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Italian Masters of Neorealism 
Rossellini, De Sica, Visconti, Antonioni, Fellini
Roberto
Rossellini
Source: Celebrity Biographies
(Information compiled by Ralph D'Angelo)
OCCUPATION:
director, screenwriter,
BORN:
Rome, Italy, May 8, 1906 (male).
DIED:
June 4, 1977 at the age of 71.
OTHER-JOBS:
editor, dubber, teacher
MILESTONES:
1934: Began working in film industry as editor, dubber, screenwriter
(date approximate)
1937-1938:
Made amateur film, "Prelude a l'apres-midi d'un faune"
(banned by Italian censors)
1938:
First screen credit as writer of "Luciano Serra, Pilota" (also directed some sequences)
1941:
First feature as director, "La Nave Bianca/The White Ship" (expanded from original documentary form)
1945:
Made breakthrough film, "Roma, Citta Aperta/Rome, Open City"
1949:
Made first film with Ingrid Bergman, "Stromboli"
1954:
Made last film with Ingrid Bergman, "La paura/Fear"
1977:
Directed last film, "The Messiah"
1985:
Posthumously appeared in Jonas Mekas' experimental compilation of
sketches, "He Stands in a Desert Counting the Seconds of His
Life"
BIOGRAPHY:
Often identified with the constrictive "neorealist" label,
Roberto Rossellini stands as one of the greatest directors in the
history of Italian film: the man responsible for the postwar rebirth
of Italian cinema and one of the few truly great humanists (along
with Jean Renoir) to work in the medium.
Born
into a bourgeois Roman family, Rossellini spent his formative years
under Mussolini's fascist fist and, by his early 30s, had drifted
into filmmaking--a common pattern amongst the idle Italian rich.
He worked with his friend, producer Vittorio Mussolini, the son
of "Il Duce", on the script for "Luciano Serra Pilota"
(1938), a propaganda film which showed some early marks of a neorealist
style. After directing a handful of pictures under the official
government banner, Rossellini, the stereotypically apolitical Roman,
made an indelible mark on world cinema in 1945 with "Open City."
Despite a lukewarm response in Italy, the film was a sensation in
France and the US with its raw, near-documentary style: grainy black-and-white
photography, amateur performers and real locations. These were elements
that audiences had not previously seen in feature films, and "Open
City" was hailed as bringing a new kind of realism, "neorealism," to the screen.
While
his two subsequent films--"Paisan" (1946, one of his greatest
achievements) and "Germany, Year Zero" (1947)--bore the
hallmarks of the neorealist style, Rossellini drew increasing critical
fire for his use of melodrama (especially through his brother Renzo's
musical scores) and Hollywood narrative conventions. He had never
been a strict neorealist, however. His aim was to understand rather
than recreate reality, sometimes for an expressly pedagogical function
(witness his masterful and unusual "The Flowers of St. Francis"
1948), and he incorporated other expressionistic elements into nearly
all his work. These elements are particularly evident in films such
as the underappreciated "Fear" (1954), with its psychologically
based visuals, but had already been partially present in "Open
City".
In
1949, Rossellini further challenged the film community's expectations
by forming a creative and personal--not to mention scandalous--union
with one of Hollywood's greatest stars, Ingrid Bergman. Beginning
with "Stromboli" (1949), the pair collaborated over a
six-year period on seven films, all of which proved disastrous with
both critics and public. (Several years later, however, writers
for Cahiers du Cinema were hailing "Voyage in Italy" (1953)
as a masterpiece, and its influence is readily apparent in films
by French New Wave directors.) By 1958, the two had separated, following
revelations of Rossellini's affair with Indian screenwriter Somali
Das Gupta. Rossellini's documentary "India" (1958) was
a box-office failure, although its critical reputation remains high.
Commercial success finally returned with "General Della Rovere" (1959), a wartime Resistance story which also marked a return to
the familiar neorealist style; Rossellini would later see the film
as a retread of the ideas and forms of his previous successes.
By
1964, Rossellini had been canonized by numerous critics, as well
as fellow filmmakers like Jean-Luc Godard and Bernardo Bertolucci
(in the latter's "Before the Revolution" 1964, a character
declares, "One cannot live without Rossellini!"). Concerned
chiefly with the state of cinema and its function as an artistic
and educational tool, Rossellini decided to remove himself from
the commercial arena. Viewing himself as a craftsman and not an
artist, he devoted his creative energies to TV films on science
and history: the five-hour "L'Ete del Ferro/The Age of Iron"
(1964), the twelve-hour "Lotta Dell'Uomo per la Sua Sopravvivenza/Man's
Struggle for Survival" (1967) and the six-hour "Atti Degli
Apostoli/The Acts of the Apostles" (1968), as well as biographies
of Socrates, Blaise Pascal, Augustine of Hippo, Descartes, Jesus
and Louis XIV. Only the latter," The Rise of Louis XIV" (1966), has received its due acclaim, chiefly because it is one
of the few to have been screened theatrically.
AWARDS:
Received Cannes Film Festival Grand Prix Award for "Open City" (1946). one of 11 films cited.
Received
Venice Film Festival Special Mention for "Paisan" (1946).
one of eight films cited.
Received
National Board of Review Award for Best Foreign-Language Film for "Open City" (1946).
Received
New York Film Critics Circle Award for Best Foreign Film for "Open
City" (1946).
Received
Locarno Film Festival Critic's Grand Prize for Best Film for "Germany,
Year 2000" (1948).
Received
National Board of Review Award for Best Film for "Paisan" (1948).
Received
National Board of Review Award for Best Director for "Paisan" (1948).
Received
New York Film Critics Circle Award for Best Foreign Film for "Paisan" (1948).
Received
Venice Film Festival International Prize for "Europa 51"
(1952). cited with John Ford's "The Quiet Man" and Kenji
Mizoguchi's "The Life of Oharu".
Received
Venice Film Festival Golden Lion Award for "Il General Della
Rovere" (1959). tied with Mario Monicelli's "The Great
War".
Received
Venice Film Festival Catholic Film Office Award for "Il General
della Rovere" (1959).
Received
Venice Film Festival International Film Critics Prize for "Il
General della Rovere" (1959).
BIBLIOGRAPHY:
"Roberto Roselliini" by Patrice Hovald (1958).
"Roberto
Rossellini" by Massimo Mida (1961).
"Roberto
Rossellini" by Mario Verdone (1963).
"Roberto
Rossellini" by Jose Luis Guarner (translated by Elizabeth Cameron)
(1970).
"Roberto
Rossellini: The War Trilogy" by Roberto Rosselini (1973). Publisher:
Garland Publishing. His war trilogy consists of "Rome, Open
City" (1945), "Paisan" (1946), and "Germany
Year Zero" (1947).
"The
Adventures of Roberto Rossellini" by Tag Gallagher (1998).
Publisher: Da Capo Press. |