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[ecrea] Journal of Italian Cinema & Media Studies 6.3 published
Tue Sep 18 13:51:03 GMT 2018
Intellect is happy to announce that the Journal of Italian Cinema &
Media Studies 6.3 is now available! To find out more about the issue,
click here >>https://bit.ly/2QF12B8
Special Issue: Rome, Open City
Content:
Rome, Open City: Before and after Neorealism
Authors: David Forgacs
Page Start: 301
The article reconstructs how Roberto Rossellini’s Roma città aperta
(Rome, Open City) (1945) film looked to its earliest reviewers and
critics in 1945–47, before it became identified as the founding film of
Neorealism, and how it has come to look since the 1970s, since the
critical paradigm centred on the concept of Neorealism started to come
apart. By focusing attention on how the film was received before the
rise and after the fall of that paradigm, we can see how the category of
Neorealism served to isolate and privilege one particular set of
aesthetic properties and interpretive-evaluative categories (raw,
authentic, quasi-documentary) while deflecting attention from others
(melodrama, spectacle of violence). It also directed attention away from
the film’s political functions, notably that of rehabilitating Italy and
Italians after two decades of fascism. These functions were perceived in
some (not all) of the early reviews, both American and Italian, but they
have become more visible to recent viewers and critics.
The reception of Rome, Open City in France (1946–68): Realism for the
elites, revolution for the people
Authors: Valerio Coladonato
Page Start: 315
In the years between the end of the Second World War and 1968, Roma
città aperta (Rome, Open City) (Rossellini, 1945) became a key point of
reference in a number of French cultural, aesthetic and political
debates. This article analyses the film’s reception across popular
audiences and cultured elites, making use of historical sources beyond
specialist film journals (such as articles from the generalist press,
promotional booklets, educational sheets, box office records) that help
to contextualize the film’s shifting cultural significance. Three
moments in particular are taken into account: Rome, Open City’s
presentation at the Cannes Film Festival and its theatrical release
(1946–47), during which its perceived ‘truth’ was indicated as its
foremost quality; the diminished visibility of the film in the 1950s
within the framework of the institutionalization of the politique des
auteurs; and the reactivation of the memory of the Resistance in the
period leading up to the events of May 1968.
Death and the gaze in Rome, Open City
Authors: Stefania Parigi
Page Start: 331
The article aims to confront the representation of death in Roma città
aperta (Rome, Open City) (Rossellini, 1945). Leaving aside the
relationship between real death and fictional death, by which is meant
the direct link between the film and historical events (already widely
analysed by scholars), the essay employs the epic and heroic dimensions
in relation to the narration of death; analyses the representation of
the foreigner as a bearer of death; focuses, therefore, on the gaze with
which Roberto Rossellini observes death, on the spaces and times of the
killings; highlights the symbolic and mythological dimension of the
film; and, finally, confronts the figure of the scapegoat and the
processes of elaboration of memory and mourning.
Re-reading Marina: Sexuality, materialism and the construction of Italy
Authors: Dom Holdaway And Dalila Missero
Page Start: 343
In this article, we propose a reading of the historical relevance of
Roberto Rossellini’s Roma città aperta (Rome, Open City) (Rossellini,
1945) in relation to one of the lesser-studied characters: Marina Mari
(played by Maria Michi). The character of Marina has been subjected to
critical negative responses centred on her narrative function, the
betrayal of the Resistance movement or the ‘corrupt’ persona of the
actress. We argue that Marina, in fact, embodies the convergence of a
series of gender, genre, social and historic dynamics that have
exceptional symbolic relevance for Italian cinematic and social history.
We begin with an overview of the connection between Rome, Open City and
the antifascist, re-foundational rhetoric that emerged after the Second
World War, which ‘preserved’ Italian national identity by assigning
culpability to the Germans alone. Following this, through a careful
re-reading of her narrative function and visual representation, we
demonstrate the radicalness of Marina’s sexual and social identity.
Notes on the end of Rome, Open City
Authors: Charles L. Leavitt IV
Page Start: 359
Among the most iconic images in world cinema, the final shot of Roberto
Rossellini’s Roma città aperta (Rome, Open City) (1945) has inspired an
effusion of critical commentary but little critical consensus, instead
giving rise to opposing interpretations. I argue that the shot, in which
the camera pans to follow a band of children as they march on a hillside
overlooking the city of Rome, was shaped by a post-war dispute over the
fate of Italian children after Fascism. Re-educating and re-claiming
these children was felt to be one of the most pressing tasks facing
Italy after the war, and I argue that it was this task that Rossellini
and his collaborators sought to represent and even to undertake in their
film. Thanks to their efforts, the final shot of Rome, Open City
facilitated both a compelling confrontation with Italy’s Fascist past
and a convincing – if far from straightforward – vision of its post-war
future.
Popular culture, performance, persona: Anna Magnani between Rome, Open
City and The Rose Tattoo
Authors: Francesco Pitassio
Page Start: 373
The article explores the work of Anna Magnani in her most productive
period, between Roma città aperta (Rome, Open City) (Rossellini, 1945)
and The Rose Tattoo (Mann, 1955). The article tackles Magnani’s work
from three perspectives: in terms of performance, that is, her acting
style; in terms of representation, that is, the relationship between a
spatial setting and a pattern organizing both narrative and performative
components; and in terms of star persona, the way in which media
discourse conveyed and construed her personality as both an authentic
artist and as an individual. The article posits that Rome, Open City was
a turning point in Magnani’s career, and encompassed all the features
that marked her following work. By closely reading her films and
scrutinizing the media discourse about the actress, as expressed in
neglected sources such as newsreels and popular press, the article
attempts to shed light on the way in which Magnani’s alleged
authenticity was designed.
(Un)dressing authenticity: Neorealist stardom and Anna Magnani in the
postwar era (1945–48)
Authors: Sergio Rigoletto
Page Start: 389
This article focusses on the making of Magnani’s star image during the
immediate postwar years (1945–1948). It appraises Magnani’s place within
the institutional discourse of Neorealism and unpacks some of the
meanings behind a notion that has been frequently associated with
Magnani: authenticity. By examining Magnani’s costumes in Roma città
aperta (Rome, Open City) (Rossellini, 1945) and in a number of popular
comedies of the immediate postwar period alongside some of the clothes
worn by the actress in her off-screen appearances, the article traces
the distinctive unfolding of a ‘star narrative’ that seems especially
concerned with points of origins and essences. The article demonstrates
that this unfolding manifests itself through the opening of a space of
absence in which, counter-intuitively, the ‘inauthentic’ appears
repeatedly confronted.
Film Reviews
Authors: Maria Bonaria Urban And Ellen Nerenberg
Page Start: 405
Libere, Rossella Schillaci (2017), National Film Archive of the
Resistance, with the support of Compagnia di San Paolo; City of Turin;
and Piemonte Doc Film Fund in association with Azulfilm
Student films from the Centro Sperimentale di Cinema, class of 2017
Book Reviews
Authors: Millicent Marcus And Sole Anatrone And Robert A.Rushing And
Danielle Hipkins And Giacomo Ravesi And Filippo Trentin And Emilio
Audissino And Simona Bondavalli
Page Start: 413
A History of Italian Cinema, 2nd ed., Peter Bondanella and Federico
Pacchioni (2017)
Marvelous Bodies: Italy’s New Migrant Cinema, Vetri Nathan (2017)
Muscoli e frac: Il divismo maschile nel cinema muto italiano, 1910–1929,
Denis Lotti (2016)
Peplum: Il cinema italiano alle prese col mondo antico, Francesco Di
Chiara (2016)
Italian Style: Fashion and Film from Early Cinema to the Digital Age,
Eugenia Paulicelli (2016)
Imagining: Serialità, narrazioni cinematografiche e fotografia nella
pubblicità contemporanea, Stefania Antonioni (2016)
Pasolini Requiem, 2nd ed., Barth David Schwartz (2016)
La musica alla radio 1924–1954: Storia, effetti, contesti in prospettiva
europea, Angela Ida De Benedictis and Franco Monteleone (eds) (2015)
Pasolini: Cinema e antropologia, Donatella Maraschin (2014)
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