Title: Andre Bazin
1Andre Bazin Italian Neorealism
2Siefried Kracauer (1889-1966)
- CINEMATIC REALISM Philosophy
- Critic of modernity (Frankfurt School)
- Human condition characterized by alienation
- Mass culture/society manipulates individuals
- Materialistic values have replaced religion,
metaphysical, romantic convictions, resulting in
disenchantment - People live distracted lives
- Film as a redemptive experience that can show
man damaged condition of modernity and help him
transcend materialism
3Siefried Kracauer (1889-1966)
- CINEMATIC REALISM
- Foreshadowed and predicted dehumanizing power of
mass media - Mass ornaments--film, military parades and
sporting events - Real world of the individual desubstantiated by
spectacle and empty rituals - Film must reengage individual with nature and
the Kantian real world
4Andre Bazin (1918-1958)
- Views cinema as a redemptive art
- The role of cinema is to help man in his search
for truth and understanding in an ambiguous and
uncertain world - Man can transcend alienation and modernity
- Film can be a religious experience
- Love and state of grace
5Andre Bazin (1918-1958)
- Bergsons concept of creative evolution
- Close experiential scrutiny reveals deep
structures/meanings behind phenomena - Under scrutiny of inquiry artistic
analysisthese deep structures are brought into
the light - Cinema and photography are media that an artist
can utilize to review the deeper meanings behind
the phenomena of existence
6Andre Bazin (1918-1958)
- We know that under the image revealed there is
another which is truer to reality and under this
image still another and yet again still another
under this last one, right down to the true image
of reality, absolute, mysterious, which no one
will ever see.
7Andre Bazin (1918-1958)
- Film image embalms time wrenches phenomena
from the flux of life - Symbolic power of cinematic imagery combined with
empirical density of cinematic realism - The spirit behind the real object
- The long hard gaze
- Disliked over-expressive, over-ornamental, or
overuse of montage
8Andre Bazin (1918-1958)
- Montage...chops the world up into little
fragments, and disturbs the natural unity in
people and things.
9Andre Bazin (1918-1958)
- German expressionism did violence to the image
by ways of sets and lighting.
10Andre Bazin (1918-1958)
- Liked films that focused on everyday
psychological experience - Italian neorealism (The Bicyle Thief)
- Disliked modernist, expressionistic
- Disliked films that imposed a political ideology
on the viewer - Long takes, of surrounding environment
- Impact of environment on people(French
determinism)
11Andre Bazin (1918-1958)
- Francois Truffaut
- Erich von Stroheim
- Roberto Rossellini
- Vittorio De Sica
- Robert Bresson
- Jean Renoir
- Orson Welles
- William Wyler
12Andre Bazin (1918-1958)
- Depth of focus
- Respect for the continuity of dramatic space and
the flow of time - Composition in depthDramatic effects for which
we had formerly relied on montage were created
out of the movements of the actors within a fixed
framework. - Ambiguity of expression closer to reality viewer
must choose
13Cinematic Realism Marxism (1930-present)
- Film as a reactionary medium
- Expose the shallowness of modern capitalistic
society - Real-life problems of the common man
- Poverty, crime, social injustice common themes
- Italian Neorealism
- British Social Realism
14Italian Neorealism (1940-50s)
- HISTORICAL BACKGROUND
- 1937-1945 Fascists controlled cinema(founded
Cinecitta--largest studio in Europe) - Propaganda films
- After WWII, Socialists and Communists in
government tolerated Neorealisms left-wing
ideology (former resistance movement) - Economy in shambles
- Cost of studio production, film, lighting,
etc.became prohibitive - Reflected desire for social reform
15Italian Neorealism (1940-50s)
- Response to artificiality of cinema of the
Fascist period - Influenced by French poetic realism and American
literary naturalism (e.g., Hemingway) - Experiences of poor and socially marginalized
- Slice of life things and facts in time and
place (versimo) - Ambivalence of everyday experience
- Some took strong social political stance
- Marxist, with a hopeful, humanistic dimension
16Italian Neorealism (1940-50s)
- CHARACTERISTICS
- On-location shooting
- Long takes
- Natural light
- Medium and long shots
- Non-professional actors
- Working class protagonists
- Environment as important as actors
17Italian Neorealism (1940-50s)
- CESARE ZAVATTINI
- Three basics tenets of neorealism
- 1. Portray real or everyday people, using
nonprofessional actors in real settings - 2. Examine socially significant themes
- 3. Promote the organic development
of situations--the real flow of life--in which
complications are rarely resolved
18Italian Neorealism (1940-50s)
- CESARE ZAVATTINI
- Some Ideas on the Cinema (1953)
- 1. Portray real or everyday people, using
nonprofessional actors in real settings - 2. Examine socially significant themes
- 3. Promote the organic development
of situations--the real flow of life--in which
complications are rarely resolved
19Italian Neorealism (1940-50s)
- CESARE ZAVATTINI
- Identification with the common man in the
crowd. - Take dialogue and actors from the street.
- Reality in American films is unnaturally
filtered.
20Italian Neorealism (1940-50s)
- CESARE ZAVATTINI
- The world goes on getting worse because we are
not truly aware of reality. - The job of the director is to observe reality,
and not extract fictions from it. - The frequent habit of identifying oneself with
fictional characters will become very dangerous.
21Italian Neorealism (1940-50s)
- CESARE ZAVATTINI
- The world goes on getting worse because we are
not truly aware of reality. - The job of the director is to observe reality,
and not extract fictions from it. - The frequent habit of identifying oneself with
fictional characters will become very dangerous.
22Italian Neorealism (1940-50s)
- Criticized for negative depiction of Italy
- Lack of positive heroes
- Negative displays of human flesh
- Catholic Church forbidden for believers
-
23Italian Neorealism (1940-50s)
- Not the most popular cinema of the times in Italy
- People didnt want to be reminded of problems
- Hollywood and capitalist system of filmmaking
an overpowering force - BUT the movement did influence the French New
Wave, Hollywood and TV -
24Italian Neorealism (1940-50s)
- Roberto Rossellini
- Luchino Visconti
- Guisippe DeSantis
- Giovanni Verga
- Vittorio De Sica
- Federico Fellini
- Michelangelo Antonioni
- Bernardo Bertolucci
- Francesco Rosi