Italian Cinema presents an overview and analysis of one of the most prolific and influential of national cinemas.Italian film has always drawn on a wide range of popular themes - from ancient history to the mafia, the family, the Risorgimento, terrorism, corruption and immigration - and on an equally diverse range of film genres - from comedy to westerns, horror, soft-porn, epics and thrillers. Commercial constraints, state and European funding, international competition, as much as cultural and political trends, have all influenced the sorts of film that get made and exported.Outlining the artistic, cultural, technical and commercial context of film, Italian Cinema presents a history from silent to contemporary film. As well as illuminating the work of classic directors such as Visconti, Fellini, Rossellini, Antonioni and Rosi, the book explores the interaction between art and popular cinema, visual style and spectacle, space and architecture, gender representations and politics.
What is Italian Cinema? * Popular Italian Cinema and Box-Office Hits * The Epic and Historical Film * What is Neorealism? Realisms and Neorealisms in Italian Cinema * Auteur Cinema * Making Sense of Changing Reality * Gender Representations and Gender Politics * Visual Style and the Use of Cinematic Space
Mary P. Wood is Reader in European Cinema at Birkbeck College, University of London