Realist Film Movements - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 30
About This Presentation
Title:

Realist Film Movements

Description:

Realist Film Movements Neorealismo (2) Films of Vittoria De Sica Table of Contents 1) Neorealismo as personal film 2) Films of Vittorio De Sica 3) Ladri di biciclette ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:123
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 31
Provided by: Muehl8
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Realist Film Movements


1
Realist Film Movements
  • Neorealismo (2)
  • Films of Vittoria De Sica

2
Table of Contents
  • 1) Neorealismo as personal film
  • 2) Films of Vittorio De Sica
  • 3) Ladri di biciclette
  • 4) Cesare Zavattini

3
Neorealismo as Personal Film
  • Traditional films - studio bound genre bound
    star bound the studio, genre and star dictate
    the way a film is made.
  • Films made according to the studios production
    interest and plan to genre requirements and to
    the demand of stars.
  • Personal films reflect film makers personal
    concerns. Neorealists PERSONAL CONCERNS and
    INTERESTS
  • are

4
Neorealismo as Personal Film
  • Ordinary lives in the post-war era
  • Social issues - unemployment, immigration,
    poverty, social and moral decay, political
    corruption
  • Lives of ordinary people in ordinary situation

5
Neorealismo as Personal Film
  • Influence of French Poetic Realism
  • Films in the 1930s by Julian Duvivier, Jean
    Renoir, Marcel Carné, Jean Vigo, Jacques Feyder
    and others
  • Ordinary people living in ordinary situation
    involves in tragic affairs.
  • Ordinary lives of ordinary people are portrayed
    in lyrical images and the impossibility of
    happiness demonstrated in tragic endings.

6
Neorealismo as Personal Film
  • What is realism in literature?
  • more extensive and socially inferior human
    groups to the position of subject matter in
    literature. (Erich Auerbach, Mimesis The
    Representation of Reality in Western Literature,
    p.491)

7
Neorealismo as Personal Film
  • Jean Renoir, La Bête humaine (1938)
  • Based on Emile Zolas naturalist novel, it is a
    story about an engineer who murders his wifes
    godfather.

8
Neorealismo as Personal Film
  • Jean Renoir, Toni (1935)
  • Based on a police dossier, it is about a crime of
    passion. An Italian immigrant worker in a
    Provencal quarry is entangled in complicated love
    affairs and jealousy.

9
Neorealismo as Personal Film
  • Marcel Carné, Le Jour se leve (1939)
  • A foundry worker is forced to murder a man who
    betrays and tricks him.

10
Neorealismo as Personal Film
  • A captain of a canal verge is estranged from his
    wife but they reunite after a sad separation in
    Jean Vigos LAtalante

11
Neorealismo as Personal Film
  • Subject matters ordinary people who are in
    ordinary situation but fail to gain ordinary
    happiness.
  • Stories of ordinary people in authentic settings
  • No idealization, no flattery, not
    larger-than-life portraying

12
Films of Vittorio De Sica
  • Vittorio de Sica (1902-1974)
  • A matinée idol turned into a film director.
  • The collaboration with Cezare Zavattini lead to
    the three great neorealist films

13
Films of Vittorio De Sica
  • Sciusciá (Shoeshine, 1946) - two shoeshine boys
    save money by delivering black-market goods to
    buy a horse. They are caught and sent to
    overcrowded boys prison. One boy betrays the
    other and after their release the latter kills
    the former by mistake.

14
Films of Vittorio De Sica
  • Ladri di biciclette (Bicycle Thieves, 1948) - a
    man in Rome found a job after two years waiting
    on the condition that he has his own bike. It is
    stolen on the very first day in his job. He
    searches all over Rome with his son. In
    desperation he himself turns to a bicycle thief.

15
Bicycle Thieves
  • Elements which made Bicycle Thieves a realist
    film in its day
  • ?    subject matters
  • ?    narrative strays
  • ?    the use of non-actors and location shooting
  • ?    no facile solution to the problem
    illustrated
  • ?    other aforementioned techniques (casual
    composition, no fancy mise-en-scène or montage,
    grainy photography, documentary style

16
Bicycle Thieves
  • Subject matters Unemployment, poverty, petite
    crime, disintegration of the society in the
    post-war Italy

17
Bicycle Thieves
  • Narrative strays
  • Bruno tries to pee during the hot chase of the
    thief who may have stolen his fathers bike.

18
Bicycle Thieves
  • Lamberto Maggiorani was a factory worker found by
    De Sica.

19
Bicycle Thieves
  • Bicycle Thieves was shot entirely on location in
    various places in Rome Piazza Vittoria, Porta
    Portese market, and the River Tiber.

20
Bicycle Thieves
  • No facile solution made though it looks as if
    father might restore his sons trust in him.
    Father will remain unemployed and the family will
    face more difficulties. Typical open ending.

21
Films of Vittorio De Sica
  • Umberto D (1952) - a retired civil servant,
    pensioner, finds difficult to make end meet in
    ridiculous inflation. He is kicked out of his
    apartment and has to abandon his dog, his only
    possession and companion.

22
Umberto D
  • Elements which made Umberto D a realist film in
    its day
  • ?    subject matters
  • ?    narrative strays
  • ?    the use of non-actors and location shooting
  • ?    no facile solution to the problem
    illustrated
  • ?    other aforementioned techniques (casual
    composition, no fancy mise-en-scène or montage,
    grainy photography, documentary style

23
Umberto D
  • Subject matters hyper-inflation after WWII,
    poverty, disintegration of the community, aging,
    animal welfare

24
Umberto D
  • Narrative strays a moment of solace. Maria, a
    maidservant of the lodgings is the only person
    who understands and care for Umberto.

25
Umberto D
  • Umberto was played by Carlo Battisti, the
    linguistics professor (dialects) at University of
    Florence, had no acting experience before and
    after the film.

26
Umberto D
  • Umberto D was shot entirely in Rome. The begging
    sequence was shot at Piazza Rotondo in historic
    centre of the city.

27
Umberto D
  • No facile solution. Umberto failed to kill
    himself and his dog and more problems are
    expected to torment them. Another typical open
    ending.

28
Ceare Zavattini
  • Screenwriter, director, painter, writer and
    theorist
  • Collaborated with Vittorio De Sica in Sciusciá,
    Ladri di biciclette and Umberto D
  • Teacher at Centro Sperimentale di Cinema
  • Critic at Bianco e nero
  • PURIST

29
Ceare Zavattini
  • A well-know American producer told me, This is
    how we would imagine a scene with an airplane.
    The plane passes by a machine gun fires the
    plane is crashed. And this is how you would
    imagine it. The plane passes by the plane
    passes by the plane passes by once more.
  • Cezare Zavattini, Some Ideas on Cinema

30
Cesare Zavattini
  • The dream of Zavattini is just to make a
    ninety-minute film of the life of a man to whom
    nothing ever happens. (Andre Bazin on Cesare
    Zavattini)
  • The duration of actual time is equal to that of
    films narrative time.
  • Little-man' principle a hole in the wall of
    a family house in order to peep inside.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com