After Fellini : National Cinema in the Postmodern Age

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Format: Paperback
Pub. Date: 2002-04-24
Publisher(s): Johns Hopkins Univ Pr
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Summary

Over the past twenty-five years, Italy's film industry has produced a remarkable number of award-winning international art-house hits, among them Cinema Paradiso and Life Is Beautiful. Despite these successes, Italian cinema is in a state of crisis: ticket sales for domestic films, which plummeted in the l980's, are only now beginning to recover; television deregulation has engendered a popular culture largely dependent on American programming; and the passing of an entire generation of brilliant auteurs--Rossellini, Viscounti, Pasolini, Antonioni, and Fellini--extinguished the revolutionary impulse which had characterized Italian filmmaking since the Second World War. In After Fellini, Millicent Marcus contends that in the late 1980s and 1990s, a new wave of Italian filmmakers has transcended these obstacles and reasserted Italy's importance in world cinema. Through in-depth critiques of such acclaimed films as The Last Emperor, Caro Diario, and Stolen Children, as well as the immensely popular Cinema Paradiso and Life Is Beautiful, Marcus details how today's auteurs have both reflected and resisted Italy's shifting social, political, and cultural identity, and created a body of work that signals a new beginning for Italian cinema.

Author Biography

Millicent Marcus is Mariano DiVito Professor of Italian Studies in the Department of Romance Languages and Director of the Center of Italian Studies at the University of Pennsylvania.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments ix
Introduction 3(12)
Looking Back
National Identity by Means of Montage in Roberto Rossellini's Paisan
15(24)
Luchino Visconti's Bellissima: The Diva, the Mirror, and the Screen
39(22)
Italy by Displacement
Bernardo Bertolucci's The Last Emperor: Powerless in Peking
61(15)
Mediterraneo and the ``Minimal Utopias'' of Gabriele Salvatores
76(18)
From Salazar's Lisbon to Mussolini's Rome by Way of France in Roberto Faenza's Pereira Declares
94(21)
Family as Political Allegory
Francesco Rosi's Three Brothers: After the Diaspora
115(23)
The Alternative Family of Ricky Tognazzi's La scorta
138(16)
The Gaze of Innocence: Lost and Found in Gianni Amelio's Stolen Children
154(27)
Postmodernism; or, the Death of Cinema?
Ginger and Fred: Fellini after Fellini
181(18)
Giuseppe Tornatore's Cinema Paradiso and the Art of Nostalgia
199(15)
From Conscience to Hyperconsciousness in Maurizio Nichetti's The Icicle Thief
214(20)
Postmodern Pastiche, the Sceneggiata, and the View of the Mafia from Below in Roberta Torre's To Die for Tano
234(19)
The Return of the Referent
Filming the Text of Witness: Francesco Rosi's The Truce
253(15)
The Seriousness of Humor in Roberto Benigni's Life Is Beautiful
268(17)
Caro diario and the Cinematic Body of Nanni Moretti
285(16)
Appendix: Plot Summaries and Credits 301(20)
Notes 321(34)
Bibliography 355(10)
Videography 365(2)
Index 367

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