In:Landscapes of Realism: Rethinking literary realism in comparative perspectives
Edited by Dirk Göttsche, Rosa Mucignat and Robert Weninger
[Comparative History of Literatures in European Languages XXXII] 2021
► pp. 697–714
Realism across borders
The role of state institutions in making Italian neo-realist film transnational
Published online: 21 April 2021
https://doi.org/10.1075/chlel.xxxii.25chi
https://doi.org/10.1075/chlel.xxxii.25chi
Abstract
This case study investigates the role of state institutions in the molding of Italian neo-realism as a
transnational phenomenon. Conventionally, the birth of Italian neo-realism is associated with Rossellini’s Open
City and the end of World War II; however, its transnational story already begins in the late 1930s and early 1940s
when the project of a new Italian cinema was initiated by a group of young film intellectuals. Focusing on the discourse
surrounding the creation of this new realism in Italian film, we examine its transnational dimension as it manifests itself in the
production history of a sample of lesser known films that put Italy in touch with other countries. Some of these films were the
result of international coproduction agreements (for instance René Clément’s The Walls of Malapaga), some
represented foreign characters or involved foreign professionals (Joseph Losey’s Stranger on the Prowl), whereas
the international distribution of yet others resulted in diplomatic tensions and wrangles (Roberto Rossellini’s The
Miracle). Of special interest in these contexts will be to scrutinize the means deployed by Italian government
institutions to control film production and police the kind of realist content that could be sanctioned, but also to examine how
the films’ potential for international circulation in turn curbed and modified those very decision-making processes.
Article outline
- 1.From project to transnational circulation
- 2.Four case studies
- 3.The obscenity of the realist image
- 4.The diplomacy of the realist image
- 5.The price of the realist image
- 6.Conclusion
Acknowledgements Filmography Works cited
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