{"id":2472,"date":"2014-01-13T19:11:02","date_gmt":"2014-01-13T18:11:02","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/rickzullo.com\/?p=2472"},"modified":"2017-07-01T16:22:32","modified_gmt":"2017-07-01T14:22:32","slug":"italian-cinema","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/rickzullo.com\/italian-cinema\/","title":{"rendered":"Italian Cinema"},"content":{"rendered":"

I finally had a chance to see the movie that everyone is talking about.\u00a0 No, not X-Men 9: Why Won\u2019t These Bastards Just Die<\/i>, but rather Paolo Sorrentino\u2019s evocative portrait of Rome, La Grande Bellezza<\/a><\/i> (The Great Beauty).<\/i><\/p>\n

\"ItalianFor those who haven\u2019t yet seen this film, it should be noted that, while visually stunning, it is thin on story\u2014which to me is a welcome relief from the aforementioned endless Hollywood blockbuster sequels.\u00a0 Rather, this movie creates a palpable mood and introduces us to some interesting characters\u2026not the least of which is the city of Rome itself.\u00a0 We follow the protagonist, the aging writer Jep Gambardella, through his extraordinary life of rooftop parties and casual encounters, all the while surrounded and seduced by the Great Beauty of the Eternal City.<\/p>\n

Many critics have called it \u201ca Technicolor La Dolce Vita<\/i> for the Berlusconi era,\u201d which for some reason the director, Paolo Sorrentino, has been keen to denounce.\u00a0 However, the similarities are just too close to Fellini\u2019s masterpiece for even Mr. Sorrentino to completely deny.\u00a0 In fact, he told the press that the two movies have very little in common \u201cexcept for the setting, their protagonists and their thematic symbolism.\u201d (But that\u2019s almost everything, isn\u2019t it?)<\/p>\n

<\/p>\n

Any foreigner with a genuine interest in Italian culture would do well to study the evolution of Italian film from neorealism to the present day.\u00a0 I recently had the privilege to do just that, watching (and re-watching) several important films under the tutelage of my friend and professor Dr. Ilaria Serra.\u00a0 I learned a great deal, not only about the art of filmmaking, but more pertinent to my interests, a deeper understanding of modern Italian society as it has progressed from the post-war era to today.<\/p>\n

The Roots of Neorealism<\/h2>\n

Neorealism was more an artistic movement than a defined genre.\u00a0 And while the expression of this style varied from director to director (and even within the oeuvre of a given filmmaker), there are certain elements that can be viewed as more or less consistent throughout this early period of Italian cinema.<\/p>\n

Classically, we define neorealism as using real people (i.e. non-professional actors) in day to day situations.\u00a0 Even the sets were real\u2014in the city streets and inside actual buildings rather than a recreated reality on a sound stage.\u00a0 Furthermore, they tended to keep the language of the people in the streets, preferring to maintain the dialects and accents of the characters.\u00a0 The result was supposed to give an almost documentary feel to the final work.<\/p>\n

In theory, the camerawork and editing should have been totally unobtrusive, but of course this was a myth.\u00a0 Directors couldn\u2019t help manipulating the camera to achiever their final artistic vision.\u00a0 Typically the protagonist was a normal, working class man (or woman) in real life predicaments, thereby allowing the audience to see themselves in the characters and their human experience\u2014a shared destiny.\u00a0 The viewer becomes involved and loses his\/her innocence.<\/p>\n

But neorealism has few absolutes.\u00a0 The movement was very much a result of timing rather than a conscious artistic method.\u00a0 It was heavily influenced by the anti-Fascism that marked the postwar period.\u00a0 Solidarity was an important theme, along with an implicit criticism of the status quo.\u00a0 Plot and story came about organically from these episodes and often turned on small details.\u00a0 Despite the rather short run (1943 to 1952) the most important films of the period, and the principles that guided them, put Italian cinema on the map and continue to shape contemporary global filmmaking to this day.<\/p>\n

Fellini<\/h2>\n

Then there\u2019s the mythical director himself, Federico Fellini.\u00a0 While he certainly began his career during the neorealism movement\u2014writing screenplays for his mentor Roberto Rossellini\u2014his own films can be seen as a progressive march away <\/i>from this style.\u00a0 Indeed, you could pick three of his most popular films and chronicle this evolution very nicely.\u00a0 If you\u2019re interested in understanding Fellini, watch these three:<\/p>\n

La Strada<\/i><\/b> (1954) still retains some elements of neorealism, but also gives us a few peeks at the style that we will later describe as \u201cFellinesque.\u201d (How cool to have an adjective in your name become part of the global lexicon?!?).\u00a0 It stars Anthony Quinn as Zampan\u00f2, a circus strongman who takes on an apprentice in Gelsomina (Giulietta Masina, Fellini\u2019s real life spouse).\u00a0 These visual elements of circuses, clowns, dreams, carnivals, and parades became trademarks of Fellini.\u00a0 And the sea.\u00a0 Most of his films began and ended at the sea, an homage to his hometown of Rimini.<\/p>\n

The ultimate expression of his famous style is seen in the surreal film 8 \u00bd<\/i><\/b> <\/i>(1963). \u00a0The whole movie feels like we\u2019re actually watching one of Fellini\u2019s black and white dreams.\u00a0 In the opening scene we see a man floating above the beach, a rope tied around his foot connects him to the Earth below, and someone is holding the other end, like a flying a kite.\u00a0 We hear only the wind and the man\u2019s breathing.\u00a0 Then he unties himself from the rope and tumbles down towards the sea.\u00a0 And from there it gets weird.<\/p>\n

But the inflection point, the film that changed it all for Fellini and indeed cinema in general, is of course La Dolce Vita<\/i> <\/b>(1960).<\/p>\n

The Not-so Dolce Vita<\/h2>\n

Ah, yes, that iconic phrase that Fellini made famous with his 1960 masterpiece.\u00a0 However, anyone who has actually watched that film realizes that Fellini was being ironic, if not outright sarcastic.\u00a0 I recently re-watched La Dolce Vita<\/i> after having seen it about 15 years ago\u2014in other words, before I had ever been to Italy.\u00a0 What I saw the second time was a completely different movie than I remembered.\u00a0 For example, the legendary scene of Anita Ekberg and Marcello Mastroianni splashing around Trevi\u2019s Fountain was actually a brief, fairly insignificant moment in the film.\u00a0 And yet that\u2019s what we all remember about the movie.<\/p>\n

So the title is actually a contradiction.\u00a0 He was commenting on a \u201csweet life,\u201d that everyone thought they wanted, but was always just out of reach, largely inhibited by their inability to communicate with one another.\u00a0 The film gives us this glimpse of Italian society as it transitioned from the post-war period of recovery into the era of prosperity and economic growth where the working class begins to have access to modern comforts.\u00a0 Now they have time to \u201cbe bored\u201d and to contemplate larger existential questions instead of just concentrating on day to day survival.\"the<\/p>\n

Abandoning traditional plot and conventional character development, Fellini creates a cinematic narrative that rejects continuity, explanations, and narrative flow in favor of seven non-linear encounters between Marcello and a cast of minor, often odd, characters.\u00a0 These little \u201csubplots,\u201d if you can call them that, shine a light on the disparity between the life that Marcello imagines and wants, versus what it actually is. \u00a0He desires connection, but has no idea how to obtain it\u2014he only senses that something is missing in his life.\u00a0 He resorts to pursuing the easy route through endless parties and sexual relations, but ultimately fails in satisfying his desires. (Sound familiar, Mr. Sorrentino?)<\/p>\n

In other words, perhaps Fellini is suggesting that endless opportunities, access to modern conveniences, and the freedom to direct every aspect of our own lives has its pitfalls, too.\u00a0 Are we really \u201cbetter off\u201d in this modern world?\u00a0 \u00a0The question might be even more pertinent today.<\/p>\n

Everybody is talking, but nobody is saying anything<\/h2>\n

The consumer society critiqued in the Rome of La Dolce Vita<\/i> looks almost quaint when compared to the incommunicability, voyeurism, and spiritual poverty characterize by today\u2019s chaos of social media existence.\u00a0 If technological distraction and pop-culture idolization leads to a breakdown of real human connections, then Fellini would be incredulous over our present state of society which, not ironically, is heavily influenced by the word \u201cpaparazzi<\/i>\u201d that he coined in this film (the photographer friend of Marcello was named \u201cPaparazzo\u201d).<\/p>\n

So what about il maestro<\/i> himself?\u00a0 Was he able to communicate with his audience?\u00a0 Fellini, a self-confessed \u201chonest\u201d liar, said about his own films, \u201cI don\u2019t understand them either. I don\u2019t seem capable of even suggesting an interpretation.\u201d<\/p>\n

But this too is a lie.\u00a0 Because although he may not have had the words to explain his messages, he communicated a great deal through the medium that he helped define by using a cinematic narrative which rejected conventional explanations and narrative logic in favor of his own brand of communication, which by-passed the intellect in favor of speaking directly to our shared emotions through visual and thematic symbolism.<\/p>\n

The Great Beauty of Rome<\/h2>\n

\"TheBack to this year\u2019s Oscar nominee for Best Foreign Film, The Great Beauty<\/i>.\u00a0 The director, Mr. Sorrentino, told the New York Times:<\/p>\n

\u201cIn Rome today, since it\u2019s hard to be optimistic, there\u2019s a kind of lassitude that found its symbolic culmination in dancing, in conga lines, in trying to seduce the beautiful woman of the moment or the beautiful man of the moment.\u00a0 It seemed that this has become the principal occupation of the country.\u201d<\/p>\n

The Roman rooftop terrace parties in The Great Beauty<\/a><\/i> show a culture that is blocked, resigned, embalmed in elegant decline, where some seek religion and others cocaine, and intellectuals talk endlessly about what\u2019s wrong and yet inertia overwhelms all forward momentum.\u201d<\/p>\n

Here we go again, Fellini redux: incommunicability. People are speaking, but nobody is really communicating\u2026they\u2019re merely looking for a quick fix, or a distraction from the unstoppable social decay.\u00a0 This is especially true in Rome, perhaps, where the political elite with their golden parachutes and blue cars are still pretending that nothing much is wrong.\u00a0 As the director says, \u201cThere\u2019s a sense that the nerve centers of the country had fallen asleep on their couches. And so I tried to turn that into a film \u2014 that everything had become a bit of a salon.\u201d<\/p>\n

And he did so very successfully, according to most critics.\u00a0 So I\u2019m sorry to disappoint you, Mr. Sorrentino, but I think Fellini would have been impressed with your work. \u00a0Maybe even flattered by the comparison.<\/p>\n

For further reading, check out this fine article on The Paris Review: Lost in Translation<\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"

I finally had a chance to see the movie that everyone is talking about.\u00a0 No, not X-Men 9: Why Won\u2019t These Bastards Just Die, but rather Paolo Sorrentino\u2019s evocative portrait of Rome, La Grande Bellezza (The Great Beauty). For those who haven\u2019t yet seen this film, it should be noted that, while visually stunning, it […]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":7034,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[10,42,4],"tags":[188,189,191,82,192,190],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/rickzullo.com\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/2472"}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/rickzullo.com\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/rickzullo.com\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/rickzullo.com\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/rickzullo.com\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=2472"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/rickzullo.com\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/2472\/revisions"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/rickzullo.com\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media\/7034"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/rickzullo.com\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=2472"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/rickzullo.com\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=2472"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/rickzullo.com\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=2472"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}