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Synopsis

Black Soul is a melodrama in which Vittorio Gassman plays an aging hustler who marries the daughter of a bourgeois Catholic household, only to be accused of manipulating a homosexual friend into leaving him the family villa when the latter dies in a car crash. The new wife promptly decamps home to mamma and, looking for solace or revenge, Gassman turns to a former girlfriend, a prostitute called Mimosa. Those who assume that the film’s “wild” contemporary setting, with its sports cars, jazz, striptease clubs, and alienating modern architecture peopled by whores, rent boys, and decadent aristocrats, was alien to Rossellini are misguided; he knew this world as well as Antonioni and Fellini (whose La Dolce Vita some have accused Black Soul of copying). Rossellini’s innate moralism here veers towards contempt – for his characters and for the project. (Tag Gallagher details the disdainful neglect with which Rossellini shot the film, for instance having the actress who plays the wife recite her “Hail Mary” in Danish when she couldn’t remember her lines in French.) However, as with all such follies, Black Soil has its passionate champions, including German director Rudolf Thome, a Rossellinian of the first water, who said: “Black Soil was a knockout… Thanks to historical distance, I suddenly realized that it was the response of Rossellini to films of the New Wave and of Godard in particular.” Though Rossellini was ashamed of the film, even Peter Brunette, who seems to agree that it is the nadir of Rossellini’s career, says it “has perhaps been treated a little too harshly. It has its moments. (And the final shot… is one of the most powerful of 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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