class
(Calvino 1993: xiii–xiv). This is a stance we see completely reversed in Renata
Viganò’s (1900–76) Agnese va a morire (1949) which offers a unique account
of female presence and formation of consciousness as a partisan within a com-
munist brigade in central Italy. Active both in Bologna’s clandestine press and
in the hills of Ferrara, Viganò was one of more than 50,000 women involved
in the Resistance, and her novel, written with journalistic simplicity and based
on autobiographic material, is the only one within a vast corpus of women’s
writing that traditionally has been admitted into the neorealist canon (Zancan
1997: 224). We follow a middle-aged, uneducated and self-doubting woman
who, after she learns that her husband who was denounced by fascist neigh-
bours died during the journey to Germany, kills a German soldier and goes
underground among partisans in the Po Plains. Her immersion in their every-
day life is initially an instinctive act of vindication, driven by her hatred for the
German tyrants and their fascist servants, but through her comrades’ militancy
she acquires political consciousness and assumes an increasingly consequential
and hazardous function until she is jailed and faces her death as a sacrifice to
the proletarian cause. If the uncritical celebration of lower-class heroes har-
moniously united in their love for the Resistance falls into the populist and
rhetorical trap that Calvino deliberately avoided, the greatest merit of Viganò’s
narrative, besides its topographic and historical accuracy, is the privileged
voice given to female subjectivity within a male-dominated culture and the
portrayal of the Resistance as a civil war and a class struggle with objectives
far beyond the patriotic goal of liberation.
A less idealistic defence of proletarian action infuses Pavese’s La casa in
collina (1948) which by contrast unfolds as an account about, more than from
the Resistance as the focus falls on the narrating protagonist’s socio-historical,
as well as existential, ambiguity. Starting with the Allies’ bombing of Turin, in
the summer of 1943 and the subsequent fall of Mussolini and the Armistice,
the novel reconstructs the arrival of German soldiers and the constitution of
partisan groups in the Turinese hills. It is, however, not their story we pri-
marily hear, but that of a troubled intellectual who is politically and morally
inclined towards the working-class resistance fighters he frequents but existen-
tially unable to take part in their struggle. As a teacher in what are officially
fascist schools in the city, Corrado returns at night to his house in the hills,
where he may shrug his shoulders and welcome the war as an alibi for solipsis-
tic contemplation, aware that both his social status and the room he rents in a
78
middle-class villa protect him from suspicion. This privileged state of ‘immu-
nity’ is nevertheless constantly questioned in the tavern he visits at night, where
class-conscious workers listen to Radio London and await the moment when
they can break free in armed resistance. Within the group there is also Cate,
a past love, and her son, Dino (Corradino), whom Corrado suspects is his.
Shared childhood myth becomes the key to communication between the two,
but Corrado is unable to act upon the boy’s precocious political awareness.
The country-city duality already seen in I paesi tuoi is reinforced by tensions
between the private and the collective; between action and contemplation, and
the narrative accordingly oscillates between historical chronicle constructed
around news items and political discussions, and resentful reflections whereby
the critique of protected inertness reveals itself as the author’s self-confession.
Ideas of authorial historicity are no less central to Pavese’s last novel, La
luna e i falò (1950), where the regrets of non-participation are enunciated
through Anguilla – a poor servant boy who, having fled to America during the
war, returns as a successful businessman to his village where his communist
friend, Nuto, tells stories of civil war, sacrifice and treason. That Anguilla was
not there to fight reflects, however, a rootlessness stemming from his incapac-
ity as an orphan to find a home. By contrast Corrado, who remains inactive
when the tavern becomes an arms depot and a partisan shelter, acknowledges
his retreat into his protected life as inertness. His friends’ allegations that the
comfortable middle class, himself included, has no reason to risk its privileges,
are illustrated by the fears of his conformist landladies, the calculations of the
opportunistic Black Shirts and also the Vatican’s pacifying communications
regarding the need for love and faith. When Cate is deported and Corrado,
along with her son, accidentally escapes the round-up, he doubts whether he
has actually been saved, considering the emotional troubles he is left with.
Whereas Enne 2 immerses himself in fatal action, Corrado’s only strategy of
resistance is to change one protected state for another, but what they both
have in common is the escape from ‘History’ typical of intellectuals who fail
to act on ideological convictions (Falcetto 2006: 50). Retreating in the critical
months of 1944 to a farm the way Pavese himself did, Corrado starts to write
about the ‘great illusion’ it is to believe in a return to childhood, in victory and
in immunity, if both you and the physical spaces of your past have lost inno-
cence, if among the enemy dead, there is a man like yourself, and, lastly, if all
you can do with your privileges is to accidentally survive and let war come and
go without changing yourself at all.
While Pavese’s twofold inquiry into human darkness and historical action
always aspired to collective dimensions, it became, increasingly, a ‘private
matter’ of existential self-destructiveness. The intellectual’s historical crisis
resonates with narrative variations in the works of Beppe Fenoglio (1922–63)
which all draw on memories from partisan wars in the Piedmontese city of
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84
excluded from public and artistic discourses by seeing both its collective
imaginary and circular history through the scientist’s analysis, the intellectual’s
political accusations and the humanist’s call for justice.
Primo Levi’s account of Auschwitz relies on the very same modes of enuncia-
tion, but his essentially secular and sceptical vision excludes both passionate
attacks and progressive initiatives to give a quietly disconcerting disclosure
of the darkest side of fascist Italy. It is worth noting that only in 1938, when
apartheid laws were introduced to exclude interracial relationships in Ethiopia
and the Nazi Nuremberg Laws provoked a gradual exclusion of Italian Jews
from all aspects of civil life, did Levi, like so many others, become aware of the
‘criminal face of fascism’ and join clandestine opposition groups (Levi 2005:
202). Fascist rhetoric and consensus-making were always essentially national-
ist, but the supposed superiority that Mussolini related to Italy’s antique roots
and present virtues was originally rationalised in historical and socio-cultural
terms and aimed to unify the people around the regime’s ideals rather than
stigmatising an antithetical and inferior ‘Other’. While the laws implemented
in 1938 were aligned with Hitler’s ‘differentialist’ and biologically anchored
racism, they nonetheless also addressed the continuous and increasing need
in times of economic and political isolation to build a ‘communal identity’
(Gillette 2002: 4).
Although anti-Semitic discourses circulated along with imperialist themes
throughout the ventennio, Mussolini long denied that Italy had a ‘Jewish
problem’ and even welcomed persecuted foreign Jews until the mid-1930s.
Only in 1937, when Italy grew increasingly close to Nazi Germany, was
the ‘Manifesto on Race’ published as the official start to a more systematic
anti-Semitic campaign (Mack Smith 1982: 220–2). While declaring Jews non-
Italian, the Manifesto also distinguished Italians from other Aryan people in
an effort to prepare the anti-Nazi population and make this racist turn look
like an extension of pre-existing nationalist ideologies, rather than an imposed
adaptation of German policies.17 Introduced in late 1938, the Nuremberg
Laws caused a segregation but not yet a deportation of Italian and foreign
Jews and they were in fact not imposed by Hitler, but the extension of the Final
Solution to Italy’s German-occupied areas following the establishment of the
Republic of Salò in 1943 was ordered from Berlin and executed by Nazis and
fascists alike (Collotti 2003; Zimmerman 2005). Of the approximately 40,000
Jews living on the Italian peninsula in 1943, an estimated 6,808 were deported
to death and concentration camps.18
That Levi found himself among the 837 Italian Jews who survived, he attrib-
uted to the time of his deportation in January 1944 when the Reich, due to
an increasingly scarce workforce, determined to extend the prisoners’ average
lifetime. A second stroke of fortune was a degree in chemistry which saw him
promoted from outdoor slavery to laboratory work during the winter of 1945.
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87
more generous towards a deeply religious fellow inmate who thanks God for
having escaped the gas chambers, thus ignoring the logics of selection by which
one person’s survival depends on another’s condemnation. It invests, on the
other hand, much affection in recalling Steinlauf who by maintaining objec-
tively futile habits of hygiene inspires resistance to bestialisation; Lorenzo,
an external worker who risks his life daily by bringing in food; and Charles
who demands that Levi recite Ulysses’ last journey as narrated in L’inferno
26, thus making him aware of still having a memory and of still being a man.
These souls destined for Paradise serve as practical and moral forces in Levi’s
resigned fight and become, in the retrospective act of writing, objects of ana-
lytical attention in a ‘quiet study’ of ‘the human soul’ that categorically rejects
Dante’s divine vision (2005: 9). The only certainty Levi brings back from the
underworld is that of God’s non-existence, but he lives in full the Christian
poet’s mission to hinder a collective amnesia of the past and to act as a source
of moral knowledge in the present.
Memory, responsibility and human essence bring us to the centre of Levi’s
testimony of death and survival, and also to the tradition of non-programmatic,
orally based, witness narratives defined by a shared set of influences, circum-
stances and objectives as well as by the individual author’s historical position
and literary sensibilities. Far from comprehensive, the overview in this chapter
has sought to trace constants and variations through emblematic and repre-
sentative examples, while also bringing in non-fiction writings that historically
have remained at the margins of the canons of both Resistance literature and of
neorealism. Drawing a line from Fontamara, via Conversazione in Sicilia and
Gramsci’s prison writings, to these two personal narratives of deprived freedom
that encapsulate both the immediacy and the testimonial value of the neorealist
optique, what emerges as the strongest constant is the commitment to docu-
ment the socio-geographical shadowlands observed and lived by authors who,
to a great extent, identify with the social world depicted. On this basis we can
formulate something more universal with regard to the function and potential
of literature as reconstructed reportage. Vittorini maintained that literature
does what politics cannot do, and the relationship between literature and his-
toriography may be seen in similar terms. In contrast to non-creative narratives
that describe macro-level events and aim to give objective accounts of official
realities, literature explores history at the micro-level, relocating the voice of
enunciation from sources of authority to subjects deprived of a voice and of
public recognition. In this way, it seeks to provoke both the human interest and
the empathy that historiography fails to provide (Enzensberger 1966: 7–22).
Given its ability to narrate pluralistic histories, literature can better serve to
chronicle and reproduce human life, and by fictionalising facts through the spe-
cific and the subjective, it creates a memory of historical events and an aware-
ness of current reality as constantly emergent, as created by human action in
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the everyday world. The more an artistic representation portrays history from
below, from the position of those who suffer most from, and have the least
impact upon, the course of ‘History’, the more it has moved away, not only
from historiography, but more significantly from rhetorical images intended to
distract the people from their own reality. Were we to identify one single feature
of neorealist film and literature that distinguished it from previous and later
traditions, it would be this ability to conduct such a move.
Notes
1. See Brunetta (2009: v). A Monarchy since its unification in 1861, Italy became a
Republic following the constitutional referendum of 1946.
2. See Ruberto and Wilson (2007: 8) and their anthology, Italian Neorealism and
Global Cinema, for illuminating studies on the influence of neorealist film.
3. See Panza (2006: 32) and Lo Riparo (1987: 282). One of the founders of fascism
and a member of the Grand Council that in 1943 voted Mussolini out of office,
Bottai became increasingly aware of the regime’s weakened position and ran
Primato as a relatively open literary avant-garde periodical free from propagandis-
tic objectives (Candela 2003: 27–30; Lo Riparo 1987: 282–3).
4. See Vittorini, ‘Tre operai che non fanno popolo’, Il bargello, 22 July 1934, quoted
in Asor Rosa (1975b: 131).
5. The image of Silone as a heroic humanist and Marxist was severely tarnished in
2000 when historians Dario Biocca and Mauro Canali alleged that he infiltrated
the Communist Party as one of the regime’s informers, something which histo-
rian Giuseppe Tamburrano has long contested. For an examination in English of
the ‘caso Silone’ see Elizabeth Leake (2003), The Reinvention of Ignazio Silone.
Toronto: University of Toronto Press.
6. See Silone (1964, 229–34). Lenin’s essay ‘What is to be done?’ written in 1901–2,
appears in Lenin, Vladimir (1961), Collected Works. Vol. 5, trans. Joe Fineberg
and George Hanna, Moscow: Foreign Languages Publishing House.
7. Among Vittorini’s most noted translations are stories by Edgar Allan Poe;
Faulkner’s Light in August (1932); and Steinbeck’s Tortilla Flat (1935), as well as
works by D. H. Lawrence. He later became the consultant for Anglo-Saxon litera-
ture in Milan’s major publishing houses, Mondadori and Bompiani respectively
(Bonsaver 2000: 21–34; 67–80).
8. It was Pavese himself who noted the profound impact Cain had on Paesi tuoi,
which in its rapid and spoken narrative tends to hint at information that will be
given later (2001: 129). In Pavese’s successive novel, Il compagno (1946), Berto’s
character inspired the initially apathetic Pedro for whom anti-fascism leads
towards class-consciousness, revolutionary action and communist affiliation.
9. See Pintor (1980: 37). The letter dated 28 November 1943 was published in 1946
in the Communist Party’s organ Rinascita (founded 1944).
10. Written in 1926, the essay ‘Alcuni temi della questione meridionale’ was published
in 1930 in Lo Stato operaio (Gramsci 1997: 180) and in 1944 in Rinascita, which
was founded and edited by Palmiro Togliatti, who from 1944 was involved in
editing Gramsci’s writings (Argentieri 1996: 122; Chemotti 1999: 61). Gramsci
was hailed as the model for the party’s reorganisation (Asor Rosa 1975a: 1551–5),
but his intellectual and ethical, rather than political, influence also reached the
wider realm of post-war culture, as Calvino (1949: 46) and Vittorini testify as early
as 1946 (1957: 237).
89
11. The complexity of the Resistance was first addressed in Giorgio Bocca’s Storia
dell’Italia partigiana (1966) and, more recently in Claudio Pavone’s Una guerra
civile (1994).
12. Whereas Pavese’s 1946 article only alludes to Uomini e no (1968: 219), Asor Rosa
directly attacks the use of the Resistance as a mere ‘occasion’ for a bourgeois,
avant-gardist, moralist betrayal of the popular roots of this movement (Asor Rosa
1975b: 164–5).
13. See Vittorini (1957: 268–269); Vittorini’s position in the post-war debate was in
particular articulated through ‘Una nuova cultura’, Il Politecnico, 29 September
1945; ‘Polemica e no per una nuova cultura’, Il Politecnico, 10 November 1945;
and ‘Politica e cultura: Lettera a Togliatti’, Il Politecnico, January-March 1947.
14. Vittorini’s notes on Gramsci in 1946–1947 (1957: 257; 263–6) suggests that he
would have had access to ‘Per una storia degli intellettuali italiani’, which had been
reviewed in Rinascita in 1946 before it appeared in the first volume of Quaderni
del carcere in 1948 (Dainotto 2008: 115). For Sartre’s influence on Italian post-war
culture, see Re (2000).
15. Carlo Lizzani’s cinematic adaptation, Cronache di poveri amanti (1954), symptom-
atically identifies the narrative voice with one of the young lovers, suggesting the
function non-naturalistic visions and subjective interpretations have in Pratolini’s
writing.
16. Argentieri sees the publication of Gramsci’s essay ‘Alcuni temi della questione
meridonale’ in 1944 and of Levi’s book the following year as an indication to the
tendency among leftists, anti-fascist and Catholic reformists to base their propos-
als for reconstruction on ‘a reconsideration of the (southern) rural world to fulfil
instances of social progress’ (1996: 122).
17. Signed by ten scientists, and revised as well as critiqued by Mussolini, the ‘Manifesto
degli scienziati razzisti’ presented a historical and anthropological excursus that
was clearly aimed at Italianising German policies. For an English translation of the
manifesto, see Schnapp (2000).
18. Added to these figures, reported by Liliana Picciotto Fargion’s classic study Il libro
della memoria (2002: 21–31), were the 1820 deported from the then Italian-ruled
Dodecanese islands. Of these, only 179 survived.
19. Whether it was unwillingness or inability to understand, or desire to move on from
the horrors of Nazi fascism, this fear was largely confirmed: few were willing to
listen to Levi’s experiences once he returned and his book did not raise interest until
it was republished in 1958.
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and cultural change, however, in wartime Italy, waiting implied longing for
political as well as artistic liberation. After L’uomo della croce was shot in
the summer of 1942, a consortium of producers unimpressed with Rossellini’s
irreverent methods banned him from any cinematic activity. Once Vittorio
Mussolini ensured him the rights to realise a story treatment Giuseppe De
Santis had written on the work of railwaymen, the project was immediately set
back by the turmoil of 1943. What little Rossellini was able to shoot between
the Allies’ first air strikes in July and the establishment of the Nazi-fascist
Republic of Salò in September was later inserted into a completely different
drama of fatal passions entitled Desiderio (1946).1
The combination of living in a country split between foreign forces and of
refusing, as Rossellini and most other cineastes did, to join the fascists’ cinema
in Venice, did not merely cause another period of professional waiting. As for
most other Italians, the fall of fascism confronted Rossellini with an obliga-
tion and liberty to take a stance and Open City is, both in inspiration and
realisation, a reflection of this ultimatum. It reconstructs the risks involved
in active and passive resistance, and both the dramatic start where Manfredi
barely escapes arrest, thanks to a timely warning from his landlady, and Pina’s
death in front of a traumatised neighbourhood, would have confronted con-
temporary spectators with recent and far from uncommon horrors. Another
and perhaps even more significant objective of these sequences was to cel-
ebrate the ‘web of solidarity’ that arose among the several hundred thousand
Italians who were persecuted during the occupation and to create a memory of
the more than 650 ex-soldiers and civilians who died while defending Rome
against advancing Nazi troops, the 1,735 partisans who lost their lives in
combat or were tortured and executed during the ten months of occupation
and the hundreds of civilians who were killed in the streets or in mass execu-
tions (Bentivegna 2002). Among the darkest memories of the occupation in
Rome is the deportation of more than 3,000 civilians, mainly Jews, of whom
only 420 returned, and the Fosse Ardeatine massacre (24 March 1944), which
constituted a reprisal for an attack members of the GAP (Groups of Patriotic
Action) had conducted in via Rasella the previous day, causing the death of
thirty-three German military policemen.2 The massacre was ordered by Hitler
and many were rounded up indiscriminately to fill the 1:10 reprisal quota,
but the majority of the 335 victims came from via Tasso and other prisons,
as did the Resistance priest Don Pietro Pappagallo whose work and death
created an instantaneous oral legend (Forgacs 2000: 14; Roncoroni 2006:
351).
While the execution of Don Pietro is the only reference included to these
tragedies, they constitute a tacit premise not only for the thematics of Open
City, but also for the collective engagement that inspired it. Months of inactiv-
ity, fear, wandering and hiding brought Rossellini closer to militant cineastes
92
and Resistance activists who in the spring of 1944 held ‘passionate’ clandestine
meetings aimed at developing ‘a program of the Resistance’ to be activated fol-
lowing the imminent Liberation. The debate centred around realism, popular
art and relations between art and society and Alicata, who had anticipated
these questions as a Cinema critic and as a collaborator on Obsession, recalled
that this was when Gramsci’s concept of national-popular-art gained cur-
rency (quoted in Roncoroni 2006: 409). These collective concerns with art
and the people operate, in harmony with Rossellini’s predilection for choral
representations, to form a view in Open City of history as built on the strug-
gles of ordinary people. In discussing the film’s ‘documentary’ qualities, critics
have conventionally emphasised its aesthetics, the immediacy of its historical
chronicle, and the authenticity it seeks in conveying the spirit of the Resistance
as a popular force of solidarity and regeneration (Wagstaff 2007: 97–8). To
these qualities, we must therefore also add the testimony it bears to a climate
of regeneration and the practical model it provides for a new culture dedicated
to redress decades of social injustice and enhance the country’s moral rebuild-
ing.
Started three months after the liberation of Rome on 5 June 1944 and
released five months after Mussolini’s execution on 25 April 1945, Open
City was unique in the immediacy with which it reconstructed what in the
film’s working title was called ‘Yesterday’s Stories’. Nevertheless, Rossellini
was not the first to envision a cinematic chronicle of recent tragedies. In
fact, the idea for Open City came from a treatment for a documentary on
Don Pappagallo written by Alberto Consigli, with whom Rossellini had col-
laborated on L’uomo della croce, and De Santis had already announced a
film – unfortunately never realised – on GAP-fighters in Rome that would also
have commemorated Teresa Gullace, a pregnant woman shot by the Germans
outside the barracks where her husband was awaiting deportation (Roncoroni
2006: 22–6; 355). As the script developed, this episode gave life to Pina, and
the story of Don Pappagallo was fused with that of another Resistance priest,
Don Giuseppe Morosini. A common motivating factor among several script-
writers, of whom only Sergio Amidei and Fellini have been credited, was the
urgency, after years of forced adherence to official realities, to ‘narrate what
had happened, what we had seen’, and when the title became Rome: Open
City, it was to reinforce this testimonial function in historically very precise
terms.3 Following the Allies’ attacks in the summer of 1943, Rome, as the
centre of Catholicism, had been declared a demilitarised zone or an ‘open
city’. This declaration passed through the Vatican and was reproposed as
the condition on which the defeated Italian army surrendered Rome to the
Germans. Neither the occupying nor the liberating forces respected the agree-
ment and the term ‘open city’ was soon redefined by Resistance activists as a
slogan around which to provoke anti-German sentiments (Forgacs 2000: 106).
93
Implied in this account is not merely the physical and economic disintegra-
tion of the industry, encapsulated by the destruction of Rome’s major studio,
Cinecittà, at the hands of Allied and German invaders, and its temporary use
as a camp for the homeless once the city was liberated (Rondolini 1989: 72).
Like Zavattini, Rossellini considered the provisional lack of traditional indus-
trial structures as having created an unprecedented freedom, opening up the
most extraordinary and hitherto considered unworkable projects. Deprived
both of the financial guarantee and the exigencies of film producers, Rossellini
found that the distaste for rigid programmes for which he had once been
excluded from the cinema had all of a sudden become an invaluable ability to
survive and innovate.
There is no question that Open City was immediately considered ‘excep-
tional, even emblematic, of a new, absolutely abnormal mode of working’,
but there are several reservations to the legend of insuperable obstacles and
total reinvention of structures (Rondolini 1989: 81). Made ‘from the truth’,
it still followed the ‘old schemes’ of cinematic techniques and narration,
Amidei would later observe, pointing in particular to the many gags and
melodramatic themes as well as to the characters’ emblematic quality. Most
of the indoor scenes were reconstructed in a vacant horse racing hall in via
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degli Avignonesi and shot with classical, albeit terribly inadequate, lighting
(quoted in Roncoroni 2006: 430–1) and the rough photography would have
been caused by artificial light drawn from poor electricity and by damage that
occurred during the development of the finished film, rather than by the stock
which in itself was both available and appropriate for Rossellini’s particular
needs (Wagstaff 2007: 96–104). Furthermore, initial interruptions in shooting
appear to have been a reflection of poor preparation as much as lack of funds,
and the decision of the distribution company CIS Nettunia to rescind its con-
tract with Rossellini in February 1945 on the basis of unsatisfactory previews
suggests that some rushes were available early on, despite Rossellini and his
collaborators’ affirmations to the contrary (Roncoroni 2006: 27). What made
Open City look intrinsically new was therefore first and foremost the subject
matter, the immediacy it gave to the historical material and the authenticity it
achieved in dramatising national sentiments. Only by relocating our perspec-
tive from the film’s aesthetic to its moral qualities can we perceive the posi-
tion it immediately acquired as the marker of national as well as cinematic
rebirth.
The coexistence of the old and the new also shapes the cast as lesser-known
performers, friends of the authors and ordinary citizens appear alongside Aldo
Fabrizi, nationally the best paid and most in-demand actor and a perfect fit
for the role of Don Pietro, and Anna Magnani, who with Open City attained
iconic status as the quintessential popolana (woman of the people). Both
claimed disproportional amounts of the non-existent budget and were crucial
in making the hazardous project economically viable.5 Contemporary cinema-
goers would, in particular, have recognised them as the jovial working-class
protagonists of Campo de’ fiori (Bonnard 1943) and L’ultima carozzella
(Mattoli, 1943) which, being scripted by Zavattini, Fellini, and Amidei, and
shot on location in the ordinary neighbourhoods of central Rome, testify to
the regenerative function of certain wartime experiments. The birth of neore-
alism as a ‘dialectal’ cinema was born with these romantic yet anti-illusionist
comedies, Rossellini later observed, and with the ‘spontaneous creation’ of the
two Roman actors who had both been trained in the vernacular style of variety
theatre (1995: 52). Their sympathetically imperfect personae had effectuated a
decisive break with the falsifying structures of ‘white-telephone films’ and re-
appropriating them in Open City was a crucial strategy that helped to form an
image of the present with which the public could identify.
Yesterday’s stories
Set in the winter of 1944, Open City establishes its spatiotemporal anchorage
with a panoramic shot over the city’s skyline, capturing Saint Peter’s cupola in
the distance. Superimposed are the main titles and a caption reading:
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The facts and characters of this film, albeit drawn from tragic and heroic
stories of nine months of Nazi occupation, are imaginary. Thus, any iden-
tification with real facts and characters should be considered incidental.
As the camera pans slowly leftwards, an initially dramatic score gives way to
singing German soldiers captured in archive footage while marching up the
Spanish Steps. The fictional part of the narrative then begins with the SS arriv-
ing at an apartment block in the same square.6 A woman catches sight of them
from the window and a cut leads to Manfredi who, in contrast to the Germans’
song of terror, is listening to the illegal ‘Voice of London’, reminding us that
the BBC had been broadcasting in Italian since 1938. Thanks to a warning
from his landlady, Manfredi escapes by way of the roofs over the adjacent
Spanish embassy, an area the SS would rather avoid.7 The following morning,
Manfredi goes to Francesco’s place and is received by his fiancée, Pina, unleash-
ing an episodic narrative where singular stories are tied together respectively
by relationships of solidarity, betrayal and monstrous power. The latter thread
unfolds with the appearance of Gestapo leader, Bergmann, and involves his
men as well as the fascists as passive accomplices; the former thread emerges
from women raiding local bakeries for severely rationed bread and from par-
tisans disposed to die for collective liberation.8 Their story reaches a caesura
with the death of Pina and a conclusion with that of Don Pietro. Between good
and evil we find Marina, Manfredi’s ex-girlfriend, and Pina’s sister, Lauretta,
who have abandoned their working-class roots in pursuit of an easy life as
nightclub entertainers.
Once Manfredi – a military leader of the CLN – has been reported, he
must hide, and he asks assistance from Don Pietro whose priestly clothing
and authorisation to go out after curfew will make the carrying of money to
partisans easier. The mutual respect with which the two engage encapsulates
ideals of a cross-political and unitary struggle, as does Don Pietro’s immersion
in secular life and his concern for matters of material and historical urgency.
He may be slightly alarmed by Pina’s son, Marcello, who instead of attending
church receives lessons in Marxist thought from Romoletto, but during the
round-up at Pina’s place, he resolutely abandons the children gathered for
Sunday school to cover up for the revolutionary kid’s weapons. In vain does
Bergmann talk of Manfredi as an enemy of the church in order to make Don
Pietro betray him, since the priest is convinced that everyone who fights for
freedom walks in the path of the Lord. This atmosphere of extreme depriva-
tion and indiscriminate solidarity sets the context for the war-time wedding
Pina plans to celebrate in a modest apartment where only the stairway offers
a room for privacy and dreams. Francesco is confident in promising her the
‘new springtime’ she longs for, unaware as he is of the tragically ironic turn
their wedding day will take. Having witnessed Pina’s deadly protest against his
96
arrest, Francesco escapes two deaths: the first thanks to the partisans’ attack
on the convoy deporting him, and the second just before he is about to seek
asylum in a convent. Marcello insists he take a scarf Pina gave him, delay-
ing his departure by the two seconds necessary to escape the SS who capture
Manfredi, Don Pietro and an Austrian deserter. The child’s search for a con-
nection of future togetherness will, it is assumed, allow them both to see the
city reclaim its openness.
These scenes of collective struggles and sacrifices are juxtaposed with
snapshots of Marina’s apartment in the refined district of Parioli. Unable to
renounce the intoxicating effects of consumer goods and cocaine, she is more
uneasy about inhabiting a grey area of non-being and non-belonging than
Lauretta, who spends her carefree nights with German soldiers. She therefore
does not dismiss Manfredi’s moralistic disapproval of her lack of values, but
declares that if he had loved her, he would have made her change. The betrayal
she immediately regrets is just as much a way not to acknowledge what human
and emotional losses her desires of social mobility have brought about as it is
a means to avenge Manfredi’s abandonment. Marina’s moral distance from
the world she once inhabited shapes her characterisation as well. In contrast to
Pina who, despite the sentimental pathos of her story, retains strong individual
traits (her Roman speech, her sympathetic candour and her sense of solidarity
and care for others) that make her credible as a woman of the people, Marina
is easily recognisable as the ‘fallen woman’ of nineteenth-century melodrama,
whereas Ingrid personifies the lesbian ‘femme fatale’ – a predatory figure
developed by stereotyping homosexual identity. The captivating relationship
of seduction and treason that unfolds between these two women serves pri-
marily to establish a narrative connection to the enemy, and the overstated
fictionalisation of their characters are attuned with the staged world of the
Gestapo headquarters. Constructed and lit as a stage, Bergmann’s office is con-
veniently located between a salon of whisky-drinking officers and the adjacent
torture chamber, enabling an easy transgression between the two spheres, and
both the intense desk light he points towards his victims during interrogation,
and the illumination of Manfredi’s grotesquely mutilated body, reveal the
calculated use of chiaroscuro effects to accentuate the opposing images of the
crude realism of relentless resistance and the performance of social and moral
degradation.
This theatricalisation of the Gestapo leaders highlights not only the good
and those that ultimately win, but also Italians who, like the Questore (head
of the fascist police), are involved in their network. He smiles and nods at
Bergmann’s impressive city map which, modelled on what historically was
known as the Schroeder-plan, divides the city into 14 zones to economise
round-ups. Although they are both seeking to uncover facts about Manfredi,
who escaped imprisonment in 1928 and fought with the communists against
97
Franco in Spain, Bergmann evidently does not trust his partner enough to
allow him to capture their victim. The Questore, for his sake, appears slightly
disturbed over the screams of pain penetrating Bergmann’s office and he is
never involved in torturing partisans or in decadent gatherings. Both charac-
ters were modelled on historical figures, but their representation is far from
accurate, or even verisimilar. Whatever effeminate traits the Gestapo leader
Colonel Herman Kappler historically may have possessed, these are magnified
by the exaggerated mannerism of the declared homosexual Austrian-Jewish
dancer, Harry Feist, whereas in the Questore we see little of Pietro Caruso,
who was sent to Rome by Mussolini to handle intensified anti-fascist activ-
ity and later executed as responsible for the Fosse Ardeatine massacre. At
worst, Rossellini’s Questore appears ridiculous and completely undermined by
Bergmann’s rhetorical skills and devilish set-up. This systematic use of generic
types and dramaturgic commonplaces to distinguish between the moral worlds
that cohabit in the city point to the film’s basis in traditional narrative struc-
tures, but the unbalanced distribution of evil also reveals an intent to ignore
the nation’s sins in favour of a conciliatory discourse aimed at unifying the
people around ideals of collective rebuilding.
Reconstructing yesterday
Moving between the city’s adversarial spheres, the narrative unfolds as a string
of episodes interrelated either by continuity or by opposition with regard both
to characters, form of action and generic elements. From the melodramatic
intensity and treacherous luxury of Marina’s life, the film cuts to Don Pietro’s
spartan rooms of unconditional hospitability, and from his gag of staging a fic-
titious last rites during the fatal raid, we are lead to the tragedy of Pina’s death
and the detached observation of the partisans’ rescue manoeuvre. Such forms
of ‘ethical intercutting’ invest spatial and moral oppositions with an evalua-
tive commentary, while also reinforcing dramatic tensions by providing more
knowledge of the events than the protagonists themselves possess (Gottlieb
2004: 33). The frequent juxtaposition of parallel actions within the Italian and
the German sphere of action is, in that respect, telling. After Manfredi’s escape,
a cut to the Gestapo headquarters leaves little doubt as to what it meant to
have barely avoided capture, and it also explains why Manfredi’s landlady
later displays such terror at the thought of ‘ending up in via Tasso’. Suggestive
parallels can be drawn to Uomini e no, which was written and published
contemporaneously with Open City. Vittorini employs similar literary tech-
niques of cross-cutting to reinforce personal experiences with an encompassing
and ethically evaluative insight, but in reconstructing ‘the fear of everyone,
but of mine in particular. I too have fled, I too have had friends who have
been captured and killed’, Rossellini created something rather different from
98
Vittorini’s Resistance city, where the atmosphere of collective terror forms the
backdrop to scenes of urban guerrilla fights and mass executions (Rossellini
1987b: 92). Open City tends to view the Resistance through clandestine con-
nections, and only the children’s sabotage of a German train and the attack on
the German convoy represent the ‘explosive city’ the Gestapo leader Herbert
Kappler described while being sentenced to life imprisonment in Italy in 1947
(Bentivegna 2002).
The partisan attack proves, however, to convey more subtle functions
than the merely narrative one of connecting Francesco’s arrest with his and
Manfredi’s successive arrivals at the trattoria where they escape the attention
of German soldiers but fall into Marina’s trap. Set in the outskirts of EUR, an
area approximately 10 kilometres south of the city which Mussolini developed
in view of the 1942 World Fair as the very incarnation of fascist planning
and urban expansion, this manifestation of armed Resistance contains ideo-
logical undertones that appear reinforced if we consider the violent protests
Gullace’s assassination historically caused and, more specifically, the attack
in Via Rasella. Given the scale of reprisals and the contradictory sentiments
this operation had caused among both the Resistance and the citizens, it was a
particularly uneasy chapter of collective memory that could only be implicitly
evoked. This forms another contrast to Vittorini’s narrative, which moves from
a celebration of a similar GAP attack in Milan to elaborate descriptions of the
atrocious reprisal it caused.9 The film’s selective history is even more obvious
in its categorical conceptualisation of the enemy. Pina, who acts as the oracle
of popular opinion, may identify the ruins outside her house as the result of the
Allies’ liberation, and she refuses to be married by a fascist in the city hall, but
evil as such resides exclusively within the Germans. Whether they gun down
sheep for their dinner or manifest themselves through a disturbing equation of
Nazism and homosexuality, the perversity of the foreign invaders permeates
their every action. In a moment of drunken lucidity, Major Hartman severely
questions the laws of the ‘master-race’, condemning the assumption of superi-
ority and the hatred caused, but the moral ambiguity of his soliloquy is denied
the following morning when he yells at the Italian firing squad for its hesitance
to shoot a priest and dispatches Don Pietro with a furious coup de grâce.
As suggested by the opening caption that exclusively establishes Nazism as
the context for tragic and heroic stories, Open City develops a Manichean
perspective that dismisses not only the man within the beast but also the beast
within the nation’s self. The fascists who stop Francesco on his way home,
and those who raid Pina’s place, are more inclined to hunt women than the
enemies of the Reich, and the firing squad of Italian soldiers refuses, passively,
to kill Don Pietro. Even more problematic is the total exclusion of atrocious
events in which Mussolini’s men were actively involved – chiefly the deporta-
tion of the Jews in the winter of 1943–4 and the Fosse Ardeatine massacre
99
the following spring. The change in focus from Don Pappagallo, a victim
of the massacre, to Don Morosini, reveals the systematic attempt to avoid
the civil war upon which Vittorini’s narrative and philosophical perspective
focuses. In addition, while celebrating the sacrifice of exceptional priests, the
film ignores the Church’s official collaboration with fascism and its passivity
vis-à-vis Nazi-fascist violence (Forgacs 2000: 64–5; Roncoroni 2006: 33).
This systematic reduction of national conflict must be related to uneasy com-
promises between often conflicted authors and between authors and censors.
In particular, Ivanoe Bonomi, head of the multi-party government that ruled
Liberated Italy in the last year of the war, interfered with measures of a priori
censorship to align the film’s messages with the official policy of national
pacification rather than the revolutionary tendencies within the Resistance.
What the original script outlined as an explicitly anti-fascist representation
and the ideals of historical accuracy and artistic freedom with which it would
be realised had all to be sacrificed on the ‘altar of realpolitik’.10 When the time
came for Paisà, Rossellini would take a more critical stance toward conflicts
and divisions during the war for liberation, but in 1945, to evoke yesterday’s
stories meant first and foremost to provide a coherent moral basis for a
collective tomorrow.
100
whereas an evanescent view of the Palazzo della Civiltà del Lavoro which was
built with ‘a classical and monumental feeling’ as the main building for the
ultimately unrealised World Fair is all that is left to recall Mussolini’s imperial
city (Grundman 1998: 323). Symbolically, it is in the EUR district and in front
of this rationalist structure that the partisans liberate Francesco.
The extent to which Don Pietro allows the authority of hierarchical eccle-
siastic structures to disintegrate in the face of the pressing needs of providing
asylum, forging documents and assisting guerrilla fighters becomes evident
when he postpones Pina’s requested confession to honour his clandestine
mission. As they leave church together, she nevertheless leads the conversation
into a confessional mode, encouraged no doubt by the unorthodox approach
to Christian charity of a priest who acts not as a mediating judge but as an
interlocutor in questions of existential and doctrinal matters. That the wedding
comes a bit late for her condition is a lesser concern for Don Pietro; what
worries him are those who expect heavenly intervention in terrestrial suffering,
without realising that the war is a divine punishment for collective disobedi-
ence and that the only means to peace is prayer and moral change. Most note-
worthy here is not perhaps the ahistorical explanation of a conflict he fights
with historical means, nor the collective ‘us’ he accuses, making no exception
for clergy members or other privileged classes. Void of liturgical formulas, his
response to Pina’s concerns deconstructs both the sermon and the confession
and what unfolds is an unintentional act of reformulation that continues in the
Gestapo offices when Manfredi attempts to confess his subversive affiliations.
The guards interrupt them and Don Pietro is not too anxious to hear what he
probably has understood anyway and, seeing his comrade tortured to death,
he praises his mortal silence and grants him unconditional absolution. Both
interactions embrace the Christian imperative of social justice rather than Don
Pietro’s official mandate, but more than redeeming the Church by celebrating
an alternative to comfortable neutrality, as has been suggested (Marcus 1986:
51), they call for a democratisation of a sacrament that has traditionally been
questioned precisely for its reliance on authoritarian mediation.
One function of these spontaneous confessions is to give the quest for open-
ness, understood in spatial and military terms, an ideological connotation and
make it applicable to the Church but also other institutions that during fascism
had disallowed debate and diverse viewpoints. If the truncated exchange
between Manfredi and Don Dietro synthesises the Revolution and the Calvary
as roads to tolerance and freedom, the last interaction between Pina and Don
Pietro bridges the parallel processes of civil decentralisation and religious dein-
stitutionalisation. Leading away from the parish church, along the scarcely
spectacular railways and towards the mountains where partisans are fighting,
Pina and Don Pietro’s walk captures the essence of what according to Sandro
Bernardi defines Rossellini’s realism: an exploration of the sacred within
101
human interaction and the landscape (2000: 50–1). If there is a nod here to
the ‘religiosity’ and ‘choral quality’ that Rossellini identified as constants in his
work (1987b: 88–9), the idea of an essentially social concept of the sacred also
points to Open City as embedded in the ethos and culture of the Resistance,
giving space and voice to traditionally underrepresented social subjects, who
during the occupation emerged as historical agents. Pina, Don Pietro and the
others are not heroes as Manfredi explains, calmer than ever in front of the
agonising death awaiting him. At least, they are not the type of heroes fabri-
cated by fascist rhetoric. Their opposition to the totalitarian state as well as
their humble condition and individual imperfections (atheism, extramarital
pregnancy, political use of ecclesiastic privileges), prove their affinity with
Visconti’s Gino, who had already introduced the anti-hero as a new cinematic
protagonist. Born out of the ruins of the war, however, Rossellini’s characters
seek, successfully or not, to transform the wanderer’s destructive rebellious-
ness by defending their city and by engaging in historical action.
Connection between a new human type, on the one hand, and new percep-
tions of space and of cinematic narration, on the other, emerge more clearly
when Pina falls to the ground, a moment so unfathomable that when Don
Pietro embraces her lifeless body, assuming the posture and expression of a
mater dolorosa, he does not immediately administer the last rites, in contrast to
when Manfredi dies. It is not only the bystanders that feel the traumatic effects
of this scene, but the spectators, unprepared as we are for the grotesque elimi-
nation of such a central and positive character (Marcus 2008: 428). The film,
on the other hand, while tracing Pina’s movements to lay bare the environment
in which she lives and map out her position at the edges of the city, has ‘waited’
precisely for this moment (Rossellini 1995: 20). If the unexpected tragedy
serves to convey Pina’s lack of political agency through a dramatic situation
that literally silences her voice, the complete futility of her protest motivated
by passion rather than any notion of historical action also presents us with a
woman who sees and reacts, but who fails to act in other than self-destructive
ways. Existentially, as well as socially and topographically, Pina belongs to
the margins, between the ‘agent’ and ‘seer’, announcing the essentially modern
subjectivity that Deleuze sees visualised within decentralised spaces. The
images from via Montecuccioli where Pina is slain amidst destroyed buildings
and terrified inhabitants offers a rare ‘documentary record’ of Rome in 1945
as well as a suggestive indicator as to what everyday life during the occupa-
tion was like (Forgacs 2000: 22). As a cinematic space, however, it embodies
the undefined, and fragmentary quality of the ‘any-space-whatever’. Invested
by the ‘tragedy’ of sacrifice that in the late 1950s made its way into Pasolini’s
Roman poetry with such an expressivity as to mute the poet’s own voice,
the ‘neorealist landscape’ is to a great extent composed of such spaces where
unspectacular streets and ordinary people may achieve the status of emblems.
102
Within this world of the ordinary and the unspectacular, we discern the
techniques of deformation Jakobson saw as central to the formulation of new
realisms. Along similar lines, Deleuze observes that it is precisely the exclusion
of recognisable and logically interconnected spaces that separates neorealism
from traditional realism (1986: 212–13). Open City relies on conventions of
cinematic narration, but its intent to disorient us has highly innovative effects.
From the roofs of Manfredi’s apartment, the film cuts to a claustrophobic
world of evil, and eventually to a raided bakery; from an inner-city tragedy,
we are relocated to a suburban claim to justice, being constantly asked to
reflect on the individual spaces before attempting to reconstruct their logical
correlations. In response to Pasolini’s regret over neorealism’s political fail-
ures, Deleuze would point to the cinematic revolution promoted by its many
discontinuities and the potential the proliferation of empty, decentralised space
offers for rebuilding and renewal. Given their lack of inner and external con-
nections, ‘any-space-whatevers’ may be reconnected in an infinite number of
ways and constitute therefore ‘loci’ of the ‘possible’ or of ‘becoming’ (Deleuze
1986: 109). This sheds light on the conclusion of Open City at the Forte
Bravetta – a fortress which historically saw the execution of seventy-seven
anti-fascists, including Don Morosini, and later, Pietro Caruso, among other
war criminals. Decentralising the fortress itself, a series of long shots visualise
a seemingly unconfined field before the camera identifies Don Pietro, tied to a
chair in the centre, and only when Marcello and the other boys leave the site
do we see how displaced the fortress is from the city centre. Don Pietro’s last
prayer takes place in open space as does Pina’s last scream. Both sacrifices are
removed from landmarks of authority and glory, and just as the fatal passion
of Pina’s body seems to radiate in the street, so, too, does the moral and spir-
itual force of Don Pietro invest the ground beneath him. Capturing the parallel
processes of decentralisation and deinstitutionalisation, the respective spaces
of martyrial death are loci of becoming in which the new, free civilisation will
take on life. A creative entity as much as it is a reproduction of documentary
value, the cinematic city offers a model for a new social formation that leaves
room for collective redemption, but that more than anything else sets out to
offer the children of the Resistance a place of tolerance and social justice in
which to restart civic life.
103
willingly provided soldiers, tanks and German prisoners. Initial relations with
American producers grew, on the other hand, far more tenuous due not to
the film’s unconventional composition of six episodes all of which present
different situations and characters, but to the authors’ methods, the lack of
detailed plans and the rejection of stars (Rondolini 1989: 94–5). According to
Rossellini and his scriptwriters, Paisà should not ‘describe actions of war’ – in
that case Hollywood heroes would have done – but it should create a ‘realis-
tic’ and ‘faithful’ image of the Americans’ relations with the Italian people.
Such an objective demanded that actors, both American and Italian, be non-
professionals and chosen as far as possible from within the environments rep-
resented (quoted in Aprà 1987: 93). Refusing all norms of cinematic spectacle,
Rossellini insisted that faces, as well as spaces, be unknown to the screen and
found himself, once again, searching for the required capital.
When shooting started in January 1946, an original scenario written by
Amidei, Fellini, and others existed. The individual episodes were, as assistant
director Massimo Mida recalled, substantially modified and to a great degree
improvised, as the script took form day by day to incorporate the impres-
sions and human conditions of locations and actors brought forth ‘by chance’
(quoted in Faldini and Fofi 1979: 108–9). Openness towards lived material
became increasingly determining as the thought of a film developed into cin-
ematic experiment, something which is suggested by the substitution of the
provisional English title Seven from the U.S. with Paisà: a dialectal form of
paesano (fellow villager/compatriot), etymologically rooted in paese (country/
village), that embodies not only an ‘epithet’ and a ‘sign of recognition’ but also
a ‘sound’ clear and elementary enough for foreigners to assimilate (Fanara
2000: 339). Besides the shift in focus it implies from the liberating forces to
encounters between people brought together under circumstances and geo-
graphical zones defined by the war for liberation, this title also conveys the
communion and choral quality that in Rossellini’s world infuse both land-
scapes and human relations.
It was not only between Americans and Italians that a magical word of
fraternity served to establish common ground; but also within a historically
divided population that experienced the months between 1943 and 1945 very
differently (Fanara 2000: 339). Whereas underground networks were ready to
surface in Northern and Central Italy when fascism fell, Southern Italy was sub-
jected to Allied power and a useless ex-fascist leadership within a few months
and knew no Resistance. It may have escaped civil war but not socio-economic
destruction and the ideals of unity, solidarity and social reform that initially
marked the Reconstruction in the North had little or no meaning in the South
where liberation meant not the establishment of a new society, but, instead,
the return to power of great landowners and criminal organisations. These his-
torical and socio-geographic divisions illuminate the film’s twofold process of
104
recognising regional and cultural specificities, while at the same time seeking to
reconnect fragments through a journey of national recomposition. Unfolding,
as Bazin acutely observed, as the first filmic ‘equivalent to a collection of short
stories’ (2002: 277), Paisà relates the encounters respectively between: Allied
troops and civilians in Sicily; an MP (Military Policeman) and an orphan boy
in Naples; a soldier and a girl turned prostitute in Rome; a nurse and partisans
in Florence; military chaplains and friars in Emilia-Romagna; and lastly, Allied
soldiers and partisans in the Po Delta. Discovering peripheral realities and
experiences of waiting, chance encounters, warfare and unexpected moments
of loss and death, this re-enacting of the long war for liberation becomes an
artistic and moral act of reconstruction, far less equivocal and pacifying than
Open City in its intent both to view history from below and to contribute to a
national redefinition of self.
105
As was the case with Open City, story information originates from within
antagonistic sources, but the effect is not so much to elaborate on Manichean
perspectives – even the Germans, after all, manifest human qualities of exhaus-
tion and homesickness – as it is to explore encounters that evolve, gradually,
from mutual suspicion to intuitive contact. Upon arriving, the liberating
soldiers are lost in the Sicilian wilderness and would rather have completed
their thankless mission without mixing with the local people, whom they
have indiscriminately preconceived as being fascists and thus potential trai-
tors. Instead, they must accept the guidance of a simple girl who is perfectly
at ease in the obscure terrain and in the spooky tower that to them evokes
the realm of Hollywood’s Frankenstein, and not that of the war they have
come to end. The Sicilian community, on the other hand, is powerless against
foreigners with a gun (‘You are all alike’, Carmela complains to Joe ‘you, the
Germans, the fascists’). Luca, a fascist, hopes they are Germans and tries to
hinder all collaboration when it appears, to the other villagers’ relief, that
they represent the liberating forces and Tony establishes a sense of fraternity
and identification around common origins and shared objectives. The camera
works with distance and mobility to include interactions within and between
the two groups, revealing the foundation for a contact that will develop in
various directions as the campaign for liberation progresses, whereas medium
close-ups and long takes trace the understanding that emerges between the two
protagonists. Slow-motion photography of Joe falling to the ground enables us
to share Carmela’s immediate incomprehension and the beginnings of a grief
later conveyed in a studied close-up and chiaroscuro light that assign dignity
to an unsophisticated character about to meet her tragic end. Carmela’s sacri-
fice is known only to the spectator, and her body, facing the sea to which she
belongs, conveys a no less exquisite message about injustice than Pina’s.
Founded on the concreteness of historical events and socio-geographical
landscape, no diegetic information reveals that the Sicily episode was actually
shot on the Amalfi coast; that the last image of Carmela was filmed in Anzio
six months later; or that Carmela Sazio came from a Neapolitan family of poor
fishermen, and not from Sicily, as the other village people did. The Germans
were prisoners held in Allied custody, while the Americans were soldiers
stationed in Naples, who, like Carmela, invest the story with biographical
experiences. Robert Van Loon was a soldier from Jersey, emotionally attached
to the ocean like Carmela, and he possessed a natural acting talent her impas-
sive performance failed to display.11 Carmela’s major communicative force
is a matter of presence, her dark colours and clumsy body merging with the
very surroundings that estrange and deceive Joe, and the expressive valence
of the sequence resides unquestionably in their exchanges. Among the words
Joe lists to align his experiences with hers – including ‘spaghetti’, ‘mangiare’,
‘c’est la guerre’ (which he mistakes for Italian) and ‘Carmela’ – it is ‘paisà’ that
106
captures the sense of identification and fraternity brought forth during this
unpredicted encounter. The overlapping in this episode of English, German,
and Italian spoken with foreign or Sicilian accents establishes the polyphonic
immediacy and proliferation of vernacular expression Rossellini had experi-
mented with since La nave bianca and made a primary basis for claims to
authenticity in Open City. This and the successive episodes of Paisà provide,
however, an even stronger sense of a ‘linguistic Babel captured live’ thanks to
the economic possibility this time of shooting with sound and the considerable
reduction of standard Italian conventionally used in pre-war cinema.12
2. Moving from the temple at Paestum outside Salerno, where white crosses
mark the sacrifices of Allied soldiers, through Vesuvius to a harbour where
military material is being unloaded, the second episode brings us to Naples
which by the end of September 1943 had become the logistic centre for the war
in Italy. The film’s interest is however not in the official life of this port city, but
in its children who, like the Roman street boys featured in Di Sica’s contem-
porary Shoeshine, have had to grow up, despite themselves, making whatever
they can at the outdoor market. Pascà is hired to look out for the police while
his friends try to sell Joe – a black MP too drunk to defend himself – as if he
were a black-marketable object, but he takes him instead to a puppet show
where Roland, the legendary knight of Italian Renaissance epics, is featured
in a battle with his Saracen enemy. Joe interprets the religious war between
Christians and Muslims as an allegory of the racial prejudice he lives with in
America, and he jumps on the stage in defence of the black knight, causing
anger among the puppeteers and spectators in a manner that recalls the equally
legendary adventures of Pinocchio. While forming a comic contrast to images
of severe social disintegration, the sequence also demonstrates the intactness,
amidst ruins and alarming living conditions, of the city’s vernacular traditions.
Neapolitan collective life and proverbial expressivity is personified by Pascà,
who with a thief’s honesty warns the inexperienced MP about falling asleep,
since by nature and by necessity, he will steal his shoes. When a few days later
Joe catches Pascà helping himself to supplies from a military truck, he demands
to meet his parents and is brought to the Mergellina Caves where the boy lives
along with many of the 200,000 Neapolitans whose homes were destroyed
during the war (Ginsborg 1990: 37). Astonished by the view of a neglected
city, Joe enquires in broken Italian about his parents (‘Dov’è mamma e papà?’)
and understands, as Pascà imitates the sound of bombs, why the children of
Naples steal.
The encounter between the orphan and the foreigner evolves through
aimless wanderings and small adventures; through looks and gestures and
eventually also music as Pascà plays the harmonica while Joe responds with a
spiritual about life’s tribulations. This picaresque composition reflects qualities
that the non-professional actors, Alfonso Bovino and Dots Johnson, brought
107
108
complains, recalling how different everyone was when he first arrived in Rome
and met a girl named Francesca. A flashback-sequence reconstructs the previ-
ously documented arrival of the Allies with Fred as a hero who is invited into
Francesca’s middle-class home, presumably shared with her parents. In a city
whose piazzas look alike to the foreigner, Fred has failed to relocate her apart-
ment building and he is unaware that the ‘happy’ and ‘fresh’ girl is the stranger
he has just met. Francesca moves to the edge of the bed, in front of the camera,
while he dozes off behind her, and two sequence shots capture their distance
as she explains quietly that many Italian girls have overcome hardship in more
honest ways, an affirmation proven by the usher in the cinema who refused the
money she offered. The next day before leaving the city, Fred throws away the
note with her address, while she waits until night-time outside her old house
for a reconciliation that will never happen.
It is in particular the conventional narrative, reinforced by medium shots
and rapid editing, and the fictionalised characters, that makes this episode so
out of place in a film considered the manifesto of neorealism precisely for its
openness, visually and ideologically, to historical realities and for its decon-
struction of generic conventions. The nostalgic look at lost love caused by an
instance of fate but actually deeply rooted in socio-economic conditions may
recall French poetic realism, and the last shot of Francesca, dressed up in the
cold December rain to evoke the sun and smiles of the Liberation reaches a
similar melancholic beauty. Although most contemporary critics, including
Bazin, glossed over the episode as a pathetic, or even ridiculous, story at the
margins of the film’s true themes because it failed to achieve the dark tones of
human insight and socio-political commentary of Renoir and Carné,15 we must
appreciate the singularity of the flashback structure – unique in Rossellini’s
oeuvre – which juxtaposes the past (June 1944) to the present (December
1944) to suspend the film’s progression and question the historical processes it
traces (Fanara 2000: 369–70). The first encounter takes place in daylight and
is marked by joy after months of waiting (‘What took you so long?’ Francesca
asks Fred): the second is nocturnal and presents the disintegration of the collec-
tive spirit. This distinction of before and after reproposes the Manichean vision
of Open City with a crucial difference. The attempt in the former to downplay
conflict and forge an image of national unity and innocence could, in 1946, no
longer be upheld; instead, it recognises that the corruption and moral degrada-
tion previously ascribed to traitors and enemies resides within the city itself. At
a moment when the ‘springtime’ Pina longs for is unmasked as an illusion and
Don Pietro’s sacrifice stands out as a lost opportunity for collective rebuilding,
the rain may purge the fallen woman but it cannot restore the hopes she had or
make her what she might have been.
4. The Florence episode takes us back to August 1944 when the material and
moral reverberations of the war are still to come. Archive footage featuring the
109
arrival of the Allies through the Tuscan hills and tanks preparing for attack,
leads smoothly into the fictional section where military ambulances filled with
soldiers and partisans arrive at an infirmary. The voiceover recounts briefly
the state of the city: only the southern side of Arno is controlled by the Allies
and across the river partisans are fighting Nazi-fascists. The temporal gap
before and after the liberation of the previous episode is therefore collapsed
into a standstill where both moments occur in the present. Wounded parti-
sans relate news from the war on the northern side and Harriet, an American
volunteer at the hospital, learns that a painter she knew before the war has
become the legendary partisan leader Lupo. Abandoning her duties, she sets
out to find him and arrives at the Palazzo Pitti where the word is spreading
that Lupo is wounded. Massimo joins her in the hazardous project of crossing
the river where the Germans have destroyed all bridges apart from the Ponte
Vecchio, and in the chaos of ruins and constant shooting, they almost forget
the obvious solution of the Corridorio Vasariano.16 Breaking the barricade of
partisans committed to keeping this passageway hidden from the enemy, they
venture over to the other side where streets void of civil life offer an arena for
German patrols and urban guerrilla fights. Disregarding once again the par-
tisans’ instructions, Massimo crosses the street to reach his family, escaping
bullets that instead hit a resistance fighter. Before he dies in Harriet’s arms,
the wounded partisan announces that Lupo has just died, unaware of her
acquaintance with him, while the other partisans execute a group of fascists.
Harriet’s story of lost love presents as many implausible coincidences as
Francesca’s and it is no less fictionalised, if we consider the historical impos-
sibility in 1944 of crossing the Uffizi Gallery and the bizarre encounters first
with two British officers who contemplate the famous cityscape while waiting
for their troops to arrive – the implicit critique being far from subtle – and
an equally unconcerned World War I veteran analysing the warfare from his
roof. Nonetheless, the quest through Renaissance Florence gains a consider-
able sense of authenticity thanks both to the prevalence of outdoor scenes
shot in natural light and with spacious frames outlining the protagonists’
milieu and to its anchorage in the Resistance, which is guaranteed by the co-
operation of ex-partisans in telling the story, including the Florentine novelist
Vasco Pratolini (Faldini and Fofi 1979: 109). The passage through crowds,
endless ruins and devastating chance encounters delineate divisions between
the liberated side of the city, where collective life is flourishing again, and the
other, where social interaction is anxious and confined to domestic spheres.
Both the civilians’ passive resistance and the adventurous wanderers’ selfless
search contrasts with the partisans’ actions, whose commitment and sacrifice
is emblematised by the execution of the fascists and the deaths of Lupo and
the partisan. These are the dramatic moments that we have waited for and
which make the protagonists’ dilemma appear secondary to the collective
110
cause they constantly jeopardise. From the partisans who arrive at the hospital
with an urgent need to tell and the crowd discussing Lupo’s critical situation,
to the partisans’ unitary defence and final act of punishment, this cause per-
sonifies the oral quality Calvino associated with the Resistance. While reaching
another level of immediacy to the partisan war compared to Open City, Paisà
also radically revisions its selective history: the resister who falls in the street
the way Pina does, his body evoking the Deposition of Christ until Harriet’s
Madonna-like figure embraces it, is significantly not killed by a foreign brute
(Zagarrio 2005: 90). There is a clear intent to celebrate the partisans who were
instrumental historically in the liberation of Florence where the northern side
was temporarily governed by the Tuscan CLN (Ginsborg 1990: 55). However,
in dramatising the civil war that Open City carefully avoids, this episode also
conveys that for an act of commemoration to serve, as it should, to ensure that
the past not be repeated, it would have to account not merely for innocent
deaths and glorious sacrifices, but also for the many contradictions, conflicts
and betrayals involved in the war for liberation.
5. Approaching the last and toughest phase of the war, the penultimate
episode opens with battle scenes reinforced by a voiceover stating the
impregnable quality of the Gothic Line – the German defence line that kept
the Allies immobile across central Italy until April 1945, despite attempted
breakthroughs dating from the previous fall. From this parafictional section
the film cuts to a monastery in the Aventine mountains, at the moment when
the ceasefire is announced. The friars gather to thank the Lord for the restored
order; some farmers come to retrieve animals left in their custody, but it is
the arrival of three American army chaplains that makes this day unusual.
The strangers are served homemade liquer and they reciprocate with army
rations and news from the conflict that has left their monastery comfortably
untouched. Not until the friars discover that two of their guests, Jones and
Feldman are respectively Lutheran and Jewish is their cordiality and curiosity
challenged. Approaching Martin, who speaks Italian and professes the ‘true
faith’, the guardian father asks whether he has not ‘scrutinised’ his friends’
‘conscience’ and attempted to save them, but their uncontested dogma is as
foreign to Martin as is his relativistic understanding of faith to them. The
tension increases during dinner when the cook, provided with gifts from the
farmers, comes up with a meal none of them have seen for ages only to leave
it exclusively to the guests. Such a sacrifice will presumably ensure that the
two lost souls be illuminated by divine light, the guardian father explains with
a bigotry accentuated by a close-up that reveals his literally and physically
unreceptive eyes, whereas Martin, even more perplexed than before, responds
by thanking them for the lesson of ‘humility, simplicity, and pure faith’ and
concludes with an invitation to peace. In contrast to the agonising images of
loss that close the other episodes, this retreat from the horrors of the war leaves
111
the spectator confused over the enormous gap between the incomprehension of
the friars and their guests’ essentially ambiguous expression of gratitude and
recognition.
The idea of a place ‘the war had touched but without entering it, a human
collective left intact and primitive’ came from a monastery on the Amalfi coast
where this episode in fact was shot. For the Southern friars to welcome a film
crew and American actors, among whom there were a Jewish and a Protestant
chaplain, presented no reason for scandal, but an ‘unusual air of holiday’ that
nevertheless never challenged their conviction of professing the only ‘truth’
(Mida, quoted in Faldini and Fofi 1979: 109; Aprà 1987: 142). Through these
highly unusual circumstances, the idea of historically contingent encoun-
ters between strangers are related to more universal questions of cultural
and religious differences. Upon arriving, Martin speaks solemnly about the
monastery’s foundation before America was even discovered, but Jones and
Feldman joke about miracles and wonder if the Franciscans are still living in
the 1400s, suggesting that if America once was associated with nature and the
monastery with culture, this binary relationship has now been turned upside
down. The Hershey bars and canned food constitute marvels within a humble
kitchen based on garden produce and Providence, but the true progress of the
‘New World’ is reflected in the open-minded chaplains, two of whom have
entered into a forbidden religious domain (Martini 2005: 110). Coming from
a society constructed on difference, and, more recently, from an immersion in
the present that constantly exposes the fleeting nature of life, Feldman is justi-
fied in wondering: ‘How can they judge us and life if they do not know what
surrounds us?’ True to his faith, Martin may admire the friars’ ‘joy’, so simple
in its limitedness, but he cannot consider as mistaken, or even different, the
chaplains with whom he has shared a historical mission. Lingering between
commotion and irony, the speech he delivers reproposes the questions of toler-
ance, openness and democratisation of the sacred that Rossellini had played
with already in L’uomo dalla croce, where an Italian army chaplain dies while
giving the last rites to a Russian soldier, and which was developed in Open
City. Don Pietro significantly shares the Americans’ view of the need to live
in contact with people’s immediate, concrete realities, as well as the ability to
respect people of different views and beliefs, provided there is unity around the
search for peace.
6. From the Apennines, the journey proceeds to the Po, the river running
from Piedmont to Veneto where it empties into the Adriatic Sea, forming the
vast delta in which the final act of discovery and commemoration unfolds. No
archive footage from the war introduces this segment; instead, long takes of
a corpse drifting down the quiet stream, sustained by a lifejacket and labelled
‘partisan’, lead us directly into a crudely verisimilar reconstruction of a war
fought by partisans and American OSS soldiers in harmonious unity. Shots
112
from both sides of the river banks show what reaction the death of yet another
partisan causes respectively among civilians, some German soldiers, and,
finally, Dale and Cigolani, who in order to retrieve the body explode a mine to
distract the Nazi guards. While the unknown partisan is buried, some of Dale’s
OSS colleagues bitterly relate the last orders from Allied Headquarters to cease
all operations and for the partisans to go home. Meanwhile, ammunition and
provisions will be dropped during the night, on signals that will not escape the
guards. ‘We will die anyhow’, one of them concludes, ‘but that’s a small matter
for headquarters.’ To reciprocate for the eels and polenta they are provided
with by the farmers at the Casal Madalena, Dale leaves mosquito repellent
for a child, and only when he returns to the farmstead after the supply drop
has failed and discovers the massacred family and the screaming child, does he
realise the fatality of this exchange. Several successive events- an aerial battle,
the rescue of two British pilots from the crashed plane, the warning from other
British soldiers about the rapid advance of well-equipped Nazi forces – all
indicate the impending defeat. Seeing how the battle is evolving, one partisan
shoots himself; Dale is out of bullets and throws his rifle; and one of the British
soldiers lights a cigarette, before they are all captured and separated. When
dealing with the Anglo-Americans the Germans intend to respect the Geneva
Convention, whereas the partisans are tied up outside and thrown into the
river the following morning. In an act of protest as spontaneous as Pina’s, Dale
jumps up and cries out, manifesting an unconditional solidarity with those
who fight not for the British Empire, as one of his colleagues observes, but for
their life. ‘This happened in the winter of 1944’, the voiceover concludes. ‘A
few months later the war was over.’
Historically embedded in a communication broadcast from the headquarters
of General Alexander, the Chief Commander in Italy, on 13 November 1944,
the episode gives testimony to the depressing implications of his order – only
partially obeyed – to ‘cease all large-scale organized operations’ and go home,
not only because these ‘homes’, if they existed, were surrounded by Germans,
but more significantly because the partisans were unwilling to sit down and
wait to be liberated (Pavone 1994: 667). If the retreat from the historical
conflict to the monastery may be considered as symbolically representing the
months of stagnation in the Allied campaign, this immersion into a struggle
the war bulletins neglected and that, as the narrator observes, was perhaps
more difficult and desperate than any other, gives voice to the operations and
the many deaths caused during the winter crisis of 1944. Both episodes relied
on the personal qualities and invaluable testimonies of actors playing them-
selves – the friars provided material around which to improvise a scenario,
as did the farmers and Cigolani, a hunter who had helped the partisans in the
area – but the dramatisation of the encounter between soldiers and partisans
is unique both in its fidelity to life and its ability to capture the film’s thematic
113
Figure 4.1 Dale shortly before he is killed by Nazi soldiers in Rossellini’s Paisà.
Courtesy of the Fondazione Centro Sperimentale di Cinematografia.
114
experiences with the perceptions of those who live and die ‘between sky and
water’. Identification with the characters is therefore encouraged not on the
basis of subjective shots which limit autonomy, but, on the contrary, on deep-
focus photography and reduced editing which allow us to view the diegetic
world the way we would in reality. Within this visual field, the characters’
movements and interactions, as well as single events such as the killing of an
eel and the screams of a terrified child are allowed to appear in all their exten-
sions and ambiguity. Observing the force such ‘facts’, or fragments ‘of brute
reality, in itself both multiple and equivocal’, assume as signifying elements,
Bazin concludes that ‘the unit of cinematographic narration in Paisà is not
the shot, an abstract perspective on the analysed reality, but the fact’ (2002:
281). As the viewer must interconnect singular objects for their significance to
emerge, hence allowing the appearance of the ‘facts’ to precede the construc-
tion of meaning, this form of composition presents all aspects of the pro-filmic
as ‘equally apparent’. Since human life is not privileged over other facts, the
actors acquire much more meaning from the environment than in conven-
tional film (Bazin 2002: 281–2). Far from connected by logic and causality, the
intrinsically ambiguous nature of these ‘fact-images’ is reinforced by the ‘ellip-
sis’ they leave in the story. How the Americans and the partisans got together
in the first place is never explained and how the Germans learned about the
farmers’ hospitality and why the child and the dog are still alive remain unre-
solved (Bazin 2002: 279). In light of this, we can appreciate why Bazin would
refer to the reportage and fragmentary narrative of Hemingway and Steinbeck,
among other American writers, as having inspired a mode of cinematic narra-
tion that in the aim for a total vision, alludes, suggests and shows, without ever
demonstrating relations between the facts of the world represented.
In search for the man within the beast: Germania anno zero
The thought of having once been banned from the Italian film industry must
have amused Rossellini at a time when Open City and Paisà were awarded
and applauded for months in the world’s capitals and neither the French nor
the other occupying forces in Germany hindered him and assistant director,
Carlo Lizzani, from filming in Berlin, despite their belonging to an ex-enemy.17
After the focus on everyday tragedies and non-heroic characters had mainly
served national memory and regional representation, the time had come to
look towards those for whom the Liberation had meant defeat. Rooted in
a conviction that ‘the Germans were human beings like anyone else’, the
project reflected both a need to understand ‘what could possibly have brought
them towards a similar disaster?’ and an aspiration to create a ‘just’, albeit
‘incomplete’ image of Germany (Rossellini, quoted in Faldini and Fofi 1979:
111–12). Nonetheless, Germania anno zero does not lead towards the genesis
115
of a historical catastrophe, but to an innocent boy who when the only world
he knows lies shattered in front of him, is lead by false ideals of strength and
heroism to the cruellest of crimes. What confronts him with the monstrousness
of his act is a ‘little flame of morality’ that totalitarian destruction has failed to
extinguish (Rossellini, quoted in Faldini and Fofi 1979: 111–12). Elaborating
on the neorealist topus of child focalisers and deprived childhoods, the film
moves from socio-historically specific events through mental spaces to arrive at
more universal experiences that escape Manichean categorisation.
Shot in August 1947 after months of research and an endless search for
funding, Edmund’s story came to life around a schematic treatment that out-
lined each passage except its tragic finale (Rondolini 1989: 117–21). Research
conducted into the topographic and socio-economic conditions of Berlin, and
of its youth in particular, was incorporated as the script took form during
filming in collaboration with the French writer, Max Colpet. All location
shooting in Berlin was completed in less than two months, but the regulations
of the Franco-Italian production required that indoor scenes be completed in
Rome months later. Except for scenes involving American soldiers and French
bar customers who give a sense of the linguistic presences in Allied-occupied
Berlin, the film was shot in German and starred professionals alongside ‘dis-
coveries’ such as Edmund Meschke in whom Rossellini would have recognised
the seven-year-old son, Romano, he had lost a year earlier (Lizzani 2009).
Authentic speech and locations and the dramatisation of everyday concerns
and interactions are coherent with Rossellini’s previous films, but it is in par-
ticular the initial idea that is allowed to develop in relation to spaces, testimo-
nies, and impressions, as well as the primacy of long takes and spatiotemporal
duration, that confirm his ‘method’. Beneath opening credits and a dedication
in memoriam to Romano, the destroyed city is introduced by a tracking shot
moving rightward along a deserted road to map out wastelands of ruins. In
the Italian release print, a caption establishes the historical and ideological
context before the same shots reappear, accompanied this time by the direc-
tor’s voiceover. Conceived of as an ‘objective’ and ‘faithful’ portrait of ‘an
immense semi-destroyed city in which 3.5 million drag out a dreadful and
desperate existence [. . .] not by faith, or spirit, but by tiredness,’ Germania
anno zero presents neither a defence, nor an accusation but a ‘quiet attesta-
tion of facts’ aimed at provoking awareness of the urgent needs of Germany’s
children.18
Objectivity, as always in Rossellini, is best understood in terms of a look
that by seeking distance to and room around the facts of the story facilitates
an autonomous perception of the diegetic world, without allowing indiffer-
ence towards it. Although these and successive exterior shots document the
appalling state Berlin still found itself in two years after the war, the material
is selected and constructed in far from neutral ways to make us reflect on the
116
117
social relations, and the constant search for scarce provisions and questionable
incomes are paralleled by a total lack of vision for the future that was unseen
even in Francesca’s Rome. While the extensive, undefined areas and the dis-
connected streets recall the spatial characteristics of Open City and Paisà, the
ghostly atmosphere is unique to Edmund’s world, infusing both the uninhab-
ited inner-city zone of Alexandersplatz where he lives and the obscure suburbs
he is driven into by the street kids Cristil and Jo, who are acquainted with
Henning and experts in fraudulent transactions. The vast, deserted spaces con-
trast sharply with his claustrophobic apartment but they are no less ensnaring
to Edmund who gets lost and must spend the night outdoors. His encounters
and movements within the city’s exteriors are, however, entirely unpredictable
and bring him ultimately far away from the ‘happy ending’ outlined in the
story treatment. Compared for example to the calculated gestures with which
he takes the poison into the hospital and infuses it in a tea made exclusively for
his father, his playful zigzag jumping from relic to relic and his visits to ruined
buildings suggests that these sequences were largely improvised (Rondolini
1989: 119). As Bazin observed, however, none of these moments are tainted
by the ‘sentimental sympathy’ that tends to arise from child characters – Open
City and the Naples episode in Paisà being no exceptions. No signs on the
child’s face allow us to conclude anything more about ‘his indifference and
his cruelty, than of his possible sorrow’ (Bazin 2002: 123), and only when he
realises the impossibility of going home, turning to Henning who hysterically
disapproves of the implementation of his own teachings, do we see the despair
behind the child’s apparently unconcerned and unmotivated use of space. In
a last attempt to recover lost innocence, Edmund seeks to intervene in some
smaller children’s play, but their resolute disapproval only affirms his irrevers-
ible exclusion from the kingdom of childhood.
Driven away from all spheres of belonging – domestic, instructive, rec-
reational, authoritative or affective – the abandoned city-dweller follows a
long, lifeless street flanked on each side by uninhabited, demolished houses.
His path is captured by a deep-focus photography that maps out no social
ambience but rather a sinister immensity of distinctly gothic features. All of a
sudden, this physical and mental necropolis is infused by a diegetic, initially
off-screen organ music originating from a semi-destroyed church. Someone
plays the tune of Handel’s ‘Ombra mai fu’ – an aria that, in suggestive contrast
to the scene’s visuals, features the title character, Xerxes, as he contemplates
the beauty and peacefulness of his plane tree. Along with other mesmerised
wanderers, Edmund stops for a while before running away, as if afraid to seize
the salvation this moment of spontaneous serenity might offer. A cut leads
back to ruins and to hellish extra-diegetic rhythms introducing his last walk
towards death. That the suicide, in contrast to the patricide, is the spontaneous
outcome of growing self-annihilation appears when he reaches the last floor
118
119
Figure 4.2 Edmund in Rossellini’s Germania anno zero. Courtesy of the Fondazione
Centro Sperimentale di Cinematografia.
identifying in the story ‘loose, free, full of breaks’ a freedom from pre-existing
uses of the cinematic language (Rohmer 1985: 205–6) that made it ‘our
cinema;’ a unique starting point for aspiring directors of the emergent nouvelle
vague (Rivette 1985: 203). This recognition of an anti-traditionalism the critics
illustratively compared to the modern visions of Mozart and Édouard Manet
intuits the line of continuity Deleuze would draw from Bazin’s notes on the
‘disconnected’ neorealist narrative to the ‘time-image’ which originates in the
visions of immobilised characters who disjoin the causal chain between percep-
tion and action. To consider Edmund a ‘seer’ incapable of performing actions
without failing (to work, to secure provisions, to trade without being cheated)
and as someone who dwells in fragmented space and counted time while con-
templating his life void of a future allows us better to account for the film’s
position between the classical and the modern cinema and for the testimony
it bears both to the life of a post-war city and to the existential and emotional
effects of historical catastrophes.
120
Notes
1. See Rossellini (1987a: 91–2). The film was completed after the war by Marcello
Pagliero who stars as Manfredi in Open City.
2. The ‘policemen in Nazi uniform’ who made their daily march to via Rasella in the
centre of Rome were, as recently explained by Rosario Bentivegna who took part
in the attack, ‘not there by chance: they were in fact “volunteers” who had chosen
the police and not the army, for two reasons: to avoid the extremely harsh Russian
front and to get higher pay. With this noble intent, they had sworn fidelity to Hitler
. . .’ (2007: 22).
3. On the basis of a reconstruction of the original screenplay, testimonies and docu-
ments, Stefano Roncoroni has demonstrated that both Consiglio, Feruccio Disnan,
and Ivo Perilli were involved at various stages and to a varying degree in writing
either the story treatment or the script until conflict with Amidei made them leave
the project (2006: 32; 52; 419; 432–4). As for the ‘collective paternity’ of Italian
scripts more generally, Bazin observed that: ‘Almost all credits of Italian films
present a dozen names under the heading “script”. One should not take this impos-
ing collaboration too seriously. It has more than anything else the function of
providing the producer with very ingenuous political cautions: usually there are the
names of a Christian Democrat and a communist (as in the films there is a Marxist
and a priest). The third scriptwriter is famous for knowing how to construct a story,
the fourth to identify the gags, the fifth because he creates good dialogues, the sixth
“because he knows the meaning of life” etc. [. . .] this interdependence is best com-
pared to the improvisation of commedia dell’arte or of hot jazz’ (Bazin 2002: 275).
4. See Rossellini (1987a: 101–3 and 1995, 11–12). For a substantial account in
English of the genesis of Open City see Gallagher (1998).
5. Out of a total budget of 11. 246. 579 Lire, Fabrizi’s honorary reached 830 000,
against the 1000 000 that he initially requested, whereas Magnani had to content
herself with 440 000 (Roncoroni, 2006, 399–400).
6. This study of Open City, as well as of Paisà and Germania anno zero, is based
on the 2009 The Criterion Collection ‘Roberto Rossellini’s War Trilogy’, which
reproduces the films’ original release print. Some scene-description may therefore
not correspond to previous Anglo-American versions.
7. The episode replicates Amidei’s own experiences from escaping a Nazi raid; it was
shot in the apartment at the Spanish Steps where he lived and where Rossellini and
many others had been hiding during the occupation (Roncoroni 2006: 429).
8. It is the second time in a week that Pina and the other women raid the local baker.
Such desperate measures against starvation allude to a radical reduction in bread
rations that was introduced by the fascists, in agreement with the Nazis, on 25
March 1944 – the day after the Fosse Ardeatine massacre. Along with the deaths
of Don Pappagallo, Gullace and Don Morosini, which all occurred in March–April
1944, this episode enables us to locate the diegesis of Open City in the late winter/
early spring of 1944 (Roncoroni 2006: 351).
9. One of the several points of disagreement between the scriptwriters was the ques-
tion whether to represent, or not, the GAP attack in via Rasella which Amidei, a
member of the Communist Party, considered a deed of the partisans, but which
many others condemned as the cause of the Fosse Ardeatine massacre. Both epi-
sodes were eventually left out of the script due to the conflicting views they had
provoked not only within the CLN, and the Communist Party more specifically,
but also among the citizens (Roncoroni 2006: 432).
10. The original screenplay stated explicitly, and with historical accuracy, that the
firing squad responsible for Don Pietro’s execution belonged to a branch of the
121
122
Like the East, Italy lives in the streets. Instead of dressing up like a man of
the people, the caliph dresses up like a movie camera. He goes in search of
mysterious intrigues unfolding in the streets and in the houses. In Miracle
in Milan, De Sica brings the Eastern narrative to its extreme.
Jean Cocteau, Le passé défine [1956–7]
123
in contact with life,’ his article implicitly claimed authorial rights to an area of
cinematic exploration, while the image of the emergent director as an investi-
gator of worlds beyond the comfortable bourgeoisie aimed more crucially at
contributing to collective processes of cinematic rebuilding (De Sica 1994a:
237).
A year earlier, Zavattini had welcomed a destroyed film industry and lack
of producers as the source of a freedom that was indispensable for an innova-
tive and honest cinema. Several steps towards industrial reorganisation were,
however, taken in the wake of the war and Shoeshine enjoyed, as a conse-
quence, a more stable, if lower, budget than Open City.1 The limited techni-
cal resources were, on the other hand, very similar, as was the amalgamation
of old and new methods. Milieus and institutions such as the reformatory of
Porta Portese were researched for inspiration and accuracy, but indoor scenes
were still reconstructed in a studio, and while most of that cast presented
‘unseen faces’ and actors ‘not yet corrupted by the profession’, as was De Sica’s
ideal, Emilio Cigoli establishes on the contrary an intriguing intertextual con-
nection between the prison supervisor Staffera he personifies and the suicidal
father he played in I bambini ci guardano (De Sica 1997: 11). Of the leading
actors, only Franco Interlenghi (Pasquale) was discovered by chance on the
street; Rinaldo Smordini (Giuseppe) was selected after repeated screen tests,
whereas the two orphans De Sica had featured in his article and whose sad
lives and passion for horses inspired the film, he considered ‘too ugly, almost
deformed’, to play themselves (De Sica 1994b: 251–2). The commitment to
reality is thus not absolute: while the search for unknown performers breaks
with the conventions of the cinema, it depends on aesthetic sensitivities that
undermine the very real-life characters and re-enactment that Zavattini would
advocate as a means to consciousness and solidarity (2002: 314–15).
Shoeshine reproposed both the inconsistencies and achievements of Open
City, but it missed its timeliness and denied its optimism and this may explain
why the film that in 1947 won Italy’s first Oscar ruined everyone except
American and French distributors, although competition from previously
banned American productions also severely reduced its commercial viabil-
ity (De Sica 1994b: 251–2). What favoured De Sica and Zavattini was the
political climate in which they worked. In the autumn and winter of 1945, the
preventive censorship of films practised during fascism was temporarily halted
and the unprecedented freedom of speech introduced by the Liberation was
still alive (Argentieri 1974: 62–4), thanks to the coalition formed by the six
anti-fascist parties of the CLN and headed by the ex-partisan leader Feruccio
Parri. Despite inner tensions and shortcomings in front of the country’s urgent
need of purgation and reform, the commitment of this administration to rep-
resentative legitimacy nurtured hopes that the Reconstruction would bring
something more than a mere return to the pre-fascist state (Ginsborg 1990:
124
89–93). The following year, things were already starting to change. Shoeshine
waited for months to be released, and while it escaped censorial intervention
it was one of the films that made ex-fascists ‘re-raise the tone of their voice:
too much misery! too many shoe-shiners and prostitutes in Italian films’
(Argentieri 1974: 70–1). Considering the civic conscience, the break of con-
ventions and transient artistic freedom at play, it ultimately reaches beyond its
depressive tone and vision in fusing the call for a total reorganisation of society
with that of cultural renewal.
Stolen dreams
Set in Rome a few months after the arrival of the Allies, Shoeshine lingers
spatiotemporally between Open City and the Rome segment of Paisà, reject-
ing the vision of hope announced in the former for the fusion of nostalgia
and disintegration in the latter. No panoramic view introduces the Eternal
City, but instead a high-angle long shot of a barren, spacious hall with a high
ceiling and large windows that through the shadows reflected on the floor
are revealed as barred. The function of this location is still unidentified, but
the chiaroscuro lighting and the dramatic turns in the initially playful score
suggest what awaits the ragged shoeshiners evoked in the title and who in the
next scene appear horse-riding in the sunlit gardens of the Villa Borghese. For
Giuseppe and Pasquale, this is a treasured moment of escape from the aban-
donment and illegitimacy that make them easy prey for delinquents, such as
Panza and Giuseppe’s brother, Attilio. To push some American blankets on a
licensed fortune-teller seems like a straight deal and not even when the instiga-
tors of the affair turn up at the woman’s place, ushering them out with enough
cash to finally buy their horse, do they see the plot they have been lured into.
These and the increasingly disquieting events that follow are permeated by a
comic vein equally indebted to Zavattini’s invention and De Sica’s direction,
but neither the stylised caricatures nor the amusing dialogue undermine the
exposure of degradation within and beyond a post-fascist officialdom.
The theme of justice announced in the opening shot is developed in its social
and juridical implications through the boys’ spheres of interaction, starting
with their workstation. The location of the US embassy and the city’s most
luxurious hotels, via Veneto would later be depicted as the hangout of celebri-
ties and scandal sheet journalists in Fellini’s La dolce vita (1959), but in 1944
it was a locus of the black market and low-cost shoeshining. The inner-city
street is therefore an obvious place for the police to search for the two indicted
street kids who benefit from the tragically needed opportunities it offers, while
also being subjected to its many traps since, as Pasquale acutely observes, they
are not labour-organised and are constantly taken advantage of.2 An orphan
who spent months sleeping in an elevator, he now lives with Giuseppe’s family
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there for months without a hearing. Besides Arcangeli whose offences convey
a rebellion against his affluent parents, the inmates, whether guilty of armed
robbery or patricide, are victims of desperate poverty and in most cases have
been abandoned by their parents. The sick and malnourished Raffaele, who
ultimately dies in jail, is left with the disappointment of receiving a stranger
in his mother’s place, and only after prison guards have tricked Pasquale into
talking, does Giuseppe’s mother visit, reproaching him not for having ended
up in jail but for having betrayed his brother. From this point on, their friend-
ship is transformed, in spite of themselves, into a relation of enmity that finds
truce only in the transient moment of a fight between Pasquale and Arcangeli.
For the rest, it entails betrayal, hate and destruction orchestrated by forces and
interests foreign to their universe.
The passing from relative freedom to captivity is delineated through the
opposition of closed and open spaces that both replicates and pays homage
to the structures of Open City (Casetti 1994). Rather than proceeding from a
state of captivity to anticipation of freedom and rebuilding, the film starts in
more or less unconfined spaces (Villa Borghese; via Veneto; the Tiber) in order
to move to increasingly constraining spheres (the fortune-teller’s apartment;
the school; the police van) and ends up in the reformatory. Whereas the exte-
riors are often captured by deep-focus photography that maps out the boys’
marginal position but also their pleasures and use of the city, their progressive
loss of freedom is conveyed through distorted angles and camera positions
that nail them behind bars and inside claustrophobic cells. The passage from
relative freedom to total reclusion is delineated by opposing closed and open
spaces and this both replicates and reveres the structures of Open City (Casetti
1994). Rather than proceeding from a state of captivity to anticipation of
freedom and rebuilding, the film starts in more or less unconfined spaces (Villa
Borghese, via Veneto; the Tiber) in order to locate increasingly constraining
spheres (the fortune teller’s apartment; the school; the police van) and end up
in the reformatory. Whereas the exteriors are often captured by deep-focus-
photography that maps out the boys’ marginal position as well as their ability
to use and find evasion in the city, their life behind bars is conveyed through
distorted angles and camera positions that nail them claustrophobically to
spaces of darkness and hostility. A close-up accentuates the violent separation
of their tied hands as they are forced into separate cells while a high-angle shot
delineates Pasquale’s isolation from the other inmates who, with the exception
of Raffaele, all accept Giuseppe’s misinformed denouncement of Pasquale as a
‘spy’. Evoking, as Bondanella has observed, Welles and French interwar film,
this form of mise-en-scène editing serves, like the other spatial and stylistic
juxtapositions, to visualise the destruction of childhoods as a direct result of
adults’ self-interest (2009: 82–3). The social accusations implied in the shoe-
shiners’ story are most clearly voiced during the court defence of Giuseppe and
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Attilio when lawyer Bonavio states that if they are found guilty, then guilty
are also ‘all of us, us human beings, who in following our passions, abandon
[...] our children, alone, always more alone’. Having compelled Giuseppe to
blame the robbery on Pasquale, the cynical lawyer has only self-seeking inten-
tions and can only be said to confirm, by his own example, the validity of his
argument. Nonetheless, the ideological implications of his address to the judge
reside in the way it directly engages the viewer in critical discourses that are
otherwise dramatised and visualised (Casetti 1994: 75).
Even more striking than the boys’ everyday responsibilities and injustices
are, as Zavattini wrote, that ‘no one interacts with them out of interest or
duty [. . .] no one has given the two boys a bit of their own heart’ (1994: 245).
What protects them against the incapacity and egoism they face everywhere is
the affection they offer each other – a veil of solidarity that while it survives
in the streets, significantly disintegrates in the exposure to juridical and social
institutions. The judge can only perceive of criminal motives and dismisses
Giuseppe’s explanation that the horse was acquired merely for them to ‘ride
on it’, whereas the priests are content to educate and entertain by screening a
newsreel and a comedy – precisely the way the cinema operated during fascism
– seeking to distract the inmate from the depressing realities rather than bring
an end to them. When the projection equipment catches fire, leading to chaos
that Raffaele is too frail to survive while Giuseppe and Arcangeli escape to
fetch the horse, all the priests can do is pray whereas Bartoli declares his res-
ignation. To visibly disturb the abusive Staffera, whose son has recently died,
it takes the view of Giuseppe’s body spread out on the rocks after Pasquale
has confronted him with the abduction of what was their common dream.
Shot with stylised sets and lighting in a studio, the scene at the river presents a
fairy-tale atmosphere perfectly congruent with the white-haired horse running
gracefully away from the boys’ violence and the world that provokes it; from
authorities such as the judge who, insensitive to the horse’s affective value,
interprets its exchange value as sufficient evidence to condemn the least impli-
cated. In this scene, the film’s dreamlike and nightmarish dimensions reveals a
tragedy that far from offering catharsis or promises of change, severely ques-
tions whether there is a future for the children of the Liberation.
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the ambiguity in reality arrives as the far less dramatic but no less alarming
conclusion that, in a country haunted by the injustices of its past, ‘the poor, to
survive, have to steal from each other’. This is, as Bazin observed, the ‘thesis’
implied in Bicycle Thieves: the work that affirmed De Sica’s mastery interna-
tionally and that still constitutes a milestone in the history not only of Italian
post-war film, but of world cinema (Bazin 2002: 299). It was Zavattini who
first discovered Luigi Bartolini’s novel Bicycle Thieves (1946), adopting its title
and major plot elements, but the script he developed with De Sica and others
relied more fundamentally on collective wanderings around Rome in search
for a reality not to be faithfully recorded but to be ‘transfigured [. . .] a reality
transferred on a level of poetry of absolute lyricism’ (De Sica 1997: 11). Banal
events and everyday impressions, a greyish texture, a melancholic score along
with depth and distance make up the lyricism of a solitary wanderer’s search
through the urban landscape.
Antonio’s story is proverbially simple. To accept the job as a billposter he
needs the bike he just pawned. His wife Maria sacrifices their linen but the
reclaimed bike is stolen on his first workday. Searching in vain, Antonio steals
a bike and is caught. Having seen his father rise and fall from disillusioned and
unemployed, to proudly employed, to (un)employed bicycle thief humiliated
beyond belief in the course of two days, Bruno takes his hand and leads him
back to exactly where they started. Whether it was the lack of action and abun-
dance of misery or the recent commercial failure of Shoeshine that caused most
scepticism, only David Selznick found a value in the project, but his request to
cast Gary Cooper was incompatible with De Sica’s vision of a true worker with
blisters on his hands. Bicycle Thieves was shot with private funds in the streets
of Rome and its main star was Lamberto Maggiorani, chosen precisely for the
hands, gestures and movements that betrayed the factory worker in him. At his
side were Lianella Carnell – a journalist who had come to interview De Sica –
and Enzo Staiola, who was discovered on location when shooting had already
started (De Sica 2000: 25–34). The stars of a cast completely composed of
non-professionals, they demonstrate the director’s noted ability to obtain per-
formances that portray the sentiments of a situation without undermining the
actor’s own development of the character.
Why Hollywood stars would have been inappropriate is evident already
from the film’s incipit. A slow pan situates us in the uncinematic area of
Valmelaina; a borgata (lower-class neighbourhood) dumped on some waste
ground approximately ten kilometres outside the city wall. The socio-historical
context at play is established in two distinct ways: while the crowd of men
who gather at the employment office represents the average 2,100,000 of
Italy’s 46,000,000 inhabitants who in 1948 were unemployed, the concurrent
housing crisis is evoked through the rudimentary apartments where the women
line up at the water pump while the men struggle in imposed inactivity (Sitney
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1995: 91). Started and evidently never finished by fascist planners, housing
projects such as this were built to relocate the lower classes to the outskirts in
order to open up inner-city areas for road networks as well as the respectable
and politically far less threatening middle class (Sorlin 1991: 118–19). As we
can tell from the men’s discouragement and from Antonio’s endless commut-
ing, the situation creates a self-fulfilling mechanism of displacement: while
no subsidies are provided to develop the area and thus to create local jobs,
the distance from the city centre limits access to the few jobs available (Sorlin
1991: 118–19). Spinning a story around an ordinary, unemployed man dis-
placed from all means of self-betterment, the film does not spell this out but it
shows the continuity of the fascist strategies of exclusion within the Christian
Democratic administration that came to power in 1947–1948. While this year
saw invaluable and highly overdue initiatives in political reform, including
the abolishment of the monarchy by referendum, the promulgation of the
Constitution of the Italian Republic and voting rights for women, both the
lack of social reforms and the exclusion of the Communists from the govern-
ment – partly caused by disharmony within the Left but more decisively by
the Church’s alliance with the Christian Democrats and Cold War American
pressure expressed through the propagandistic implementation of Marshall
Aid – proved the limits of defascistation and the inability of the Resistance
to have a political and moral function in the country’s rebuilding (Ginsborg
1990: 104–20).
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carried away from perpetual poverty by the light of dawn and the swarm of
cycling workers. In this moment of untroubled pleasure, we can sense the
childhood Bruno has lost; while much younger than Pasquale and Giuseppe,
he completely lacks their playfulness. Antonio shares his son’s joy, and in con-
trast to the long shots that capture his isolation in Valmelaina, the last stretch
along via Nomentana into the centre is framed in a series of close-ups revealing
serenity and anticipation.
The collapse of these hopes rests on a premise so fragile and for script-
writer Amidei so ideologically wrong that he left the project, objecting that
in Italy in 1948, the Communist Party would have provided Antonio with a
bike (Moneti 1992: 247). Bazin, who considered Bicycle Thieves the most
valuable Communist film of the decade precisely because it avoids propa-
ganda, responded that without the search, there would have been no film.
More importantly, the implausible story aims not to show social injustice as
it really is but to create awareness around how it really is felt. As insignifi-
cant as the worker and as essential as the job, the bike is an obsession we
share with the character like the horse in Shoeshine, and when we see him so
absorbed in his new job that he fails to register the theft taking place beneath
him, ‘for five minutes, that point of Rome becomes the centre of the world’
(Zavattini 1997: 51). The bike bridges a pre-industrial world of water pumps
and endless walks with signs of modernity that rather than providing access
reinforce Antonio’s alienation. Busy streets full of traffic hinder his view and
undermine his dilemma; offices and institutions receive him with paternalistic
indifference and the leisure activities he witnesses, whether it is a bicycle race,
a football game or the Hollywood films evoked in the promotional posters
for Gilda (1946), are far removed from his material means and infinitely
circular dilemma (Gordon 2008: 41; 93–5). Excluded from the city’s oppor-
tunities and pleasures, Antonio is also unprepared for its dangers and naively
hopeful that the police will mobilise for a bike, demonstrating an inexperi-
ence encapsulated in the ironic contrast between his clumsiness and Rita
Hayworth’s glamour (De Sica 2000: 40). This metacinematic moment seems
also to acknowledge noir influences in the rainy mean streets Antonio and
Bruno navigate and in the far from natural lighting of certain interiors, while
there is also an authorial awareness that in 1948 when Gilda reached Italian
audiences, American femmes fatales would do far better at the box office than
bicycle thieves.
A point of spatiotemporal gravitation, the theft divides the film into an uplift-
ing before and a disconcerting after, where the first part leads from the borgata
to the city through four narrative blocks: problem-resolution-idyll-work. Only
Maria’s decision to reward La Santona for having predicted Antonio’s change
in fortune deviates from this linearity and only later, when he who ridicules his
wife resorts to the same nonsense, do we see the importance of this episode.4
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The second part takes a circular turn, moving from one theft to another and
from a job in the city to, we assume, unemployment in the borgata. It also pro-
vokes a series of encounters that – from the labour union where radical intel-
lectuals discuss injustice and ignore the singular victim and the church where
hypocritical philanthropists shave and feed the poor provided they attend
mass, to the trattoria where a bourgeois family reminds Antonio of his poverty
– all suggest how a lack of solidarity and dysfunctional social institutions
perpetuate his marginalisation. The novelty of Bicycle Thieves resides, in par-
ticular, in the absence of causal relations and spatial continuity between these
moments; a feature that brings it closer to Paisà than to Shoeshine. A shower
of rain forces Antonio and Bruno to take shelter under a roof, a vagrant
brings them to mass, an accident in the river makes Antonio forget the bike
and search desperately for Bruno. The duration of these moments asks us to
wait and feel the alienating presence of the Austrian priests at their side or the
father’s fear that his son has drowned, before the quest continues, whereas the
accidental succession of events makes it seem as if they just happen, as if there
were no story. It is of course a meticulously constructed ‘disappearance’ of the
story and it renounces neither a perfect tragedy nor an unambiguous message.5
Elaborating on these ‘idle periods’, Deleuze observes how the post-war
economic crisis leads De Sica to ‘shatter’ the traditional ‘action-image’ which
centres around an agent who reacts to an initial situation so as to create a new
situation. Antonio’s disconnected and temporal experiences with a materially
entirely concrete dilemma break such chains:
there is no longer a vector or line of the universe which extends and links
up the events of The Bicycle Thief: the rain can always interrupt or deflect
the search fortuitously, the voyage of the man and the child. (Deleuze
1989: 212)
This voyage is not only deprived of opportunities, although that is the authors’
strongest allegation, but it is also void of the consequentiality unquestioned
by the type of cinema they reject. Chance and ambiguity are present from the
start when Antonio is assigned a job merely for belonging to a certain category
of worker: a job he cannot accept because he has and has not a bike (Moneti
1999: 41). That he runs into the thief twice in a day – after the rain and outside
Santona’s – without being able to turn the fortuitous moments to his advan-
tage brings this logic to its surreal extreme. What makes us accept the episodes
as part of the world represented is their integration into the film’s disconcerting
social portrait: the first instance leads to a church where people attend Sunday
mass to get a bowl of soup, the second to a brothel and to the neighbourhood
where the malefactor lives in even poorer conditions than Antonio but in the
protection of a social network that undermines any law.
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Figure 5.1 Antonio and Bruno in De Sica’s Bicycle Thieves. Courtesy of the
Fondazione Centro Sperimentale di Cinematografia.
133
who becomes thief because he is out of himself [. . .] he lets himself get caught
after a clumsy and uncoordinated attempt to escape, like someone who has
given up’ (Moneti 1999: 42).
Apparently a case of perfect duplication, there is a significant difference
between the film’s parallel thefts. Whereas Antonio’s misfortune occurs in
a congested street and is noticed only by a taxi driver, the solitary bike he
spots, acting alone and with no strategy, is instantaneously reclaimed by a
crowd mysteriously gathered from all sides of the previously empty square.
Several critics have seen something Kafkaesque in the instinctive solidarity
and collective effort turned against the mortified thief, but De Sica objected
that Antonio’s alienation is social and not metaphysical in nature (Bazin 2002:
323). Such a distinction is confirmed by the inequalities at play in this confron-
tation, as in the rest of the film: none of the men chasing him, least of all the
bourgeois victim, depends economically on a bike, but where the social factor
cedes and Kafka’s surreal labyrinth seems to prevail is in the hostility Antonio
faces everywhere, in his own neighbourhood and in that of the thief, as well as
in the emptiness, the indecisiveness and uncertainty that would likely follow
him even if he had a job. What we are left with when Antonio and Bruno
merge with the indolently moving crowd so indifferent to their tragedy, and
with the film’s languid texture, so embracing of their tacit isolation, is this veil
of ambiguity. Behind them rises the city, officially at the verge of modernity;
ahead of them lie wastelands and unemployment, with no promises for the
future. Today, it is however easier to see the human, rather than the social
conditions, at play in Antonio’s drama. Haunted by an intangible sense of
anguish rooted in loneliness and non-belonging, he stands at the margins,
isolated and weak in his uncertainty, between the outskirts where he has no
roots, and a cityscape where he finds no foundation. Looking into this city, the
searching worker also looks towards new spaces of cinematic narration that
in the successive decades would develop around irresolute, drifting, wanderers
like him.
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135
would have continued into the clouds towards a country where ‘good day’
really means ‘good day’, as we see them do. This anti-capitalist message was
censored, which had the effect merely of increasing its ambiguity and, certainly
not, of reducing critical discord. Whereas right-wing critics were certain that
the broomstick flight was heading towards Russia, Soviet censors banned the
film for its inconsistency with Marxist doctrine, and advocates of neoreal-
ism lamented the appeasing escape from the present (Parigi 1992: 308; 295;
Argentieri 1974: 82–3).
Miraculous misery
Written and rewritten over a decade as treatments and scripts; as a novel
entitled Totò il buono (1943) and in dialogue with Zavattini’s other fictional
writings, Miracle in Milan presents a metadiscursive, rather than an unwritten
cinema and its surreal elements lead far from the scriptwriter’s call for an end
to spectaculars. When De Sica still considered this film a tribute to Zavattini,
it was no doubt for the signs both plot and characters bear of his satirical
look at a society of hypocrisy and injustice as well as of his vivid imagination.
Through this story of spatiotemporal concreteness there runs a vein of fan-
tastic playfulness announced with the manneristic scenery of Pieter Bruegel’s
‘Proverbs from the Netherlands’ which is featured under the titles (Parigi
1992: 287–96). A prologue captioned ‘once upon a time’ affirms the move
away from the practices of neorealism as it accounts for the protagonist’s
fairy-tale-like origins. In line with the Italian folklore of childbirth, Totò is
found crying under a cabbage and, growing up with an adoptive grandmother
who marvels over the milk he lets boil over, he learns to safeguard the ‘poetic
defence’ of childhood.7 The multiplication exercise they share while she is
dying recalls Staffera’s interrogations of the inmates in Shoeshine, but rather
than intimidating the child, it leaves him with a piece of lasting knowledge
he later passes on to the city’s street kids. Having grown up protected from
the brutalities endured and internalised by other children of neorealism, Totò
leaves the orphanage with nothing but altruism and faith in the ability of
games to change the world.
At a point when Naples, Rome, Florence and Berlin have all acquired
cinematic life, the journey of socio-geographical discovery arrives in Milan;
Vittorini’s Resistance city and the scene for De Sica’s first endeavours as a
comic actor. Miracle in Milan redirects the social analysis and comic situations
of his 1930s comedies to the margins of the expanding financial capital where
Totò and a group of the disinherited settle down. Their borgata demonstrates
the relative prosperity of Valmelaina, but convinced in their common margin-
alisation that ‘a shack is enough to live and sleep’ in, they have no aspiration
to enter the city centre. Significantly, what stirs tension in their community is
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137
in Totò il buono, does not follow the usual categorisation ‘rich and poor –
but rather, good and bad’, implying that evil can and does reside within the
underprivileged as well (quoted in Spinazzola 1975: 247). Greed, egoism,
and pretentiousness bring forth not only the Judas in Rappi who reveals the
discovery of oil to Mobbi for a fur coat and a top hat, but also the claim to
ownership in men who want the sculptured woman for themselves and in the
competition for wealth that ultimately exhausts the capacity of Totò’s magic
dove to protect the community. While admitting that the marginalised are
inclined to the very social ills that keep them at the margins, we must also
allow for the modest and tender wishes Totò is happy to fulfil: a stammering
man wishes to speak properly and a white girl and a black man ask to become
black and white respectively, complicating further a love made impossible by
social prejudice. These are wishes Mobbi could never appreciate, but what
makes the poor morally superior to him is not, ultimately, the simplicity and
sincerity they are still able to profess, but the unity with which they resist and
eventually break free from forces that deny them their most basic needs. The
flight towards a kingdom of sincere greetings conveys a refusal, similar to that
of the horse in Shoeshine, to live in a society of selfishness and exploitation, but
there is also a bitter realisation that the present social order allows no room for
solidarity and social justice.
Recognising the pessimistic undertones of the satirical-utopian narrative and
its call for a complete reorganisation allows us not only to situate the fable
within the authors’ visions of a civic cinema, but also to recognise its coher-
ence with the social and artistic origins of neorealism. Inherent in the collective
of disenfranchised living and fighting in the open there is a reference to the
popular resistance and the deinstitutionalisation of communal life in Open
City, as well as to novels that from Fontamara and Uomini e no to Cronache
di poveri amanti celebrated the instinctive political battle of lower-class com-
munities. Calvino’s view of neorealism as a choral matter and polyphonous, as
were the experiences of resistance and liberation, also illuminates the story of
the homeless which is told from the piazza; a physical space they inhabit and
at the same time a fantasy-land reminiscent of Bruegel’s painting (Parigi 1992:
287). The fusion of Totò’s singular voice with the pluralistic one of the tramps
creates a narrative of exchanges similar, albeit far less provocative, to the one
Pin incites in Il sentiero del nido dei ragni; a particularly apt parallel consider-
ing the fantastic dimension of Calvino’s resistance narrative and its studied
deformation of reality. Like his useless and opportunistic partisans, Di Sica’s
grotesque outcasts suggest that the worst of the lot is better than the privileged
classes who are capable only of recreating their privileges. Far from embracing
the cultural policies of ‘passivity and pacification’ (Kolker 2009: 57), Miracle
in Milan exposes the falsity of idealised pictures through ‘curious consonances
with Brecht’s poetics’, although there was most likely no intention of making
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Figure 5.2 Totò with Edvige and fellow homeless in De Sica’s Miracle in Milan.
Courtesy of the Fondazione Centro Sperimentale di Cinematografia.
And if it is true that evil may also be fought by laying bare its most crude
aspects, it is also true that if in the world people have to be induced –
wrongly – to reckon that the Italy of Umberto D is the Italy of the mid-
twentieth century, De Sica will have rendered a terrible service to his
motherland. (quoted in Aristarco 1980: 9)
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a demand that appears to have been denied from the outset since they never
obtained permission to demonstrate. Squads of riot police consequently force
them to break up and disappear, creating a quiet sense of defeat with regard to
the practical execution of democracy that sets the film’s critical tone. Umberto
D soon forgets the predictable outcome for the urgency of procuring ways to
pay off his rent arrears. A retired civil servant, he strives to live decently on a
meagre pension of which more than half goes to a landlady who has just com-
mitted to an advantageous marriage and plots to evict him. His only consola-
tion is the dog and Maria; the naive and candid maid from the country who
will soon be homeless, too, once the landlady who profitably accommodates
adulterous lovers, discovers her pregnancy. ‘Certain things happen to you
because you don’t know your grammar,’ Umberto D insists, and although the
thesis that only education can bring an end to exploitation hits to the core
of her dilemma, his humanistic values and sense of honour – incapable of
begging, he sells off his belongings while continuing to dress impeccably and
maintain exquisite manners – are useless in the ‘post-human’ society in which
they live (Brunetta 2009: 57).
This quest for human dignity leads back to the streets of Rome where
Umberto D wanders, like Antonio, out of material need and in utter solitude,
although he has lived there for twenty years. Having experienced the rise
and fall of Mussolini’s empire; the war, the Resistance and the Liberation, he
would have participated in a range of urban collectives, whereas now the city
represents a threat of exclusion that materialises both in the police jeeps who
force the pensioners to seek refuge in dead-end alleys and doorways and in the
hostile indifference Umberto D faces in the park where the film ends. What
brings him to the verge of suicide is, however, not ultimately the conviction
among younger and more privileged citizens that ‘old people stink’, but the
complete absence of the camaraderie that makes the homeless in Miracle in
Milan so strong (Zavattini, quoted in Brunetta 2009). Deprived of a common
cause, the group of protesters disintegrates; at the cheap café, the poor eat in
silence while the waitress scorns Umberto D for giving his plate to the dog;
even more disquieting is the unwillingness he discovers in a fellow demonstra-
tor and a former colleague respectively to relate to poverty and be confronted
with a request for help. His nostalgic look back at the war when the landlady
called him ‘grandfather’ and poverty was shared suggests that a loss of civitas;
of citizenship and social consciousness, has taken place during the times of
shoeshiners and bicycle thieves when survival and quests for freedom became
increasingly private matters.
These confrontations between character and environment are projected
through a look that Bazin compared to the ‘love for creatures’ of directors such
as Vigo, Renoir and Chaplin and that, as emblematised by Maria and Umberto
D spying on a lawless couple through the keyhole, is as ungenerous with the
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ing in particular to the maid’s morning routines – her waking up in the hall,
going over to the kitchen, watching the cat outside and drowning the ants. In
succession, these instances show how ‘the cinema of duration’ renders ‘spec-
tacular and dramatic the times of life itself’ (2002: 326–33). Maria’s drama
transpires from the juxtaposition of the mechanical act of grinding coffee and
the impassivity with which she looks down at her stomach, a drama that not
incidentally prompts Deleuze’s exposition of the ‘time-image’. In the encounter
between the eyes and the belly there emerges a ‘pure optical situation [. . .] it
is as though all the misery in the world were going to be born’ and she can
only stare out in the air (1989: 1–2). Although this inability to act and to react
with anything but quiet tears dramatises a socio-economically determined lack
of agency, it also identifies her nature as the bearer of a gaze within a realism
based on dwelling, chance encounters, disconnections and objects that fail to
incite motion.
Embracing marginalised viewers, the universe of De Sica and Zavattini is
one where loneliness is the only certainty, where the utopia of solidarity and
playfulness fails to undermine insatiable pursuits of wealth, where indifference
has outdone the interests of the collective and the right to human dignity. Their
characters reveal an authorial affection and seek a corresponding emotive
reception – thus Bazin’s felicitous distinction between Rossellini’s style as
essentially a ‘look’ and of De Sica’s as essentially a ‘sensibility’ (2002: 312).
According to some critics, this ‘sentimental attachment’ to the subject and the
‘special pleading’ involved for child protagonists, in particular, betrayed both
the people portrayed since they are never seen as victorious, and the audi-
ence who, identifying emotionally with the characters, is denied the Brechtian
distance required to perform a ‘sustained analysis’ of their situation (Kolker
2009: 48–50). The neorealists’ failure to offer visions of change was, allegedly,
rooted in the ‘aesthetic they promoted’ since it forced them to observe without
altering what they saw, leaving them with the conviction that to ‘gaze into
the book of God’s creatures’ was enough for the truth to transpire. A notion
of passivity would also have been ‘built into neorealist theory, as a result, the
filmmakers only allow their characters and audience to reap the rewards of
passivity: more pain, more poverty’ (Kolker 2009: 50; 55). It is unclear which
aesthetic exactly is at stake here. The differences between the directors and
between individual films question the presence of any norms except faithful-
ness to the historical present which, as we have seen, could take a range of
forms. More than aesthetic or religious sensitivities, it was the failure to change
the political and commercial imperatives of filmmaking and to establish a radi-
cally new relationship to the people, that hindered the revolutionary potential
of neorealism.
Even more questionable is the supposed theoretical limitation: the only one
who consciously formulated a neorealist poetics insisted tirelessly on analysis
143
Notes
1. Shoeshine was produced with less than a million lire; still it was for the producer,
William Tamburella, ‘a disaster’ because, ‘in Italy, practically no-one saw it’ (De
Sica 1994b: 252).
2. According to Zavattini’s observations on the story, police raids in via Veneto were
frequent but rather inconsequential, which is why Giuseppe and Pasquale show no
sign of fear and do not attempt to escape. ‘They are certain that it is only one of the
usual operations caused by the battle against the black market’ (1994: 244). After
a night in custody, Pasquale still believes they will be liberated immediately since
they after all have done nothing wrong.
3. During the ventennio the pronoun ‘Voi’ (you, plural) became an obligatory substi-
tution for the formal pronoun ‘Lei’ which was considered anti-nationalistic in as
much as it was of Spanish origin.
4. The episodes, included mostly as a token of popular Roman folklore, are inspired
by the authors’ many visits to a woman known in Rome as La Santona (‘The Great
Saintess’). She refused to appear in in the film, but Ida Bracci Dorati who interpreted
her artful strategies vividly suggests the opportunities there were for an entrepre-
neurial fortune teller to profit from post-war uncertainty (Zavattini 1997: 55–6).
5. Se Bazin (2002: 315). According to assistant director Sergio Leone (1997: 22), who
also played one of the priests, only the rain sequence was entirely improvised.
6. A positive outcome of the Renzi-Aristarco process was the polemics it created,
engaging critics, filmmakers, writers and journalists in united calls for a free cinema
(Aristarco 1975).
7. See Bazin (2002: 324). Totò’s enchantment was inspired by an episode that
occurred in Zavattini’s home: ‘The other morning I called my children to the
kitchen to see the milk that came out from the pot. I had been told by my wife to
oversee the boiling, so that it did not go over the pot. They were having a lot of
fun: the creaking of smoke, the rivulets of liquid that spread out everywhere. And
they saw with me in that boiling candor, cities that were decomposing, millions of
microscopic beings battling with the tempests and dissolved ices and other things
that I don’t remember. All at the cost of 1.30 lire, a liter of milk’ (quoted in Fanara
2000: 443).
8. See De Sica (2000: 40; 32). A reservation must be made to this restrictive view of De
Sica’s neorealist phase: the sketches from everyday life in L’oro di Napoli (1954),
the comic treatment of the housing crisis in Il tetto (1956), and the resistance drama
featured in La ciociara (1960) all reside at the margins of neorealism.
144
9. In 1954, the Italian Amateur Radio Association referred to a recent Time article and
reported that: ‘Of the fourteen major Italian directors, four at least are communists:
Visconti, Monicelli, Lizzani, De Santis’, whereas De Sica, Lattuada, Antonioni
and Germi were denounced as ‘sympathizing’ with the country’s communists and
socialists. At the same time, Associated Press reported from Washington that “The
highest exponents of the government have expressed their enthusiastic satisfaction
over Prime Minister Scelba’s decision to affront energetically the problem of com-
munism in Italy’ (quoted in Argentieri 1974: 107).
10. After the modest success of Miracle in Milan, Umberto D ended up as the 85th most
seen film of 118 Italian productions in 1951–1952. Within the neorealist canon,
only Visconti’s La terra trema proved commercially more disastrous (Cosulich
1975: 471). The French-Italian comedy Don Camillo (Duvivier, 1952) which De
Sica had refused to direct won that year’s box-office race and achieved 216 million
lire in government contributions, against the 16 million that went to Umberto D
(Vigni 1992: 317). De Sica estimated the total costs of Umberto D to be 140 million
lire (Wagstaff 2007: 430).
145
Visconti [. . .] tries to reach raw and primordial impulses. But, too ‘aris-
tocratic’, he does not succeed, because his true theme is elsewhere and is
immediately concerned with time.
Deleuze, The Movement-Image (1986)
146
and the related anti-communist battle, and when Italian film saw the golden
age of art cinema and ‘comedy Italian style’, did the collective opposition to
forced optimism and social peace produce results.
Visconti, as ever, stood on the barricades. Provoked by conservative editori-
als in Il Mondo (founded 1949) which spoke of neorealism as a ‘scandalous’
liaison between communists and the cinema, he reaffirmed the diverse manifes-
tations of overarching objectives. What was
neorealist, was the basic idea that moved the new conception of national
cinema. To fight for the neorealist cinema today means therefore to
fight for the national cinema. The value inherent in the Italian neorealist
cinema is the battle for freedom. This, for instance, was what I thought
of when I, during fascism, started to work on Obsession. It is, therefore,
not only a question about a particular poetics, but a democratic point of
view [. . .] When I made The Earth Trembles and when I made Senso, my
point of view did not change in the least.
(quoted in Argentieri 1974: 123)
147
been denied during the fascist period, he staged everything from Shakespeare
to Tennessee Williams and Sartre, establishing a directorial competence des-
tined to encompass operas starring Maria Callas and ballets with Jean Babilée
(Brunetta 2009: 70; 61). When Visconti finally returned to the cinema in 1947,
it was with the commission to make a documentary for the Communist party’s
electoral campaign the following year. Expanding on the intended project on
Sicilian fishermen to cover the economic and social exploitation of miners
and peasants as well, he originally planned a three-part film but could barely
procure funds for the first segment.2 The choice of setting reflected recent
uprisings concerning land reform and redistribution among Sicilian farmers,
as well as the Massacre of Portella della Ginestra, where peasants were killed
and injured during May Day celebrations.3 An equally determining factor was
however the ‘discovery’ that the country’s many contradictions and conflicts
between North and South were ‘problems of social structure, rather than of
cultural, spiritual and moral orientation’, a discovery Visconti later related to
the formative experiences of the war and the Resistance (1976b: 48).
There was nothing entirely new about the project that in late 1947 brought
Visconti to the Sicilian provinces. This neglected area of the country had
attracted him ever since the period of anti-fascism when Alicata and De Santis
championed a new cinema rooted in Verga. Their view of the ‘Homeric and
legendary Sicily’, as the most ‘solid and human, most miraculously virgin
and true environment’ (Alicata and De Santis 1941b), resonated in Visconti’s
article ‘Tradition and invention’ ([1941] 1986b) where he, following a visit to
Verga’s island, first discussed the cinematic potential of I Malavoglia and of
the ‘island of Ulysses’.4 For the aspiring director, the ‘veristic’ novel’s ‘violent’
tone of ‘epos’ and the island of Greek temples and volcanic eruptions, still
invested with the magic aura of Homer’s hero who some 3,000 years earlier
had crossed the strait of Messina, represented an opposition not only to the
aristocratic urban culture he had grown up with in Milan, but also to fascist
myths of progress, Roman antiquity and national superiority (Visconti 1986b:
116). Socio-geographic and literary escapism as a protest and motor of con-
science was precisely what Vittorini had proposed and like Conversazione in
Sicilia, Visconti’s journey to Italy’s most non-imperialist margins suggested the
need for ‘new duties’ that in Obsession took the form of artistic and political
opposition and that, by the time of The Earth Trembles, had developed into a
didactic formulation of class consciousness absent among Verga’s fishermen.5
Living in the isolated village of Aci Trezza, which had been largely unaffected
by the recent processes of national unification, and oblivious to the violent
revolts that subsequently activated the Sicilian lower classes, his protagonists
are not ill-willed as the name ‘Malavoglia’ implies, but ill-fated and powerless
against corrupt village authorities as well as natural forces.6 Seeking economic
independence, they establish a family business that seems promising until their
148
149
All the actors of the film have been selected from among the inhabitants
of this island: fishermen, girls, labourers, bricklayers, wholesalers of fish.
They know no other language than Sicilian to express their rebellion,
pains, or hopes. The Italian language is not the language of the poor.
150
151
152
Figure 6.1 The Valastro women in Visconti’s The Earth Trembles. Courtesy of the
Fondazione Centro Sperimentale di Cinematografia.
153
the souls of purgatory’, being caught, that is, in perpetual albeit not eternal suf-
fering (1995: 152). Visconti’s fisherwomen stand, on the contrary, as firm and
resistant as the rocks beneath them and their masklike faces open to waiting
and lingering vision do not speak of their suffering, whether it is temporary or
eternal (1986b: 116).
The experience of dwelling captured in these scenes and, later, in ’Ntoni’s
aimless wandering along the beach is charged with myth and ideology, reflect-
ing archaic laws of resignation to one’s fate and economic laws of deprived
agency. Like De Sica’s characters, however, ’Ntoni and the women are also
archetypes of Deleuzian ‘seers’ and the inconsequential restlessness and self-
destructive dissatisfaction that ’Ntoni, in particular, has inherited from Gino in
Obsession – equally at odds with his surroundings and incapable of defending
his claim to freedom – points to the distinguishing factor of the new realism.
In contrast to the logical passages between situations, actions and reactions of
past realist traditions, post-war realism would tend to let cinematic conven-
tions, literary sources or ideological agendas give way to the uncertainties, the
lost connections and the utter meaninglessness that in the wake of so much
material and human destruction severely questioned any form, political or
other, of constructive action.
154
155
156
157
screen test and selecting the least likely girl for his film. In complete contrast
to Zavattini’s original story which saw Maria rejected, it is Maddalena who
refuses to sign the lucrative contract, leading the focus away from typically
neorealist concerns with socio-economic disjunctions towards questions of
human dignity and a denial of social mobility that can hardly be interpreted
as a ‘triumphant personal agency’ (Marcus 2002: 42). Rather, as she follows
Spartaco’s ideals and abandons visions of emancipation for domestic concerns,
she restores ‘the status quo of the patriarchal Italian family’ (Micciché 1998:
202–3). The conciliatory closure does not, however, apply to the fundamental
concern that cinema is heavily industrialised around the spectators’ conform-
ist desire for escapism, leaving us with a pessimistic vision with regard to the
viability of the type of film Zavattini was delineating just at this time. Where
Bellissima demonstrates a prospectus of innovation and a critical use of the
medium is in deconstructing the assumed correspondence between reality and
its cinematic reproduction that to some extent was always integral to neorealist
film. In this, it announces the experimental approach to filmmaking destined to
prove its potential and success in the 1960s through milestones such Fellini’s
8½ (1963), where the story of a film in the making evolves along explorations
of artistic crisis, fantasy and dream states.
158
159
160
Figure 6.2 Livia and Franz in Visconti’s Senso. Courtesy of the British Film Institute.
(1976a: 70), an idea conveyed at La Fenice, when Livia warns Franz about
her distaste for opera taking ‘place out of stage’. It is, however, not the matter
of honour she thinks will create undesired continuities between Il Trovatore
and her life, but a web of passion, deception, suspicion and revenge so easily
carried over into the labyrinthine cityscape.
Besides the suggestive stage offered by ensnaring alleys and gloomy canals,
what in particular makes the nocturnal Venice sequence so central to the film’s
operatic discourse are the movements, looks and gestures with which the
adulterous affair takes life. Franz initially follows Livia like a despised second
shadow, but his company is increasingly appreciated as he shields her from
the sight of a dead Austrian solider and their exchanges develop into ‘melo-
dramatic declarations’ (Visconti, quoted in Rondolino 1981: 311). Picking
up a piece of broken mirror, Franz leans against a well and contemplates his
image to be certain ‘that I am . . . I!’ ‘Only then are you certain of it?’ Livia
enquires; ‘No, also when I see a woman looking at me the way you do now,’
he replies, before resorting to far more obscure terms: ‘It is Judgment Day. The
dead arise to eternal joy or to eternal suffering. Only we remain embraced and
nothing matters to us, neither Paradise nor Hell.’16 Citing, with variations and
without the appropriate context, the last stanza of ‘Lyrisches Intermezzo 32’,
161
Franz omits that Heinrich Heine’s poetic voice envisions this careless embrace
as taking place in the otherworld, reappropriating the overtly morose lines to
involve Livia in his narcissistic indifference to political questions and histori-
cal battles. But besides being a respectable woman who in the light of day is
ashamed over the night spent with an Austrian, Livia is also a ‘true Italian’
convinced ‘that the freedom of a people must be defended at the cost of one’s
own freedom and . . . of life’. She therefore rebukes the significance of Heine’s
words but not the spell of their tone and delivery. That the countess soon
forsakes patriotic objectives and sentiments manifests, as such, no betrayal
of principles but a hopeless romanticism and moral inconsistency Visconti
ascribed to the aristocracy for whom Italy’s unification was nothing but a long
degradation and a gradual cession of power and privileges to an emergent
bourgeoisie (quoted in Rondolino 1981: 298–9).
Musically, these structural changes associated with the fall of the Austrian
Empire are articulated through the opposition between Verdi and Anton
Bruckner, whose late-romantic Symphony No. 7 accompanies the treacherous
lovers’ encounters. Their squalid love affair comes, in this way, to encapsulate
the historical processes that leave them in a limbo of lost identity and lack of
meaning, both equally deprived of the integrity, convictions and sincere pas-
sions by which Verdi’s heroes seek to hinder a tragic outcome. Livia is reduced
to a troubled observer of her own actions, disproving of the ‘madness’ that
induces her to give Franz the patriots’ money and running in desperate search
for him when she has just ordered his execution, whereas Franz, as the refer-
ence to Heine suggests, is driven by an aestheticist inclination to ‘cling onto
life’, to its beauty and pleasures, so that, rather than dying heroically in a war
he knows ultimately will be lost, he arrives at a point where moral and physi-
cal degradation collide (Rondolino 1981: 298–9). ‘What does it matter,’ Franz
exclaims once the beast within him is exposed, ‘that my compatriots today
have been victorious in a place called Custoza, when Austria in some years will
not be there any more and the world we belong to will disappear?’ Unchaining
Italy’s offensive against Austria in the Third War of Independence, the battle of
Custoza (1866) ended with disastrous losses and the numerically superior but
disorganised and incompetently lead Italian army retreated within a day. The
sense of defeat was reinforced by the awareness that Prime Minister General
La Marmora at first had refused Austria’s offer to cede Venice peacefully and,
subsequently, by the fact that the city was never reclaimed through heroic
deeds but surrendered to France and returned to Italy as a gift (Mack Smith
1997: 72–7). These historical conditions are embedded in the fear Livia’s col-
laborating husband shows for the imminent future in which Austria, regardless
of the war, will return his native city and the Venetians will avenge his betrayal.
The barely honourable war is aptly focalised through Roberto who, as an
exponent of the Venetian ‘garibaldini’ – the army of volunteers with which
162
163
164
Senso looked therefore just as much towards the country’s recent past as it did
to the nineteenth-century with the implication that the Resistance had been
a mere recourse of history – another failed revolution. This view would not
merely have troubled authorities concerned with safeguarding political and
social equilibrium, but also leading Communists such as Togliatti, who served
themselves using the myths of the Resistance in an attempt to forge unity
within the political Left (Dalle Vacche 1992: 132). That the political defeat
had its cultural counterpart was also clear to those who had followed the pub-
lication of Gramsci’s prison writings and realised that if Italian intellectuals
historically had lived detached from ‘the people, and thus from the nation’,
little had been done in the post-war years to bridge the gap and direct popular
forces into an anti-capitalistic opposition (Gramsci 1996: 72). Despite the
potential neorealist cinema had to abandon elitist and populist parameters in
order to constitute an ‘articulation, with organic function, of the people itself,’
which would require to know and feel its ‘needs, aspirations, diffused senti-
ments’ (Gramsci 1996: 72), it had been essentially paternalistic, unpopular
and inadequate as a political force, disclosing itself as a ‘vital’ but ultimately
inconsequential ‘crisis’ (Pasolini 1965: 229).
The incommunicability with the masses was rarely as profound and insu-
perable as in the case of The Earth Trembles: the most programmatic and rig-
orously Marxist as well as the most unpopular manifestation of neorealism.
Nonetheless, looking back at the film in 1960, Visconti emphasised the inspi-
ration he had found in Gramsci’s notes on the intellectual’s responsibilities
with regard to the Southern Problem. His effort as a privileged Northerner
to expose the country’s economic and geographical disjunctions and to
restore beauty and dignity to his Southern subjects certainly corroborates
this association, although in 1947–8 he would only have had access to some
of Gramsci’s writings.18 Contrary to The Earth Trembles, too inaccessible in
its artistic aspiration to engage the masses, the populist treatment of social
immobility in Bellissima appealed to the general spectator while failing to
provide unifying and didactic points for national-popular identification. The
relative popularity of Visconti’s least committed film reflected what Gramsci
defined as the Italians’ ‘taste for melodrama’ – a socio-cultural phenomenon
he regretted since it implied a sense not only of bourgeois life and culture,
but also of rhetorical sentiments, formulaic language, and forced gestures and
modes of behaviour, all of which distanced the people from their own reali-
ties. The only means to fight this would be a popular literature that reflected
the life, values and language of the nation (Gramsci 1996: 49–50). Gramsci’s
view of il melodramma – in the original sense of the word (melody + drama)
– as having constituted the only popular art form in nineteenth-century
Italy, fulfilling needs of escapism soon to be catered for by the cinema, reso-
nates in Senso, where Verdi’s opera appears as a unifying mode of escapism
165
Notes
1. One story treatment co-written with Alicata proposed a film entitled Pensione
Oltremare which would have told stories of partisans tortured and executed at the
Jaccarino pensione where Visconti had been held prisoner (quoted in Faldini and
Fofi 1979: 138).
2. Rondolino (1981: 196) and Giuseppe De Santis, who was referring Visconti’s own
testimony (quoted in Faldini and Fofi 1979: 140), are among the few to mention
the initially propagandistic scope of the project; that the first 6 million lire came
from the Communist party is certain. It was a budget that, given the six months of
shooting, soon sent Visconti out on tours for funding worthy of Rossellini (Rosi,
quoted in Faldini and Fofi 1979: 138).
3. One week before the massacre, The People’s Block formed by communists and
socialists had won the local election, and the bandit Salvatore Giuliano and his men
were sent, either by the government or the mafia, to suppress the celebration that
took place (Ginsborg 1990: 111–12). Visconti’s treatment for the documentary
outlined a reconstruction of the massacre (1998: 238–9).
4. See Visconti (1986b: 116). Having officially announced the project in 1942,
Visconti failed to obtain the rights to the novel (Micciché 1998: 84). According
to Marcus, ‘the impulse’ to an adaptation ‘came at a relatively late stage in the
film’s elaboration’ (1992: 25), but both characters and events of the story treat-
ment for the documentary are clearly indebted to Verga’s novel (see Visconti 1998;
Rondolino 1981: 203). Francesco Rosi recalled that ‘Visconti’s intentions were in
effect to complete the three episodes of the trilogy, but what I think he definitively
desired more than anything else was to make a film of I Malavoglia and since the
theme of that novel coincided with what would have been the episode of the sea in
the trilogy, he left, in either case, in 1947, to film a documentary on the fishermen
of Acitrezza. Money was short, very short . . .’ (quoted in Rondolino 1981: 196–7).
5. Visconti would recall the ‘alarm’ Conversazione in Sicilia had aroused in young
anti-fascists when it was first published in 1938–1939 and in 1941 (1976b: 48–50).
Significant in this regard is the agreement between Visconti and Vittorini regarding
an adaptation of Uomini e no in 1946 – one of his inconvenient projects that met
too many obstacles to see the light of day (Rondolino 1981: 158–9).
6. The most notorious of these was the massacre of Bronte, where starving farmers
rebelled against the great landowners, demanding the redistribution of land
Garibalidi had promised them when he conquered Sicily. A total of sixteen noble-
men, officers and civilians were killed and land was plundered. The event, which
occurred in August 1860 not far from Verga’s city Catania and was violently sup-
pressed, inspired his short story ‘Libertà’ (1883).
166
7. Marcus, following Geoffrey Nowell-Smith and others, reads the scene according
to Eisenstein’s theories of dialectical montage (1992: 36–7), whereas Micciché
excludes categorically any influence of the Soviet filmmaker on Visconti (Marcus
1992: 1050). More than anything else is it hard to see how the cuts from the indi-
vidual to the collective and back to the individual which, more than juxtaposing
images, have the narrative function of showing reactions to a progressing act of
rebellion, would work dialectically to form a synthesis of revolutionary meaning.
8. The fatalist view on popular action evokes ‘Libertà’ in which Verga describes how,
for one day, peasants unite in a violent revolt against their town’s ‘gentlemen’ only
to obtain jail sentences and further poverty. Shortly after, however, the poor return
to the town ‘to do what they had done before. The gentlemen could not work their
land with their own hands, and the poor could not live without the gentlemen. They
made peace.’ (Verga 2004: 259)
9. See Visconti (1943: 108). His account of the procedures (1994: 249–50) is some-
what modified by that of his assistant, Franco Zeffirelli who elaborated on the
actors’ suggestions by having elderly men in the village translate them into the
‘pure’, Greek-sounding archaic dialectal forms Visconti wanted (Zeffirelli 1994:
30). What fascinated him was a ‘lost, truly ancestral’ mythic and poetic, more than
authentic language, and its function is consequently ‘expressionistic’ rather than
‘naturalistic’ (Parigi 1994: 142).
10. See Rosi (1994: 21–2). Used to working with actors in the theatre, Visconti con-
fessed to have ‘spent hours and hours with my fishermen of The Earth Trembles
to make them repeat even the shortest line’, thus suggesting the degree of authorial
control involved in making the actors merge with the characters and vice versa
(Visconti 1994: 249–50).
11. See Zeffirelli (1994: 31). For a meticulous analysis of the commentary, see Parigi
1994: 156–162.
12. Bazin compares the first aspect to Rouquier’s documentary Farrebique (1946)
and the latter to the studio-created depth-of-field in Citizen Kane (2002: 288–92).
While his notes on the running time of three hours and on the Sicilian dialogues
prove that his review, dated December 1948, was based on the original version
screened at the Venice Film Festival that year, he does not comment on the voiceo-
ver which, according to Micciché, was added for that occasion (1998). Visconti’s
own recollection that the complete version screened in Venice was subtitled (1976a)
seems, however, also to be called into doubt by Bazin’s observation that the film,
due to its visual style, lacks subtitles. If these contradictory statements are based on
lost memories, it would reflect the uneasiness Visconti felt about having added a
commentary for the sake of comprehension, thus compromising the visual expres-
sion of the film’s images.
13. Bondanella draws a parallel between Visconti’s accentuation of circularity within
an ahistorical, mythical world to that of Levi, suggesting that the celebratory
treatment belongs more to the artist than to the ideologist (2009: 97). When
Levi outlined all the myths and beliefs that made the peasants’ world go round,
however, it was to acknowledge an immensely complex worldview as well as to
enable readers to appreciate what they meant by not being ‘Christians;’ by not
having been humanised. Their lacking a sense of linear time is first and foremost a
reflection of neglect from the State and from History and something similar can be
said for Visconti’s fishermen whose cyclical life is always related to cyclical poverty
and who, as both ’Ntoni and Cola affirm, are reduced to ‘work-donkeys’; to ‘work-
meat’.
14. See Micciché (1998: 198). Visconti’s rationale for having agreed to direct Bellissima
was that ‘the choice of one treatment rather than another does not exclusively
167
depend on what the director wants [. . .] After having had to renounce Cronache
di poveri amanti [an adaptation of Pratolini’s novel which Lizzani later directed]
and La carozza del Santissimo Sacramento, Salvo D’Angelo presented me with
Zavattini’s subject’ (quoted in Faldini and Fofo 1979: 247).
15. Wagstaff estimates that the percentage earned by The Earth Trembles of total
Italian receipts in its period of release was 0.084 whereas Bellissima would have
earned 0.219 and Senso 0.597 per cent (2007: 436–9).
16. The original reads as follows: ‘Die Toten stehn auf, der Tag des Gerichts/Ruft sie zu
Qual und Vergnügen/Wir beide bekümmern uns um nichts/Und bleiben umschlun-
gen liegen.’ Heinrich Heine, Buch der Lieder, http://www.staff.uni-mainz.de/
pommeren/Gedichte/BdL/Lyr-32.html (accessed 18 February 2012). ‘The dead
resurrect, Judgment Day/Calls on damned and blessed/We both do not worry about
anything/And we remain laying embraced.’ I am indebted to Carlo Testa (Masters
of Two Arts: Re-creation of European Literature in Italian Cinema, Toronto:
University of Toronto Press, 2002: 195) for the identification of Heine’s poem.
17. The testimony belongs to jury-member Piero Regnoli who was compelled by the
Minister of Culture (Ministro della pubblica istruzione), Giuseppe Ermini, to
give his vote to Renato Castellani’s Giulietta e Romeo which, as expected, won
the Golden Lion for best film in 1954. For Senso’s unfortunate encounter with
the censors, see Visconti (1976a: 73–4) and Rondolino (1981).
18. Despite the fact that Visconti’s 1960 article ‘Da Verga a Gramsci’ relates both
The Earth Trembles and Rocco e I suoi fratelli (1960) to the ‘illuminating reading
of Gramsci’ (Visconti 1976b: 49), Miccichè has categorically excluded that his
writings, given their time of publication, could have inspired The Earth Trembles
(1998: 85–6). Besides the knowledge Visconti would have had of his articles on
the Southern Problem (see Chapter 3, notes 10, 14 and 16) before his works were
systematically published starting in 1947–1948, an evaluation of Gramsci’s indirect
and direct influence must also consider the connections that existed between the
Communist Party, which originally commissioned the film as a documentary from
Sicily, and Gramsci’s works, which the party leader, Togliatti, had received while
in exile in Moscow in 1938 and started to edit for publication in 1944 (Gerratana
1975: XXXI; Asor Rosa 1975a: 1551–5).
168
‘I think that an author has to base his creativity on a utopia, even though
this creativity aspires to be born from reality. Utopia, in my view, is
healthy for artists. Of course, it has to be a utopia that contains values
intended to bring forward the development of the world, the development
of humans, the development of society.’
Giuseppe De Santis in L’avventurosa storia del cinema italiano
169
170
171
172
Figure 7.1 Lidia and Ernesto in Lattuada’s Il bandito. Courtesy of the Fondazione
Centro Sperimentale di Cinematografia.
from the slavery of a trafficker who attacks Ernesto just when they approach
the exit. To escape his violent counter-attack, the pimp shoots Maria while
Ernesto, despairing over her death, throws him over the handrail of the dra-
matically lit stair. An uneasy connection between life and death, exploitation
and freedom, this liminal space metaphorises the ambiguities of their drama:
having sacrificed innocence and dignity to survive, Maria dies like a tragic
heroine, whereas Ernesto, who once saved Carlo’s life and who shouts out in
defence of an ailing ex-soldier denied benefits, is led away by grief and hatred
for what destroyed her. Since the police are only concerned with the victim-
iser’s death, Ernesto seeks protection from the astutely opportunistic Lidia
and is soon heading her group of gangsters, operating triumphantly but with
a melancholy and an idealism that isolates him as much from the law as from
the criminal world.
The cash robbed at a lavish New Year’s party he distributes in a shanty-
town, and while he condemns his associates’ assassination of an honest man,
he kidnaps and kills a wealthy trafficker in women, avenging his sister and so
many other victims. In the end, when Lidia gives them up to the police and
takes off with a new prey for her seduction, Ernesto refuses to flee, choosing
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story ‘not of two races but of two persons who met in Italy after the war’ is
captioned as a ‘testimony to truth’, but there is also a claim to universality
in events that could have transpired wherever ‘the horrors of the war have
made people forget pity’. The very same twofold ideal motivated Vittorini’s
Conversazione in Sicilia and later The Earth Trembles, which premiered a
month before Senza pietà in the fall of 1948. Approaching two radically differ-
ent faces of post-war Italy and adapting equally contrasting means to represent
the country’s many contradictions, Lattuada and Visconti seem to assimilate
Vittorini’s call for ‘new duties’ as they search regional realities and singular
cases of victimisation for inspiration to articulate humanly shared needs of
compassion and freedom.
Our guide into this world is Angela who has boarded a freight train to
find her brother and escape parents with no empathy for the illicit and later
deceased child she had. That Livorno is hardly a place for abandoned women,
she intuits when Jerry, a black GI, jumps into her compartment in a vain
attempt to avoid a gangster’s bullets. Angela ensures his medical assistance
and is rewarded with interrogation as the American officers suspect she was
involved in the attack. They eventually send her to a convent with some pros-
titutes, whose confrontations with the nuns and each other offers a suggestive
sequel to the police raid Francesca barely avoids in Paisà. Assisted by a group
of black deserters, the girls escape and fall back into Pierluigi’s network of
smuggling and prostitution. Angela stays with Marcella and the other girls
in some questionable lodgings and keeps away from the trap until Jerry, in
order to protect and provide for her, implicates himself in the business and is
caught. Left defenceless against Pierluigi who takes pleasure in revealing that
her brother died in his service, Angela assumes enough indifference to survive
his slavery and psychotic terror, hiding all remorse until Jerry breaks out of
jail and finds her reduced to merchandise. The two are ready to leave for the
US the way Marcella has done with a black fugitive, when Pierluigi turns up to
avenge the money Jerry stole for their travel and his relationship with Angela.
What the criminal’s calculating mind had not anticipated was that she would
throw herself in front of Jerry and take the bullet meant for him. If the expres-
sion of regret flashing over his devil’s face confirms Vittorini’s conviction that
there is a man in every beast, this revelation comes too late: even if Jerry in
the rush to save her had not driven off the road, she would not have made it
to a new life in America. This devastating incident on a dusty provincial road
recalls the ending of Obsession, but in contrast to Giovanna and Gino, Jerry
and Angela are unambiguously seen as victims of other people’s atrocities and
their tragic trajectory severely questions whether the freedom Visconti’s mur-
derous lovers went in search of can be found.
Composed of gunfights, car chases, and melodramatic moments of loss
and regret, the rapidly edited narrative belongs more to Hollywood than to
175
post-war Italy, and both the astute prostitute, Marcella, and the criminal
masterminds – a fierce Tuscan, a pretentious Brazilian captain, and the pale,
white-dressed and androgynous Pierluigi – suggest that the authentic mate-
rial collected has been contaminated by Fellini’s background as cartoonist.
Nevertheless, Senza pietà relies on means of concretisation that in Il bandito
were absent and it communicates, as a result, more authentically tragic emo-
tions. The harbour infected by criminal trafficking, the pine forest housing
a brutal nocturnal life and the church where Angela is shot are recognisable
locations of sociological and auditory complexity, mirroring a unique social
formation in which nuns must confront prostitutes and deserters, and the
sonority of the Tuscan dialect is infused by streetwise English, minstrel song
and Brazilian nightclub music (Brunetta 2009: 78). Seeking a confrontational
portrayal of the antithetical realities that cohabited in Allied occupied Italy, the
authors have left no room for glamour or divismo. Except for Carla del Poggio,
who performed a similar role as Ernesto’s sister, and Giulietta Massina, whom
we shall meet as a less fortunate prostitute in Fellini’s Le notti di Cabiria, most
performers were non-professionals, including the Roman hotel keeper who
gave sinister life to Pierluigi and the US army captain John Kitzmiller, who had
been stationed in the area and appeared in several films of this period.5 What
distinguishes the protagonists is their marginalisation within a lawless world,
in itself on the margins of society. Dishonoured and condemned, Angela has no
means to realise her honest aspirations or to evade the powers of unopposed
illegal organisations, nor does Jerry who, burdened with centuries of racial
violence, is captured while the real criminals go free and is brought, without a
trial, to a military prison inhabited by black inmates and white guards. Along
with greed, corruption and exploitation, the occupying army is also accused of
having brought institutionalised racism into Italy (Bondanella 2009: 105–6).
Given the focus both on the contribution and suffering of African-American
soldiers and on their relation to Italian women – a historical grey area more
recently re-examined in Spike Lee’s Miracle at St. Anna – Senza pietà was,
Lattuada recalled, so ‘ahead of its time, for its decisively anti-racist content:
this white hand and black hand united’ that it was denied an American release
(quoted in Faldini and Fofi 1979: 129). At the time, its most extraordinary
achievement was that of having broken injurious codes of social represen-
tation, but what is likely to strike contemporary viewers is the continuing
relevance of its attack on hypocrisy, prejudice and intolerance.
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senses the danger, he disregards his fellow criminals’ desire to buy themselves
out and orchestrates a robbery at Orfeo intended to finance their escape.
Instead, thanks to Stella’s forced collaboration, he faces a fatal confrontation
with Marcello and seeks, vainly, a shield of protection behind Luisa. Predicting
the opponents’ respective plots, she has come to avert fatalities but becomes
instead a witness to events that bring the drama to a disquieting close, despite
the hopes her reunion with Marcello leaves of domestic reconstruction.
The story of a gangster’s downfall is framed by expressionistic images of
Rome as a locus of disorder and degradation; it oscillates between crime
scenes and police headquarters and involves a femme who becomes predict-
ably fatale once Marcello brings her compromising past to the light. Against
this construction of a nocturnal city of threat, Rome’s daylight may be out-
lined in deep-focus photography and the ordinariness of its private and public
spheres seek socio-historical referentiality, establishing an encounter between
the noir and contemporary national trends that is mirrored in the rival pro-
tagonists. Marcello shares the hard-boiled sleuth’s introspective nature and his
conflict between private and professional interests, but after having fought in
Mussolini’s imperial wars, he is neither tough nor witty. His solemnity, per-
fectly captured by Massimo Girotti and balanced by one of Carla del Poggio’s
more optimistic characters, stands in contrast to Stefano. With the looks of
a young Jacques Sernas, he embodies both the appearance and the mechani-
cal ferocity of Alan Ladd’s gangsters, but he is aware enough of what inner
destruction recent events have caused to seek redemption (Sesti 1997: 160).
Instead, killing Maria behind a fraudulent embrace at the river where they used
to walk, Stefano eliminates the last connection to times when relations were
meaningful and anchored to visions for the future. Where the responsibilities
lie is suggested during his twentieth-birthday dinner, when he wonders why no
one ever asks for ‘the children’s opinion before they bring them to the world’,
conveying a heartfelt contempt for his middle-class parents and, by extension,
for the totalitarian authorities who stirred grand illusions in the country’s
youth. Possessing neither the ability to ‘believe, obey, and fight’ for the State
and the family, nor the vigour and strength of fascist youth, all Stefano is left
with is a destructiveness that after a crescendo of violence brings about his own
death. While we may question Germi’s choice to interpret the post-war crisis in
the light of the social sphere that economically had suffered less from the war,
both his historical allegations and the protagonist’s nihilism bring us closer to
Lattuada’s soldier, to De Sica’s shoeshine boys, and to Rossellini’s Edmund
than such a limited perspective might suggest.
As if to reject this urban world of post-fascist disillusions and degraded
middle-class ideals, the Genovese director turned to Sicily for stories of injus-
tice, neglect, myth and human warmth. The Western-inspired In nome della
legge (1949) takes an unprecedented – albeit heavily romanticised – look at the
178
mafia’s rule in the world of omertà (the law of silence), whereas Il cammino
della speranza follows unemployed miners’ journey of immigration to France.
Scripted by Fellini and Pinelli and adapted from Nino de Maria’s novel Cuori
negli abissi (1949), the film engages with Paisà as well as with Ford’s adapta-
tion of Steinbeck’s novel about sharecroppers migrating from Oklahoma to
California in The Grapes of Wrath (1940). The closest model was, however,
Mario Soldati’s Fuga in Francia (1949), in which Germi played a clandestine
immigrant pursuing a death-sentenced former fascist official across the French
border. Il cammino was presented and awarded both at Cannes and Berlin, but
Christian Democrats who had just established the Cassa per il Mezzogiorno
(Fund for the South) through which to relocate parts of Marshall Aid to the
South, were not impressed with the treatment either of poverty or of emigra-
tion. When the film was released after months of delay in 1950, it was denied
the governmental ‘quality prize’ given to any work that left both social order
and Italy’s sunny image abroad unchallenged.6 The problem with Germi this
time may, however, have been too much sun. A blinding light connects his
disjointed story, and while it exposes the lack of resources driving Saro, a
widowed father of three, and his fellows away, it also underscores the collec-
tive joy of their hampered journey and the hope they discover while crossing
freezing French borders. At stake stands not merely the Southern Problem,
a topos Germi had seen evolve with the new realism from 1930s fiction to
The Earth Trembles, but also the 4.5 million Italians who immigrated to
various destinations between 1946 and 1961 and, more specifically, the
143,416 workers who left for France between 1946 and 1950. 40–50 per
cent of them were clandestine (Rinauro 2009: 58; 148). It was ultimately on
these figures and on the social crisis they mirrored that the film shed an uneasy
light.
While the title (‘the path of hope’) prepares us for wandering towards
something that in its unfamiliarity is deemed preferable to the characters’
present, the regional music accompanying the opening credits foreshadows
the Southern ambience where some recently laid-off miners have occupied the
poisoning depths of a closing sulphur mine, while their women wait anxiously
outside. Behind their black-dressed figures lies an infinitely fruitless landscape;
in front of them rises demolished houses and an isolated, inert village. As a
benevolent accountant, sympathetic with the men’s cause, insists the mine is
profitless, they resign themselves to forced inactivity and are easily taken in
by Ciccio’s talk of booming French labour markets. Saro entrusts himself to
the immigrant trafficker as do the newlyweds Luca and Rosa; the accountant;
Mommino, whose guitar playing consecrates their unity, and many others.
For different reasons, the disgraced Barbara and her fugitive Vanni also leave.
Only when Ciccio disappears at the station in Rome and Vanni escapes during
a gunfight with the police, is the fraud unravelled, but rather than assistance,
179
Figure 7.2 Barbara, Saro and his son in Germi’s Il cammino della speranza.
Courtesy of the Fondazione Centro Sperimentale di Cinematografia.
all the marginalised Sicilians get at the police station are deportation orders to
homes they have sold.
Continuing, all the same, they arrive in the Po Plain where a farmer’s offer
of paid work, room and board undermines recent misfortunes until local
workers on strike attack the ‘scabs’, severely injuring Saro’s daughter. While
the group leaves, some returning to Sicily, Saro, his children and Barbara stay
behind, joining the others in the mountains where they team up with two
Venetians whose presence reminds past and present viewers that not only
Southerners were forced to emigrate. Threating their last walk is Vanni, who
challenges Saro to a rustic duel over Barbara only to be killed, and a storm
so fierce that the elderly accountant disappears in the snow.7 Eventually, ‘as
God wished’, the narrator intervenes, ‘the storm passed and they crossed
the border’, exhausted, saddened by their losses and anxious when some
French and Italian guards ask for passports they don’t have. Contrary to the
uncompassionate police in Rome, however, they are amazed by the travellers’
Southern origins and welcome them into a territory ‘where loneliness is huge’
but where ‘people are less alone, and certainly closer than in the streets and
cafés of our cities’.
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The Northern director’s voiced affection for his Southern subjects enters
into a moral, rather than thematic, dialogue with The Earth Trembles that
is established already with the statue-like female figures outside the mine
who evoke Visconti’s pictorial study of the Valatro women during the storm.
Saro’s conviction upon leaving, furthermore, that ‘everything will be better
than what we have now’, echoes Cola’s clandestine farewell to a life ‘as a
beast’. Traces of inspiration point, however, also to the vagrant lovers of the
Po Plain in Obsession and the Southern Italian immigrants of Martinique
in Renoir’s Toni, which starts at the narrative point where Il cammino ends
(Fanara 2000: 245). Both directors are present in Germi’s focus on the char-
acters’ relationship to their environment and in his commitment to reclaim
their dignity, but the escape he leads them into – from unemployment and
from Italy – looks pessimistically not only at the specific situation of Sicilian
miners and an assumed lost industry, but more generally at the collective
change of which ’Ntoni still dreams.8 Rare signs of hope stem from characters
such as the accountant, the Venetians, the border guards, and Saro – infi-
nitely compassionate with those weaker than himself – who together form a
call for solidarity. Both positive and pessimistic messages are reinforced by
the authenticity of location and of non-professionals from the milieus rep-
resented, reminding us of Zavattini’s lessons that real-life characters are the
most crucial key to identification and reflection, which was most likely what
the reactionary forces of the Reconstruction feared the most.9 Moving far
away from ideals of pedinamento, however, Germi wraps critical objectives in
an adventure wherein Raf Vallone – a journalist whose success in Bitter Rice
(discussed below) offered an ordinary hero’s image to Saro – directs the ‘dis-
covery of places in which history may still merge with myth’ (Brunetta 1996:
24). Moving, along with American and French models, in the paths of Paisà,
this discovery unifies the choral, the specific and the universal dimensions
of neorealism, locating social features, regional characteristics and dialectal
variations in order to transcend socio-geographic disjunctions and arrive at
the ‘human warmth’ found among snow-white French Alps where the narra-
tor discovers that ‘borders are outlined on maps, but on earth like God created
it [. . .] there are no borders’.
181
that happened because it had really been a protagonist with the partisan
fights [. . .] without the fall of fascism and the Resistance, it would never
have happened that farm labourers, fishermen and small employees
became protagonists of the histories of Italian cinema. (quoted in Fanara
2000: 83)
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183
Figure 7.3 Silvana, centre, with fellow mondine in De Santis’ Bitter Rice. Courtesy of
the British Film Institute.
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185
186
a valued experience (Minardi 2005: 19). No other film came closer in unify-
ing all the genres, styles, influences and tendencies hybridised in neorealism
and Bitter Rice reflects on past and present cinema as much as on the reality
represented (Lizzani 2007: 68). Against criticism that the distortions and styli-
sations made the mondine look like prostitutes in heavily romanticised condi-
tions rather than as exploited women who, some argued, danced nothing but
waltzes and read not only fotoromanzi, De Santis defended the intention not to
observe their world dispassionately, but to assimilate ‘contaminations’ intrin-
sic to ‘the popular cultural world’ and engage the masses in a dialogue (1996a:
40–4). In this way, the thesis of collective action as the exclusive answer to
individual struggles could more convincingly be presented and developed, in
line with Pudovkin’s theories, through a narrative that forges the formation of
a community while individualism and deceptive values produce a tragic end
(Argentieri 1996: 122–3). The dramatisation of social injustice as a community
matter of collective suffering and objectives offers viewers not merely a call for
solidarity, but a practical programme and a perspective in which to place their
own reality.
Bitter Rice reached out both to national and international audiences and
much of its appeal was replicated when De Santis relocated to his native
Ciociara, halfway between Rome and Naples, to tell a story about peace-
making among the oppressed.17 Non c’è pace tra gli ulivi opens with a pano-
ramic view over a remote mountain village, while the director’s voice intrudes
to declare his belonging to this world seemingly unmarked by recent histori-
cal tragedies. Although, he explains with slight sarcasm, the Ciociara is best
known in folkloristic terms for ciocia sandals and the saltarello dance, it is a
century-old battleground for foreign armies as suggested by a rudimentary
cross marking the death of a German soldier, and by a people made ‘suspi-
cious towards others [. . .] jealous of their sentiments [. . .] despiteful in suffer-
ing and in causing suffering’. The dark, sombre, characters immobile in their
quiet disbelief convey a ‘homage’ – strikingly similar to the one opening Il
cammino which was shot contemporaneously in 1950 – to The Earth Trembles
(Zagarrio 2002a: 39). Like Visconti, De Santis starts from the specificity of
a closed, atemporal society, unprecedented at the movies and ignored by the
authorities of the Reconstruction, to address universal disjunctions between
‘those who possess something and those who possess nothing’. Developed
through a story of deprivation, injustice, love and victory, these thematics
assimilate both the conflict and the hybridisation of Bitter Rice in order to take
its utopia a step further.
Winter approaches and while the other shepherds prepare to migrate,
Francesco stands unemployed and indignant over seeing both his sheep and his
girlfriend, Lucia, in the greedy hands of Bonfiglio. A shepherd like everyone
else, but crueller and luckier than most, Bonfiglio has acquired wealth thanks
187
to the misfortune of people such as Lucia’s parents, who to settle their debts
have promised him their daughter, and Francesco, who has spent the last six
years in war and internment. The narrative pretext is therefore that of the
returned soldier, but unlike Il bandito, Non c’è pace approaches the theme
of a destroyed economic basis and failed reintegration at the level of low-
scale power relations, and it disregards the existential experiences of the
post-war crisis to articulate a thesis of class consciousness. Everyone knows
that the sheep belong to Francesco, but when he reclaims them in order to
migrate with Lucia he is arrested, and Bonfiglio’s violent intimidation forces
the other shepherds into a conspiracy of false testimonies. Seeing that even
Lucia, threatened by her parents, denies having witnessed the theft, Francesco
resigns himself to the four-year sentence. Only when it appears that Bonfiglio
has raped his sister, Maria Grazia, and she reveals this during the malefactor’s
wedding, liberating Lucia while constraining herself to domestic slavery, does
Francesco react. Along with Salvatore, a Neapolitan jailbird, he escapes, and
while Lucia’s parents flee in fear of the fugitive prisoner’s revenge, she breaks
through the guards and is reconciled with her boyfriend. Spreading their flocks
to complicate the carabinieri’s search, the remorseful shepherds also back
Francesco’s final confrontation with Bonfiglio, while Salvatore surrenders in a
similar effort to sidetrack the forces of law and order. Panicked to see himself
abandoned, the detested tyrant strangles Maria Grazia, who has followed him
when he fled, and jumps over a cliff to avoid Francesco’s revenge, leaving him
innocent and with the promise of a fair retrial.
Francesco ‘fought for being right’, the director comments, ‘and achieved
justice when the other shepherds understood that people can only separate
right from wrong if they are united’. That he was right ‘even against the law’,
was censored from the original script for the threat it allegedly posed to public
order (De Santis quoted in Zagarrio 2002: 115–16). Still, this conclusive note
presents an unambiguous directive to communities such as Francesca’s in
Bitter Rice, which in the subsequent rice-weeding seasons will face the very
same injustices. Culminating during Easter, when the snow is gone and the
migrators have returned, Francesco’s resurrection to freedom also entails the
betrayal and sacrifice leading up to Silvana’s redemption, but rather than
confirming the village’s circular and destructive existence, the religious feast
catalyses a collective change. Fleeing across stony hills, Francesco mingles
with a shielding procession of pious villagers while Lucia runs ahead with the
gun procured by the other shepherds. If this incorporation of the individual
into the collective demonstrates social peace and solidarity in the making,
Maria Grazia becomes, as Salvatore relates to the carabinieri, ‘the lamb of this
Easter;’ the expiatory victim required to forge a unitary opposition among the
oppressed. Communion turns into class consciousness when Bonfiglio is driven
to suicide and it appears that, ultimately, Francesco’s trial was distorted not by
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189
(De Santis 1996a: 45). At the time, this innovative stylistic asset enabled the
stylised world of cartoon-like, Western-inspired characters to engage fotoro-
manzi readers and Hollywood fans with an unusual immediacy, while also
making the message of social awakening as direct as the denunciation of
exploitative socio-economic relations.
There was nothing unique about the intention, eloquently achieved both
in Bitter Rice and in Non c’è pace, to ‘see people’s souls vanish in its con-
crete relations to the environment’ and, in this way, to fulfil Alicata and De
Santis’ programmatic call for truthfulness (1941b). In particular, the relations
established between social and natural shadowlands and the moral attitude
behind geographical concreteness, human recognisability and historical
authenticity invest the neorealist experience with a vein of coherence. Apart
from Rossellini, however, no director operating within this cultural field
came as close as De Santis to suggesting what a ‘revolutionary art inspired
from a humanity that suffers and hopes’ might look like (Alicata and De
Santis 1941b). Delineated with anti-fascist militancy and visions of an imme-
diacy to the people’s experiences, these directives for a new art contained
an ‘instinctive’ idea, developed over the years and confirmed, after Bitter
Rice was completed, by Gramsci’s texts, about a national-popular art apt to
establish revolutionary relations to, as well as among, the masses (De Santis
quoted in Faldini and Fofi 1979: 143). Only by assuming an interest in ‘the
living human, in life lived’ and seeking not merely to represent ‘the humble’
but to free them from ‘humility’, could the intellectual aspire to reach and
have a function among the people, Gramsci wrote. That his search for a
rare exception to Italy’s elitist literary tradition would lead to the ‘popular
content’, the ‘popular language in its expression’, and the ‘caustic critique of
a corrupt and putrefied aristocracy’ present in Carlo Goldoni’s (1707–93)
comedies’ is, in this case, particularly relevant. Based on ‘ideological atti-
tudes: democratic before having read Rousseau’ and on ‘popular enlighten-
ment’ directed towards the middle classes, the reform Goldoni conducted in
eighteenth-century theatre offers an illuminating parallel to De Santis’ posi-
tion in post-war cinema (Gramsci 1996: 42–5). Like his successive film, Roma
ore 11 (1952) which follows the frantic application of 200 women for one
advertised position, the unrealised Noi che facciamo crescere il grano would
unquestionably have broadened considerably the field of dialogue, narration
and denunciation. The story of starving Southern peasants claiming their legal
rights to uncultivated estate land was, however, too much for the Christian
Democrats, since the specific episode in question – occurring in Calabria in
1949 – had stirred much turmoil after an armed police squad caused three
deaths and several injuries in the name of reckless landowners (De Santis
1996c: 241–5). The promising project ended up in the archive of dreams
along with Zavattini’s inquiry-journey Italia mia and several other hypotheti-
190
cal films that in different ways might have contributed to the development of
a truly popular cinema.
Notes
1. That the tradition of the Resistance, for political reasons and for the symbolic
language and collective expression it soon acquired, in itself failed to play a deci-
sive role in recreating national identity must also be taken into consideration. See
Stephen Gundle (‘La religione civile della resitenza: Cultura di massa e identità
politica nell’Italia del dopoguerra’, in ed. Gian Piero Brunetta et al. (1987), Cinema,
storia, resistenza, 1944–1987, Milano: Franco Angeli, 1–37).
2. Wagstaff estimates that the percentage of total Italian receipts earned by
L’onorevole Angelina in its period of release was 0.310, whereas Sotto il sole di
Roma would have earned 0.443 per cent (2007: 435–6).
3. Lattuada’s preface is quoted in Taramelli (1995: 75). Having entered Italy clandes-
tinely, American Photographs was reviewed on the anti-fascist Corrente (founded
1938) in 1939 and created a ‘profound visual shock’ among the Milanese ‘bohemia’
Lattuada frequented (Taramelli 1995: 66–75).
4. See Micciché (1999b: 26). The film would have earned 1.321 per cent of total
Italian receipts in the specific period of release, compared to Open City’s 1.924 per
cent (Wagstaff 2007: 435).
5. Kitzmiller was already known from Vivere in pace (Zampa, 1947) and Tombolo
paradiso nero (Ferroni, 1947) which explored the very same criminal milieu
(Sanguineti 1989: 142–4; Faldini and Fofi 1979: 123–9).
6. See Argentieri (1974: 86). The greatest achievement of the Cassa per il Mezzogiorno
was, according to Ginsborg, infrastructural work that ended the isolation of the
South. Lack of long-term, industrial projects and corruption severely limited the
outcome of the 1,200 billion lire invested over a decade, however (1990: 62), allow-
ing the North’s comparative advantages in income and industrial development to
increase (Mack Smith 1997: 434).
7. 611,000 immigrants came from the region of Veneto, 276,000 From Friuli-Venezia
Giulia, 62,000 from Trentino-Alto Adige, 292,000 from Lombardy and 222,000
from Emilia Romagna, whereas 496,000 came from Campania, 420,000 from
Calabria and 420,000 from Sicily (Rinauro 2009: 60–1).
8. De Santis observed that Germi ignored not only the harsh realities the immigrants
would find in the land of hope, but also that a programme to regenerate the sulphur
industry in Sicily at the time had been established. His pessimism would therefore
have been unfounded and came, unintentionally, to support those who benefited
from a closure of those industries (De Santis 1996c: 235–6).
9. ‘Why does this film bother De Gasperi [Prime Minister 1945–53] so much? Is it
perhaps not him who is forcing Italians to emigrate?’ Tommaso Chiaretti asked
from the pages of L’Unità (November 1950). ‘Here it is – emigration; here it is
depicted by a director not at all Communist, by a man who has looked around
himself and reflected. But people who reflect are dangerous; it has been that way
from time immemorial.’ (quoted in Fanara 2000: 442)
10. See Vitti (1996: 29–31). Other Resistance films financed by the ANPI were Il sole
sorge ancora (Vergano, 1946) and Achtung! Banditi (Lizzani, 1948); The testimony
of post-Resistance confrontations between partisans and fascists belongs to Girotti
(Faldini and Fofi 1979: 119–22).
11. See Minardi (2005: 13–25). The triumphant 1918 strike of the mondine in the area
of Novarese was, according to Vivarelli (1991: 755), one of the most successful
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192
What a journey they made you do. Of no use. If they didn’t want to
accept me at the first institution they won’t accept me at this one either.
Me, they won’t accept anywhere.
Rosetta in Il ladro di bambini
193
The city is spreading: the city is expanding [. . .] we too shall arrive at the
three millions of Paris, the four [millions] of Berlin, the eight [millions]
of London [. . .] In the acropolis and in the turreted provincial town
councils, this civic tickling is even frenzy. (quoted in Crainz 2005: 130)
Fellini’s response to frenetic urban rhythms was the ‘large allegorical fresco’ La
dolce vita offers of movie stars, tabloid journalists and a degraded aristocracy
gathered in Rome’s fashionable via Veneto (1999: 67), whereas Antonioni’s
L’avventura opposes it to silences left behind by the emotional and interper-
sonal disappearances of the idle rich. The negative effects that such radical
transformation can have become clearer still from Rocco e i suoi fratelli as
Visconti follows five Southern brothers from an overwhelming new life to
material betterment and tragic disintegration in Milan. Uncontested winners at
the 1960 Cannes and Venice festivals and, except for L‘avventura, at the box
office, these equally experimental approaches to socio-cultural commentary
were welcomed as an artistic ‘rebirth’ among critics and filmmakers, while
running into considerable obstacles on account of the Church and Milan’s
Public Prosecutor’s Office (Argentieri 1974: 170–6). Shared among them is the
formal and narrative alignments with transformations that were ‘miraculous’
not as much for their rapidity but for the ‘short circuit’ they caused ‘between
previous economic horizons, expectations, mental images, and the ones
infused by the boom’ (Crainz 2005: 60). Our journey beyond neorealism will
accordingly present ruptures and reinventions, and while it will trace neorealist
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legacies in portrayals of the nation, aligning with Alan O’Leary and Catherine
O’Rawe’s recent critique of ‘a “certain tendency” in Italian film criticism’ it
will show no ‘disdain’ for popular films, nor will it presuppose neorealism as
a paradigm and realism as ‘a value category’ (2011: 107–15). In some highly
diverse works of directors who from the 1950s to the present have been among
the country’s most prolific, we will see that the play with neorealist themes and
narratives is a question of reformulating the proximity to human and social
hinterlands and in most cases of rejecting all forms of detachment from the
pro-filmic. What remains unchanged is the moral objective of reducing dis-
tances between the cinema, History and those who make it.
If, in via Veneto, a prostitute from the periphery should happen to come
around, of those who live in the borgata or among the ruins of Foro
Romano, what happens? Her VIP colleagues will make a big deal, the
commendatori will not even look at her, then a policeman will tell her
to leave. Instead, let’s make her live a fairy-tale night. (quoted in Del Fra
1965: 37)
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Resentful both of Giorgio’s attempt to drown her for 40,000 lire and social
regulations that exclude her from the city’s exclusive areas, Cabiria trans-
gresses into Via Veneto where she encounters her favourite actor, Alberto
Lazzari (played by Amedeo Nazzari). Tired of life and of his silly girlfriend, he
takes Cabiria to the Piccadilly club and to his lavish villa where her clownish
mannerisms eventually turn into tears as the girlfriend, predictably, returns.
Equally disappointing are Cabiria’s visits respectively to a sanctuary where she
asks the Virgin Mary for help to change, and to a variety theatre where she is
hypnotised and ridiculed. What motivates both her escapism and her savings
for the future is suggested when she meets ‘the Man with the Sack’ and follows
his nocturnal visit to the homeless in the caves. While the view of a former
high-priced prostitute worryingly announces where Cabiria might end up in a
few years’ time, the humanitarian’s unprejudiced charity makes her reflect on
her life and confess how she first came to Rome as an orphan.4 This tentative
self-awareness takes a more precise form when Oscar abandons her – alive but
without all the money she got for her hut – and she rises to resume her walk.
When we follow Cabiria’s tired steps and evaluate what will become of her –
chances are she will end up like Antonio without his bike: exactly where she
started – Cabiria’s path merges with that of some musicians while her look
moves gradually towards the camera. Whether the tearful smile she directs
towards us manifests ‘a touch of grace’ Fellini ascribed to several of his appar-
ently destroyed characters (1999: 66) or whether it is just another mechanism
to ‘implicate’ the viewer in her circle of ‘illusions and disillusion’, it takes us far
away from the detached and denunciatory open-endedness of Bicycle Thieves
(Shiel 2006: 120). What we do discern in Cabiria’s self-reflexive look and in
the comfort she finds in the cheerful, young musicians, is an authorial poetics
that in its focus on the subjective experiences of a changing society will arrive
at entirely different ways of seeing and of being in the world.
Like the aimless provincial bachelors in Fellini’s I vitelloni (1953) and the
travelling clown Masina performs in La strada (1954), Cabiria directs the
neorealist journey towards new human and cinematic realms. The innova-
tive intentions attached to these wandering characters come, nevertheless, to
reinforce what according to Deleuze marked the very novelty of neorealism,
accentuating ‘not only the insignificance of the events, but also the uncertainty
of the links between them and their non-belonging to those who experience
them in this new form of the voyage’ (Deleuze 1986: 212). Whereas Fellini’s
‘viewers’ are driven along with utter inconsequentiality to exhilarating spaces
of appearance and performance, the sub-proletarians Pasolini portrayed in
Accattone (1961), which visualises his novel Una vita violenta (1959) and
in Mamma Roma (1963), stand tragically immobilised to demonstrate how
‘beyond the city a new city is born, new laws are born where the law is enemy,
a new dignity is born where dignity no longer exists’ (Pasolini 1979: 117–18).
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city’s recent wealth, but also the ‘chaos’ that emerges between her origins and
petit-bourgeois aspirations, creating a ‘confusion’ that destroys Ettore’s pri-
mordial sense of self as well as her own chances of social mobility (Pasolini,
quoted in Faldini and Fofi 1981: 237).
No apocalyptic vision but an agonising ennui and an obsessively visualised
emptiness emerge when Antonioni explores the protagonists of modernisa-
tion and urban expansion. La notte (1961) opens with a descending tracking
shot of Milan’s 127-metre-high Pirelli skyscraper and of the vast cityscape
as projected onto its window-walls. It is, however, not from this panoptical
perspective that Italy’s financial capital will be examined, but from that of a
wanderer in search of meaning beneath domestic and social facades.7 Lidia’s
trajectory starts and ends respectively with classy receptions, the first launches
her husband, Giovanni’s new novel and follows on from their visit to a cancer-
suffering friend who dies a few hours later; the second ends at dawn as Lidia
reveals a ‘thought’ she starts to formulate upon leaving the launch party.
Drawing on the energy of the urban crowd, her initially absent walk assumes
the spontaneous inquisitiveness of a flânerie that leads from congested streets
and massive skyscrapers to a demolished courtyard. As misplaced amidst
modern constructions as she is among socialites and pseudo-intellectuals, this
residue of the city’s less prosperous past brings Lidia to an equally destroyed
house in the suburbs where she grew up. Giovanni picks her up and, failing
to comprehend her return to the places of their past, he takes her home to
their inner-city apartment where domestic boredom drives them to a fancy
nightclub and an industrial tycoon’s villa. Giovanni is offered a position in
the wealthy host’s empire, but fails to seduce his daughter, whereas Lidia
continues her detached observation and is ultimately incapable of accepting
an admirer’s advances. Their elopement is poetically rendered through a rainy
car-window that drowns out the voices of their enthusiastic conversation, a
noticeable contrast to Lidia’s confrontation at dawn with Giovanni, who by
conquering her body thinks he can obliterate her despair over realising that all
she feels for him is ‘compassion’.
All the commonplaces associated with Antonioni – incommunicability,
alienation, ‘Eros gone sick’, lack of purpose and loss of meaning – surface
from the predictably inconclusive night that gives the film its title. Halting
in ‘optical situations’ where ‘idle periods’ and ‘empty spaces’ merge and
memory crystalise past and present destruction (Deleuze 1989: 6–7; 79–81)
as it happens in the courtyard scene, all Lidia arrives at is a longing for death
that hopefully will start ‘something new’ or, she concedes, “perhaps nothing”
at all. In formulating this nihilistic awareness, however, she has distanced
herself from her unquestioning husband and their conformist social environ-
ment, following a path uniquely of her own devising. Her wandering evokes
the claim Italian women staked in the 1960s to predominantly male streets,
198
suggesting what inner experiences such socio-cultural acts may entail (Bruno
1993: 50–4). A similar walk of emancipation unfolds in Agnes Varda’s Cleo
from 5 to 7 (1962) where the fear of terminal cancer compels the materialis-
tic singer Cleo to transform her previous window shopping and masquerade
into self-reflection, objectification and flânerie along Parisian boulevards. This
representation of a mobilised female gaze points to the legacy the neorealist
journey left among the aspiring cineastes of Cahiers du Cinéma whose auteur-
ist inclinations developed around essayistic road movies such as La strada and
Rossellini’s Viaggio in Italia. What in particular made the latter’s focus on a
woman’s exploration of the ‘providential city’ of Naples a ‘breach’ through
which ‘all cinema, on pain of death, must pass through’ was, Jacques Rivette
wrote in 1955, the ‘vast chords’ springing from ‘shots of eyes looking’ and the
‘new, contemporary tone that speaks to us [and] affects the modern man in us’
(1985: 194–200).
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200
critical voices tended to ignore the reference to the recent case of a worker
who had been fired for professing radical objectives at the factory, as well as
the authenticity of Northern voices and of the setting of a factory near Turin
whose recently laid-off employees filled the supporting roles (Della Casa 2009:
16–18). With the exception of Mario Monicelli’s I compagni (1963) which
portrays textile workers in 1900s Torino, and Ruttmann’s Acciaio, whose for-
malism Petri evokes through Ennio Moricone’s weighty score aligned with the
rhythm and the solidity of the machinery, no Italian feature film had portrayed
an actual factory. More importantly, however, La classe operaia adheres to
the awareness that the way of convincing spectators was no longer ‘faithful’
portraits, but ‘baroque deformations’ (Casetti 2008: 37); that to look at press-
ing political problems with ‘grotesque’ and ‘oneiric’ frames could better reveal
their origins and engage 1970s’ audiences in their implications (Castaldi 2006:
59–65). The exaggerated representation of greedy owners, on the one hand,
and of disunity within the Left and among workers, on the other, discloses the
complexity of exploitation, whereas Lulù’s disfigured expressions and delirious
experiences confront the viewer physically and mentally with a labour process
that destroys people from within. Ultimately, such estranging strategies aimed,
as Brecht theorised it, to disallow emotional identification and draw attention
away from the particulars of Lulù’s story to the historical realities he refers to
when asking, desperately, ‘what kind of life is this?’
That naturalism had played its part as the motor of ideological analysis is
an accepted fact when Lina Wertmüller (1926) visits 1970s Turin, starting,
as she does, with a Sicilian metalworker seduced by communism and by an
emancipated Northern woman in order to satirise archaic notions of honour
and the mafia’s iron grip on individual and social life. Although both Mimì
metallurgico ferito nell’onore (1972) and Wertmüller’s successive comedies
are inconceivable outside of Italian regional and social discourses, they trav-
elled triumphantly within international theatres and stirred cult reactions
among American cinephiles and critics alike.12 Standing in a niche between
Fellini – whose taste for the bizarrely vulgar and, according to certain feminist
critics, for the misogynistic, she shares – and the 1960s’ commedia all’italiana,
which in itself drew on the regional stereotypes, stock scenarios, and anti-
bourgeois satire of commedia dell’arte, Wertmüller balances questions of
supra-national relevance – political commitment, exploitation and rebellion,
conflicts of gender and ethnicity – with national traditions wherein grotesque
registers serve to deconstruct repressive social conventions (Marcus 1986: 314;
Bondanella 2009: 194). In Film d’amore e d’anarchia (1973), this equilibrium
is anchored to Tunin, a young farmer who in the 1930s witnesses the assas-
sination of an anarchist friend and takes on his commitment to kill Mussolini.
In Rome, he meets up with Salomè, whose boyfriend was unjustly killed in
Bologna for a plot on the Duce. Since then, she has lived for revenge, hiding as
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Figure 8.1 Tunin and Tripolina in Wertmüller’s Film d’amore e anarchia. Courtesy
of the British Film Institute.
the queen at Madame Aida’s luxury brothel and pumping Spatoletti – chief of
the secret services and her most devoted client – for information. What ruins
her plans is not Tunin’s naiveté or fear of certain death, but her colleague,
Tripolina, who after some days of Tunin’s disinterested love, tries desperately
to prevent Salomè from waking him up for the fatal mission. Their betrayal
unhinges Tunin and rather than escaping with Tripolina, he shoots frantically
at some carabinieri mistakenly thought to be after him and discovers, with the
revolver pointed towards his head, that he is out of bullets. Spatoletti’s tortur-
ers nonetheless report his death as an unidentified madman’s suicide to hinder
the increasingly numerous anarchists from getting another martyr.
Like Lulù, Tunin is predictably defeated. If Film d’amore appears even more
pessimistic with regard to revolutionary objectives, it is not as much for the
disquieting counterpoint his death forms to witty dialogues, stereotypical por-
traits, a well-paced narrative and ridicule of authorities such as the stupidly
boastful Spatoletti and the presumptuous Madame. Nor is it the futilely tragic
end it poses to Tunin and Tripolina’s romantic idyll – a two-day holiday the
Madame consents to after Tunin helps her get rid of a client just before he dies
of a heart attack. The two anarchists may both profess a hatred for tyrants,
reinforcing the messages of the brothel scenes which rather than demonstrat-
ing an ‘unwillingness to deal with women as individuals’ (Cottino-Jones 2010:
202
159) convey a critique of totalitarianism through women who display false and
conformist identities, pretending a happily vulgar submission to male laws and
desires. Ultimately, however, Tunin and Salomè are fundamentally driven by
personal exigencies of vindication. While their anarchism, as Marcus shows, is
embedded in history and in their native areas – Tunin grew up among social-
ists in the Po Valley and replicates an unnamed Sardinian anarchist executed
after a failed attempt on the Duce; Salomè is from the equally radical Bologna
where her boyfriend, the actual anarchist Anteo Zamboni, was killed during
Mussolini’s visit in 1926 – their fiction subjects personal sacrifice to Tripolina’s
individualism (Marcus 2004: 185–7). The disdain she expresses for ideals and
belief in justice conveys, however, neither a ‘typically female view of politics’
(Cottino-Jones 2010: 161), nor certainly a ‘nihilist’ attitude (Russo Bullaro
2006: 44), but a knowledge, drawn from growing up in Naples and from
surviving humbly in The Eternal City, of the immutable course of History.
Her rejection of political action ultimately presents an ‘alternative history’
that testifies to the perpetually marginalising strategies of patriarchal powers
(Diaconescu-Blumenfeld 1999: 390).
The characters’ distinct temperaments, their broad dialects, and the regional
folk tunes interconnecting the rural North with the urban centre and the mari-
time South all serve to reactualise the neorealist journey towards suppressed
realities. While the parodistic portrayal may remain inadequate as a histori-
cal analysis, its value resides in the way the nature and intentions of fascist
violence are projected onto 1970s Italy.13 Tunin’s desperate call for human
freedom when surrendering to the carabinieri’s ferocious capture comments on
the gory, sometimes fatal, confrontations that arose between students and the
forces of law and order summoned to suppress their protests. However, what
would have struck contemporary viewers most is the flashback at the beginning
to when Tunin, as a child, asked his mother what an anarchist is and his proc-
lamation years later – ‘Viva l’anarchia!’ (Long live anarchy!) – voiced when he
intends to shoot himself and in response to Spatoletti’s interrogation.14 Herein,
we discern specific references to a wave of extremist political violence that
unfolded in the wake of 1968, peaking a decade later with the Red Brigade’s
assassination of former Prime Minister, Aldo Moro.15 Wertmüller’s concern
is the 1969 Piazza Fontana bombing in Milan which left seventeen dead and
many more wounded, inspiring hasty conclusions within the police who imme-
diately targeted the harmless Giuseppe Pinelli and other anarchists. After three
days of illicitly long interrogations, Pinelli was seen falling from the fourth
floor of Milan’s police headquarters and would, according to infamously fab-
ricated police reports, have screamed: ‘Viva l’anarchia!’ before jumping out
of the window (Lucarelli 2007: 21–5). Joining the chorus of Documenti su
Pinelli (1970), a film inchiesta promoted by Petri and Volonté, and Dario Fo’s
satirical play Morte accidentale di un anarchico (1970), Film d’amore engages
203
with the public anger this case caused, but more subtly still does it voice the
suspicion many correctly had that the attack in Milan was orchestrated within
the neo-fascist organisation Ordine Nuovo and promoted by the diversion of
Italian and American Secret Services. Already at this time, critical observers
talked of ‘the strategy of tension’, suggesting that the counter-revolutionary
attacks on civilians staged as coming from the Left served to urge the country
towards totalitarian structures and away from politics of inclusion and social
reform.16
Few summarised the 1970s zeitgeist better than the feminists who in the
search for revolutionary transparency extinguished borders between the
domestic and the public, professing their convictions that ‘the personal is
political’. Seen in this light, the grotesque in Petri and Wertmüller appears as a
means to put women’s and men’s tacit suffering up for collective debate (Crainz
2003: 509–10). Some twenty years later, when cult director and actor Nanni
Moretti looks back at the radical Left within which his ideas were formed, the
feminists’ dictum is resolutely reversed: in Caro diario (1993), the political is
idiosyncratically personal.17 While autobiography has been Moretti’s method
since Io sono un autarchico (1976), the first of several films in which he per-
sonifies the neurotic ex-68er, Michele, it was in this essayistic film that the
director first played himself, thus presenting a manifesto of already publicly
known obsessions and of the considerable freedom he enjoys as producer and
distributor of his own films, winning international acclaim as the one of the
most innovative of Italy’s contemporary directors.18 Caro diario opens with a
diary entry in the writing while the author’s voiceover reads the text, declar-
ing that there is one thing he likes the most. By the end of the first chapter, ‘In
Vespa’, his favourites (old buildings observed while cruising around Rome’s
deserted streets in August) have formed a list of impressions (dancers, Jennifer
Beals, random interlocutors, horrible movies) that continues in ‘Isles’ where
he visits the southern Aeolians with Gerardo, a devoted reader exclusively
of Joyce’s Ulysses. Their odyssey in search of peace fails, as the things they
wanted to escape (traffic, hostility, conformism, anti-social narcissism) are
intensified on the islands, while Gerardo resigns himself to the industrialisa-
tion of culture and becomes addicted to The Bold and the Beautiful. In claus-
trophobic contrast to these open-air explorations, the last chapter, ‘Doctors’,
gravitates around health centres as it reconstructs the months of arbitrary
assessments and useless treatments Moretti underwent before being diagnosed
with Hodgkin’s lymphoma. When frustration, pain and chemotherapy are
all over, he can only state the doctor’s ability to talk but not to listen and the
supposed healthiness of water.
Unfolding as a collection of improvised, constructed, and re-enacted expe-
riences, what Moretti referred to as a ‘Vespa-film’ (quoted in Detassis 2002:
9) fulfils in part Zavattini’s ideals of a ‘cinema of encounters’, but it does not
204
205
Figure 8.2 Witnesses to the building collapse in Rosi’s Le mani sulla città. Courtesy
of the Fondazione Centro Sperimentale di Cinematografia.
206
permits with political influence and the support of the Camorra and acquires
votes with wealth derived from shoddy housing. An inquest is called, but as it
includes complicit party members and proceeds through unaccountable public
offices, Nottola is left predictably untouched, whereas the impoverished resi-
dents must evacuate the street where the incident occurred to leave room for
his inexorable expansion. On election night, the right-wing mayor loses to the
centre candidate with whom Nottola has allied to enter the governing commit-
tee as head of public works. It is the new mayor who eventually inaugurates
Nottola’s project launched against civically sensitive town planning schemes
but with public funds and the blessing of governmental and clerical authorities.
The film’s postscript note states that although events and characters are fic-
tional, the reality forming them is authentic. Concealed within this apparently
generic claim to authenticity are rather confrontational references to webs of
collusion that reached far beyond Naples where the ex-fascist Mayor Achille
Lauro, according to Rosi’s compatriot and scriptwriter, Raffaele La Capria,
throughout the 1950s had given speculators ‘free hands on the city’ (quoted
in Garofano 2004: 243). It is as a product of his regime that we must perceive
of Nottola who in himself is a force, not essentially evil, of constructiveness –
memorably rendered through Rod Steiger’s formidable screen presence – that
political and historical circumstances allow cynical and destructive room for
play (Rosi, quoted in Ciment 2005). Nottola’s primary protector is the outgo-
ing mayor who personifies both Lauro’s opportunism and eventual defeat,
whereas De Vita denounces their corruption with the lucid oratory of Carlo
Fermariello, the Neapolitan communist councilman and Labour Union Leader
who played his character. The story is, however, not about the heroes and
villains of this society, although it separates morally as well as spatially those
who pass off the abuse of power for the legitimate execution of administrative
procedures of individual rights, and those who, like the boy who loses his legs
in the incident, live in deprivation. Based on endless city walks, encounters with
urbanists and architects and observation of innumerable city council meetings,
as well as on the authenticity of non-professionals who act out their ideological
and social positions, the film presents individuals as forces in a conflict; of inter-
est not for their personal life, but for the public consequences of their actions.
As character development is undermined by political discourse, allusions and
ellipses, psychology becomes, as Rosi explained, a matter of ‘editing’, and
‘truth’ – something he ultimately leaves up to the viewer to ‘judge’ (quoted in
Ciment 2005). By suggesting the nature and origins of processes that at the time
were not publicly acknowledged, Le mani sulla città seeks to transform its spec-
tators into a citizenship capable of substantiating De Vita’s warning to Nottola
that the people are developing consciousness and will soon challenge his game.
The retrospective awareness of how wrong De Vita was is partly what
motivated Roberto Saviano (1979–) to investigate and expose the mechanisms
207
that have reduced what in the 1960s was an aesthetically, socially and envi-
ronmentally devastating construction site, to a Gomorrah intoxicated by
waste, drugs and bloodshed. By such means, Neapolitan clans have seen an
enormous expansion, but their power remains founded in ‘concrete. The oil of
the South’, an entrepreneurial capital derived from sand enough to construct
‘half of Italy’ and to destroy landscapes and farmlands around Naples (Saviano
2006: 235–6). Openly and unopposed, for in the kingdom of the Camorra,
the wages of truth are death or, at best, exclusion, as is known both to the
police-protected author and to some of his characters who have broken the
omertà – a law that in Naples reigns as resignation, indifference and material
necessity rather than fear. Nonetheless, the reportage-novel proves the power
of the word, and in transforming it into the cult film that Gomorra (2008) has
become, Saviano and director Matteo Garrone (1968–) selected five stories
defined by place and characters who all testify to the Camorra’s territorial
control. Don Ciro delivers money to the families of imprisoned clan affiliates
in Scampia, a housing project founded in concrete in the North of Naples. His
route interrelates with that of the sixteen-year-old Totò, who delivers goods
from his mother’s store and drugs between dealers. An aspiring camorrista,
Totò is trained in fearlessness by being shot at while wearing a bulletproof
vest, while the provincial kids Marco and Ciro reject all rules and affiliations,
stealing money, drugs and weapons from a gaming house, illegal immigrants
and a mafia boss respectively, realising only too late that to live like Tony
Montana in Scarface also implies facing the death he suffered. Pasquale is
a gifted tailor employed in a textile industry that in the battle for contracts
with Northern designers has met increasing competition from the factories of
Chinese immigrants. Having survived the fatal reprisal for clandestine lectures
given to admiring Chinese employees, he starts work as a truck driver rather
than returning to constrained, underpaid and unappreciated artistry, content-
ing himself with televised images of Scarlett Johansson dressed in his laborious
creation. Franco’s abilities, by contrast, are amply compensated as his job is to
identify dumping grounds and immigrants or gypsy kids for hazardous trans-
portations to rid Northern companies of their toxic waste in an apparently
‘clean’ and comparatively cheap manner. Roberto is Franco’s eager appren-
tice until disgust over destroyed natural and human life makes him forgo the
success of corruption.
The voice of all the morality and consciousness that is lacking around him,
Roberto’s quiet protest expresses both the author’s civic commitment and the
suffering of a people who have learnt to consider injustice a collective fate. To
what extent criminal power infuses people’s everyday life is dramatised when
a group of secessionists demands autonomy from the leading clan, provoking
‘a war, not declared, not recognised by governments’ that killed people daily
in the fall and winter of 2004–5 (Saviano 2006: 105). Don Ciro and Totò both
208
fall betwixt and between the imprisoning walls of Scampia: while the anony-
mous money-carrier is forced into a battle he wants no part of, the trusted kid
is given the choice to die or to lure a woman into a fatal trap set by her son’s
enemies. Nobody is neutral or immune, and to dismiss mafia violence as a
question of ‘killing among themselves’ the way governmental and law enforc-
ing authorities have traditionally done is as naive as to reduce it to a Southern
problem (Saviano 2006: 97). Whether fashion goes out to adorn Hollywood
stars or garbage comes in to ruin Southern farmers, the Camorra stands behind
and above, but the global dimensions of its parasitic power is most evident
in an open-air drug market run like clockwork, with a workforce of children
and unemployed youth and with distribution from Scampia to the whole of
Europe.22 In contrast to Saviano, Garrone maps out this world as a stranger,
and while he shoots on location with permission from Camorra bosses, with
the expertise of drug dealers, and with local amateurs or non-professionals
alongside professional actors, the cinematic gaze remains detached, excluding
both the participant observations and the critical assessment of Saviano’s pas-
sionate investigative writing. The commitment to document without judging a
precarious and unacknowledged reality and the interconnection of freestand-
ing episodes through the theme of war reveals, instead, the legacies of Paisà,
evident in the dedication to socio-geographical spheres and characters previ-
ously unseen at the movies as well as in the inquiry into relations between
History and history; between self-declared authorities and their subjects.23 By
recuperating moral and thematic aspects of Rossellini’s journey of liberation,
Gomorra appeals to viewers within and beyond the society represented with
the very claim to freedom that during the Resistance saw socially distanced
citizens unify against dictatorial atrocities.
209
the allusiveness of Colpire al cuore (1981).24 Evoking the basic facts of a recent
news item, Amelio introduces the eleven-year-old Rosetta as she prays to the
Guardian Angel while waiting for a man to enter her room in an untidy apart-
ment. From the alienating spaces of a Milanese housing project reminiscent of
Gomorra’s concrete-worlds, her little brother, Luciano, witnesses the arrest of
their Sicilian single mother and of the decent-looking Northern client. The two
siblings are accompanied onto a train by two carabinieri, but as one betrays
the shared assignment of conducting them to a Catholic orphanage outside of
Rome, Antonio must face Rosetta’s rejection and follow the order to go imme-
diately to another institution in Sicily alone. Luciano’s asthma delays their
departure, however, and Antonio finds a colleague’s place in Rome where they
stay. In Calabria, they participate in a First Communion Party at his sister’s
restaurant. Even Rosetta is enlivened until a woman reveals her image in a
tabloid newspaper, driving the three travellers away to a hotel. The following
day, to make up for their recent suffering, Antonio lets them stop at a beach in
southern Sicily, being awarded with filial affection and admiration as he arrests
an armed thief. The local warrant officer is, however, less impressed, predict-
ing that the humanitarian law enforcer’s disregard for orders will lead to
charges of kidnapping and possibly sexual assault rather than the promotion
he is aiming for. Exhausted and demoralised, Antonio can no longer comfort
the children and their last, nocturnal, drive unfolds in a disillusioned silence
that confirms their mutual abandonment. His solidarity has, nonetheless, fos-
tered ‘a different way of thinking’ in the previously inimical siblings and while
Antonio still sleeps in the car, they both wait with uncertainty for the Sicilian
institute to open, aware that from now on all they have is fraternal love (Vitti
2009: 229).
‘What a journey they made you do,’ Rosetta reflects aloud to Antonio, who
has been forced to extend an ungrateful mission she senses will end up exactly
where it started. Rome or Sicily makes little difference: no one would expose
innocent children to a girl sullied or, as the priest who refuses her suggests,
possibly infected, by prosperous perverts. Whether things are as hopeless or
as disastrous as she and Antonio eventually fear remains unknown; the frag-
mentary story constructed around looks and silences offers no solutions to the
encounters and cases of injustice it entails. Their open-ended journey recalls
both Paisà and Il cammino della speranza. which lead to uncertain borders of
time (the war’s end) and space (of France), but as Il ladro di bambini reverses
these films’ trajectories, it also denies their vision respectively of collective and
individual freedom. The Southern characters who are ordered away from a
menacing North while failing to find a home either in the dystopia of high-
ways that has ruined Antonio’s village, or in the utopia of Sicilian beaches,
enunciate small-scale experiences with a conflict that throughout the 1980s
had intensified around secessionist movements for Northern independence
210
Figure 8.3 Rosetta, Luciano and Antonio (far behind) in Amelio’s Il ladro
di bambini. Courtesy of the Fondazione Centro Sperimentale di
Cinematografia.
211
212
213
come to life through the travellers who in their non-verisimilar ethnic and lin-
guistic heterogeneity project the miraculously ‘reborn’ kid’s changing look at
stigmatised people whose worries and poverty he now shares (Cincinelli 2009:
173–8). Seen in contrast with the other’s estranging magnitude, our prejudice
and exclusion recall the type of indifference and conformism that in the past
have nurtured totalitarian visions of desired and unwanted citizens. Part of the
film’s objective is to warn us about the recurrence of history and call for our
civilisation to grow along with its ethnic landscape, but it also recalls times
when the losses and levels of destruction made everyone equal and the cinema
appeared as a revolutionary means to foster knowledge of the self and of
others. Where we sense the neorealist ethos is in particular in the ability to use
national cases of social injustice as a starting point for confronting universal
ways of closing the ‘door’ on that which threatens our privileges and disturbs
our conscience, without however denying the equally human capacity to create
‘bridges’ and relate to that which is different (Simmel 1994: 408). Delineating
a trajectory of awareness that reactualises the altruism which is the basis of
Paisà, Senza pietà and Il cammino – stories of times when we were they whose
urgent struggles engaged strangers prepared to die for our cause – Giordana
proceeds via ethnic diversity and bridges of solidarity and fraternal proximity to
denounce the easiness with which we hide, comfortably and indifferently, from
those who today carry the burdens of our past.
Claiming a place among the anarchists, resisters, workers, writers and
directors who since the rise and fall of dictatorial rule have declared the truth
about their world, Quando sei nato and Gomorra bring the cinema of the
new millennium into a territory of collective memory and civic engagement.
The narrative and aesthetic qualities of these and other post-neorealist films
illustrate, by way of opposition, the limits of the anti-illusionist and dedrama-
tised cinema Zavattini advocated and never saw realised to its potential. More
importantly still, the society they portray denies, categorically, the possibility
of scripts ‘thought during’ the moment of shooting and the ‘revolutionary
way of life’ such a non-industrial and ideologically free method would require
(1979: 395). Whether the obstacles are inequality and injustice, a faulty
democracy or increasingly illegitimate power relations on the one hand, or
the self-interest, corruption and indifference that exclude solidarity and social
consciousness on the other, neither the miraculously modern nor the (post-)
ideological Italy have promoted the ‘irreversible choice’ with which Pina,
Don Pietro, Carmela, Dale, Enne 2, Agnese, Edmund, Ernesto and Angela
affirmed ‘the freedom of thought as a value’ (Brunetta 1996: 37; 23). While
the sentiments involved differ, their sacrifices rest on ‘the true choice [that]
“consists in choosing choice” and that is supposed to restore everything to us’.
Anchored to ‘moralism which is opposed to morality’, it illuminates the affini-
ties between philosophy and the cinema that frame Deleuze’s film criticism
214
(1986: 116). It is, however, also suggestive of the immediacy between reality
and the cinema Zavattini considered it a duty to achieve, and in this ethical
basis for all vision and practice resides his greatest legacy. Besides corrobo-
rating the conviction that films may be ‘formally documentary’, and not at
all realistic, or they may be ‘completely invented’, and present an ‘absolutely
realistic’ content, this journey beyond suggests what an inspiration his tireless
insistence on the moral act of discovering the nation and its people continued
to constitute (Zavattini 2002: 738). Between them, the films in this section
give some kind of life to Italia mia, moving from the North to the South and
telling stories of ordinary people’s singular experiences of exploitation, suffer-
ing, engagement and solidarity. While it may be, as Giorgio De Vincenti has
recently suggested, that the lesson of neorealism as a manifold, innovative and
dynamic tradition today tends to be forgotten and, more specifically, that the
idea of a cinematic journey, for instance in China, would be deemed of no
interest and as such, unrealisable, both past and contemporary Italian cinema
offer signs to the contrary (2008: 24–5). Amelio, who in La stella che non c’è
(2006) follows the footsteps of Antonioni’s documentary Chunk Kuo – Cina
(1972) to conduct an intriguing journey of geographical and human discovery
precisely in China, testifies to the continuous value of the universal vision that
from Uomini e no via Senza pieta to Miracle in Milan increasingly defined
the neorealist ethos, ultimately forming the very rationale for the ‘Giornale
cinematografico della pace’ (Film Journal for Peace) Zavattini ideated in the
early 1960s.
Notes
1. See Wood (2005: 14). National income increased from 17,000 billion lire in 1954
to 30,000 billion in 1964, whereas the per capita income increased from 350,000
to 571,000 lire in the same period (Crainz 2005: 83).
2. See Ginsborg (1990: 239–49) and Sorlin (1996: 115); see Tönnies (2001) for the
classic distinction between ‹Community› and ‹Society›.
3. Between 1951 and 1961, Rome’s population increased from 1,961,754 to
2,188,160; by 1967 it had grown to 2,614,156. Milan similarly underwent an
expansion from 1,274,000 inhabitants in 1951 to 1,681,000 in 1967 (Ginsborg
1990: 216–20).
4. Based on an actual freelance humanitarian whose nocturnal missions Fellini had
followed, the episode was initially cut since neither the exposure of poverty nor
the portrayal of a charitable soul outside the Church’s circles went down well
with Christian Democratic authorities. Other controversial episodes such as the
prostitutes’ visit to the Divino Amore sanctuary escaped censorship, thanks to the
intermediation of a Jesuit and a cinephile cardinal (Kezich 1988: 260).
5. The most obvious iconographic references are to Da Vinci’s L’ultima cena (1495–
98), ‘mocked’ in the opening sequence featuring Carmine’s wedding, and Andrea
Mantegna’s Cristo morto (1985) which we recognise in Ettore’s death (Rodie 1995:
78; 12).
6. While Pasolini’s films exclude immediacy to the reality portrayed, his film theory
215
216
217
Fiamme Verdi, and its three sub-divided brigades, see La montagna non dorme: Le
fiamme verdi nell’alta Valcamonica, Brescia: Morcelliana (1968) and other writings
by the ex-partisan Dario Morelli and Associazione Fiamme Verdi’s website: http://
www.fiammeverdivallecamonica.tk/index.php?option=com_content&view=article
&id=47&Itemid=13 (accessed 15 October 2011).
218
219
Film d’amore e d’anarchia, ‘ovvero stamattina alle 10 in Via dei Fiori nella nota casa di
tolleranza’ (1973; Love and Anarchy). Director/Story/Script: Lina Wertmüller.
Germania anno zero (1948; Germany Year Zero). Director/Story/Script: Roberto
Rossellini. Script: Max Colpet, Sergio Amidei.
Gli uomini che mascalzoni! (1932; Men, what Rascals!). Director/Story/Script: Mario
Camerini. Story/Script: Aldo De Benedetti. Script: Mario Soldati.
Grandi magazzini (1939; Department Stores). Director/Script: Mario Camerini. Story/
Script: Ivo Perilli. Script: Renato Castellani, Mario Panunzio.
Gomorra (2008; Gomorrah). Director/Script: Matteo Garrone. Story/Script: Roberto
Saviano. Script: Maurizio Braucci, Ugo Chiti, Gianni Di Gregorio, Massimo
Gaudioso.
Ladro di bambini (1992; Stolen Children). Director/Story/Script: Gianni Amelio. Story/
Script: Sandro Petraglia, Stefano Rulli.
Maddalena zero in condotta (1940; Maddalena, Zero for Conduct). Dir: Vittorio De
Sica. Story: Lasazlo Kadar. Script: Feruccio Biancini.
1860 (1933; Gesuzza the Garibaldian Wife). Director/Script: Alessandro Blasetti. Story/
Script: Gino Mazzucchi. Script: Emilio Cecchi.
Le mani sulla città (1963; Hands over the City). Director/Story/Script: Francesco Rosi.
Story/Script: Raffaele La Capria. Script: Enzo Forcella, Enzo Provenzale.
Miracle in Milan (1951; Miracolo a Milano). Director/Script: Vittorio De Sica. Story/
Script: Cesare Zavattini.
La nave bianca (1941; The White Ship). Director/Script: Roberto Rossellini. Story/
Script: Francesco Di Robertis.
Non c’è pace tra gli ulivi (1950; Under the Olive Tree). Director/Story/Script:
Giuseppe De Santis. Story/Script: Gianni Puccini. Script: Carlo Lizzani, Libero De
Libero.
La notte (1961; The Night). Director/Story/Script: Michelangelo Antonioni. Story/
Script: Ennio Flaiano, Tonino Guerra.
Le notti di Cabiria (1957; The Nights of Cabiria). Director/Story: Federico Fellini.
Script: Ennio Flaiano, Tullio Pinelli, Pier Paolo Pasolini.
Obsession (1943; Ossessione). Director/Script: Luchino Visconti. Story: James M. Cain.
Script: Mario Alicata, Giuseppe De Santis, Gianni Puccini.
L’onorevole Angelina (1947; Angelina). Director/Story/Script: Luigi Zampa. Story/
Script: Piero Tellini, Suso Cecchi D’Amico. Script: Anna Magnani.
Paisà (1946; Paisan). Director/Script: Roberto Rossellini. Story/Script: Sergio Amidei,
Federico Fellini. Story: Alfred Hayes, Klaus Mann, Marcello Pagliero. Script:
Annalena Limentani, Vasco Pratolini.
Un pilota ritorna (1942; A Pilot Returns). Director/Script: Roberto Rossellini. Story:
Vittorio Mussolini. Script: Michelangelo Antonioni, Rosario Leone, Margherita
Maglione, Massimo Mida, Gherardo Gherardi, Ugo Betti.
Quando sei nato non puoi più nasconderti (2005; When You Are Born You Can No
Longer Hide). Director/Script: Marco Tullio Giordana. Story: Maria Pace Ottieri.
Script: Sandro Petraglia.
Quattro passi tra le nuvole (1942; Four Steps in the Clouds). Director/Script: Alessandro
Blasetti. Story/Script: Cesare Zavattini, Piero Tellini. Script: Aldo De Benedetti.
Rome: Open City (1945; Roma città aperta). Director/Script: Roberto Rossellini. Story/
Script: Sergio Amidei. Script: Federico Fellini.
Senso (1954). Director/Script: Luchino Visconti. Story: Camillo Boito. Script: Carlo
Alianello, Giorgio Bassani, Paul Bowles, Suso Cecchi D’Amico, Giorgio Prosperi,
Tennessee Williams.
Senza pietà (1948; Without Pity). Dir. Alberto Lattuada. Story: Ettore Maria
Margadonna. Script: Federico Fellini, Tullio Pinelli.
220
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Alicata, Mario, 15, 16, 18, 30n, 49, 93, Blasetti, Alessandro, 4, 8, 9, 24, 155–6,
166n, 190 157, 177
Alvaro, Corrado, 67–8 1860, 8, 163
Amelio, Gianni, 29, 215 Quattro passi fra le nuvole, 20–1
Ladro di bambini, vii, 209–11 Brecht, Bertolt, 36, 52, 138, 144,
Amidei, Sergio, 93, 94, 95, 104, 121n, 201
131
Andreotti, Giulio, 32n, 52, 59n, 60n, Cahiers du Cinéma, 48, 199
135, 139–40, 146, 163, 216 Cain, James M., 16, 41, 81n
Antifascism, 6, 69, 73, 147, 148 Calvino, Italo, 29, 35, 72–4, 76–8, 89n,
Antonioni, Michelangelo, 29, 30n, 145n, 111, 138, 169, 182
183, 194 Camerini, Mario, 24, 37, 42, 133
Amore in città, 55 Gli uomini che mascalzoni!, 9–10, 11,
La notte, 198–9 37
Aristarco, Guido, 119, 135, 144n, Grandi magazzini, 10–11
164 Caravaggio (Michelangelo Merisi da
Auerbach, Erich, 34, 44 Caravaggio), 39, 48
Castellani, Renato, 169n
Barbaro, Umberto, 11, 17, 38–9, 47, 48, Sotto il sole di Roma, 156, 170–1
59n, 60n, 146, 177, 183 Centro sperimentale di cinematografia, 3,
Bazin, André, 13, 25, 26, 27, 29, 46–50, 4, 30n, 38, 40, 146, 177
51, 52, 53, 58, 59n, 60n, 81, 105, Chaplin, Charlie, 41, 43, 137
109, 114, 115, 118, 119, 120, 121n, Cinema, 16, 22, 74
129, 131, 141, 142, 143, 151, Cinema Nuovo, 24, 135, 140, 146,
167n 163
Bernari, Carlo, 65, 68–9 CLN, 23, 24, 111, 124
233
234
optique, 28, 34, 57, 59, 69, 82, 88, 123, Verga, Giovanni, 7, 14, 15, 16, 31n, 36,
134, 182 39, 49, 68, 72, 148, 149, 151, 152,
153, 166n, 167n, 186
Pasolini, Pier Paolo, 24, 29, 91, 102, verismo, 7, 8, 14, 34, 69, 72, 149
103, 205, 215–16n, 217n Vertov, Diziga, 36, 37, 38, 42, 50, 52
Mamma Roma, 196–8 Vidor, King, 6, 36, 42, 43, 65, 108
Pavese, Cesare, 66, 67, 71–2, 78–9, 89n Viganò, Renata, 78
Petri, Elio, 203, 204, 209 Visconti, Luchino, 2, 16, 22, 25, 26,
La classe operaia va in paradiso, 29, 31n, 40, 42, 44, 59n, 60n, 73,
200–1, 216n 74, 135, 145n, 146–7, 166n, 167n,
Pratolini, Vasco, 80–1, 82, 90n, 110 168n, 172, 175, 181, 195
Bellissima, 29, 154–8, 165, 167–8n,
Renoir, Jean, 4, 6, 36, 39–40, 47, 171
59–60n, 126, 141, 151, 172, 177, Giorni di gloria, 147
181 Obsession, 16–19, 28, 31n, 36, 39,
Renzi, Renzo, 135, 144n, 152, 164 40–1, 44, 51, 63, 67, 71, 72, 102,
Rosi, Francesco, 166n, 209, 217n 147, 148, 151, 154, 172, 175, 181,
Le mani sulla città, 206–7 182, 183
Rossellini, Roberto Senso, 24, 29, 147, 153, 158–66,
Germania anno zero, 26, 115–19 168n
La nave bianca, 13–14, 107 The Earth Trembles, 2, 7, 28, 29, 42,
L’uomo dalla croce, 13, 15, 92, 93, 147–54, 155, 158, 165, 167n, 168n,
112 175, 181, 187
Paisà, 2, 17, 29, 42, 49, 80, 100, Vittorini, Elio, 26, 35, 68, 69–71, 72,
103–15, 118, 119, 121n, 122, 125, 74–6, 88, 89n, 90n, 98, 99, 100,
126, 171, 175, 179, 181, 195, 206, 148, 166n, 175
209
Rome: Open City, 1, 2, 13, 19, 28, 29, Welles, Orson, 43–9, 127
30n, 32n, 34, 42, 43, 45, 46, 51, Wertmüller, Lina, Film d’amore e
60n, 91–103, 107, 112, 115, 118, d’anarchia, 201–3, 216n
121n, 122n, 125, 127, 155, 171,
191n, 192n Zampa, Luigi, 191n
Un pilota ritorna, 13, 14–15 L’onorevole Angelina, 157, 170, 171,
Russian formalism see Soviet cinema 191n
Ruttman, Walter, 4, 6, 9, 37, 42, 201 Zavattini, Cesare, 5, 7, 8, 13, 19, 20, 25,
27, 28, 29, 30n, 32n, 33, 38, 50–4,
Samugheo, Chiara, 63 60n, 67, 74, 81, 95, 123, 124, 128,
Saviano, Roberto, 207–8, 209 129, 135, 136, 137, 140, 142, 143,
Shklovsky, Viktor, 35 144, 154, 158, 159, 181, 183, 209,
Silone, Ignazio, 68–9, 89n 211, 215, 217n
Soviet cinema, 3, 4, 6, 8, 17, 35, 38 Amore in città, 54–7
235