HISTORY & DEVELOPMENT of ITALIAN NEOREALISM

Pre World-War II

Among the critics and the films scholar, Italian cinematic history was known as ‘neorealism’ which was a crucial watershed in the evolution of the seventh art. Italian neorealism reflects the emphasis on the social realism as it can be seen from one typical list of its general characteristics. On the most sensitive critic era, neorealism is a cinema of ‘fact’ and ‘reconstituted reportage’ which contained the message of the fundamental human society. According to Fellini, he declared ‘neorealism’ is a way of seeing reality without prejudice without conventions coming between it and myself.
During the pre-war of Italian cinema, Benito Mussolini had seized the power of the Italian cinema which was used as a form of propaganda, by educating the Italians with the documentaries and newsreels in the year of 1922. Besides, Benito Mussolini had set up Cinecittà studios in Rome and in the year of 1937, he took charge of the studios and had doubled the Italian production within a year.




                                                              Benito Mussolini


Besides, according to the pre-world war II Italian film industry journal, Neorealism was not a new movement in cinema but it is a continuation of the pre-war ideas. Thus, according to Marcia Landy, to regenerate the Italian cultural practices, the neorealist had created their own myth which is the ‘newness’ of ‘beginning’.



After World-War II
Italian Neorealism came after World-War II. Italian film industry loses its center after Benito Mussolini’s government fell. In 1942, Cesare Zavattini was the theoretical founder of neorealism.



He suggested a new form of Italian cinema that abolish contrived and planned plot. Zavattini looked at plots as a fake structure of everyday life. He claimed that professional actors complimented the falsehood. In Italian Neorealism film, most of the actors are real-life actors. They never received any performance training. Italian Neorealism emphasized on contemporary social realism. Neorealism was known as a cinema of poverty and pessimism. The citizens were suffering with poverty after world-war II. Poverty had influenced the moral condition of the citizens.  For example, in the film ‘Bicycle Thief’, the main character Ricci forced to stole bicycle because he need a bicycle for work.

The scene which people were chasing Ricci because he stole others bicycle.

Upon after seeing Rosselini’s Rome, Open City (1945) and Vittorio De Sica’s Bicycle Thief (1948), many established director all over the world were fascinated by a refreshing post war aesthetic which brought about the engaging narrative techniques to bear upon social issues. Through these films, it show that how a national identity could be redefined by cinema. The first neorealism films had pointed toward other cinematic styles and themes. It is the aesthetic alternatives to an ever-growing supply of American import. Satyajit Ray describes his first encounter with Italian neorealism as a life-changing experience.

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