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Synopsis

Influenced by Jean Renoir, whose Grand Illusion, La Bête Humaine, and Rules of the Game Rossellini greatly admired, A Pilot Returns mixes professional actors (Massimo Girotti, who was later to appear in Desire and Visconti’s Ossessione) with real soldiers, “even real English and Greek prisoners of war” as Tag Gallagher reports, to make what at first glance seems a classically Fascist portrait of a heroic figure, the pilot of the title. (The film was conceived by Vittorio Mussolini, Il Duce’s son.) Remarkable not only for its Hollywood-like action and battle scenes, its sweeping romance, and expert choreography of group action, but also for its grim portrait of the war it is supposed to be celebrating, A Pilot Returns, like its naval counterpart, The White Ship_, was condemned as Fascist propaganda, a view that has been revised or challenged by many, including the leftist French director Jean Rouch who proclaimed: “I have never in the whole history of the cinema seen a film more decisively against war than this one that Rossellini managed to make in Fascist Italy at war… It’s a truly moral portrait of war.” Gallagher says "_Pilot resembles Grand Illusion in that it is about prisoners of war, but it only hints at the solidarity that transcends war," and points out that the “final sequence… is one of the more ambitious in Rossellini’s career.” —Cinematheque Ontario

Director

Original

Roberto Rossellini

Rossellini was one of the directors of the Italian neorealist cinema, contributing films such as Roma città aperta (Rome, Open City 1945) to the movement.

In 1937, Rossellini made his first documentary, Prélude à l’après-midi d’un faune. After this essay, he was called to assist Goffredo Alessandrini in making Luciano Serra pilota, one of the most successful Italian films of the first half of the 20th century. In 1940 he was called to assist Francesco De Robertis on Uomini sul Fondo.His close friendship with Vittorio Mussolini, son of Il Duce, has been interpreted as a possible reason for having been preferred to other apprentices.

Some authors describe the first part of his career as a sequence of trilogies. His first feature film, La nave bianca (1942) was sponsored by the audiovisual propaganda centre of Navy Department and is the first work in Rossellini’s “Fascist Trilogy”, together with Un pilota ritorna (1942) and Uomo dalla Croce (1943). To this period belongs… read more

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