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Bicycle Thieves - A Passionate Commitment to the Real
Course: Italian Cinema (ITA1113)
50 Documents
Students shared 50 documents in this course
University: University of Ottawa
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Bicycle Thieves: A Passionate Commitment to the Real
By Godfrey Cheshire
The Criterion Collection
12 February 2007
Viewed in retrospect, much of modern cinema can seem to flow
from twin fountainheads: Orson Welles’s Citizen Kane (1941)
and Vittorio De Sica’s Bicycle Thieves (1948). Though separated
by World War II, the two movies symbolize the cardinal
impulses that came to captivate serious audiences, critics, and
filmmakers after the war. The tendencies they signaled—ones
soon fused into a singular aesthetic by the French new wave—
are not so much divergent as complementary.
Where Citizen Kane heralded the age of the auteur and a cinema
of passionate individual vision, Bicycle Thieves renounced
“egoism” for collective concern, envisioning a cinema of
impassioned social conscience. Both films reflect their directors’
personal formal gifts, and their distinct approaches to “the real”
transmute the very different production circumstances under
which they were created. While Welles’s use of deep-focus and
other innovations brought a hyperrealist sophistication to the
elaborate fantasy mechanics of the Hollywood studio film, De
Sica’s uncommon skills as a visual stylist and director of actors
imbued the purist tropes of Italian neorealism—social themes,
the use of real locations and nonprofessional performers—with a