| Vito Annicchiarico, Nando Bruno ,
Aldo Fabrizi , Harry Feist, Anna Magnani , Giovanna Galletti
Roberto Rossellini's Roma, Cittเ Aperta
(known in English as Open City) was one of the landmark films of
the 1940s on several levels. Aesthetically, it was one of the first
major works of Italian neorealist filmmaking and perhaps the single
most influential example of the style. Historically, it was among
the first postwar European films to gain a significant audience
in the United States, opening the door for a greater appreciation
of international filmmaking in America. And politically, it was
a work of tremendous bravery. The screenplay was written by Roberto
Rossellini in association with Federico Fellini and Sergio Amidei
while Rome was still occupied by German forces in 1943-44. Rossellini
began filming in secret, using scavenged film stock without sound
equipment, shortly before the city was liberated in June of 1944.
Several key members of his creative team had been active in the
Italian resistance movement. With its rough, documentary-style look,
multi-layered narrative, and a cast that mixed amateurs with actors
who didn't look like film stars, Roma, Cittเ Aperta captured the
harsh and unforgiving textures of real life as few movies of its
time had dared. It set the pace for Italian Neorealism as an influential
postwar film style that combined outdoor light and location shooting
with non-actors, a focus on simple stories of everyday life, and
a concern for the poor and for social problems. Roma, Cittเ Aperta
shows the lives of a group of people living in Rome during the Nazi
occupation, after the Germans had declared it an "open city."
Anna Magnani plays a woman in love with a member of a resistance
group; in helping him, she risks not only her own life, but also
that of her unborn child. Aldo Fabrizi plays a priest who aids the
anti-Nazi cause and pays dearly for his activism. Marcello Pagliero
is an outspoken communist who runs afoul of the Nazis. And Harry
Feist plays a German officer who has taken an Italian lover, but
whose affection for Romans does not run especially deep. While Roma,
Cittเ Aperta shows flashes of the melodramatic sentimentality that
would mark much of Rossellini's later work, it still rings true
as a chronicle of a city under siege and as the genesis of a powerful
new film style whose influences include such later filmmakers, among
many others, as John Cassavetes, Martin Scorsese, Robert Altman,
and Spike Lee. |