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Synopsis

Vanina Vanini is something of a film maudit, having a vexed history from the time it was designed to win Sandra Milo the Best Actress award at the Venice film festival through its troubled shooting (the crew was so preoccupied with maintaining Rossellini’s Pancinor zoom lens that they did not notice that Milo’s wig had caught fire from a candle) to its editing by the producer to give prominence to his wife (again, Milo!). As Peter Brunette notes in his study of Rossellini: “It has been praised and reviled in equally strong terms. It seems to have been, and to be, a matter not of simply liking the film or disliking it, but of elevating it into a masterpiece or consigning it to the realm of the unspeakable.” A grand, sumptuous romance based on a Stendhal short story, Vanina Vanini is set in the same period (the early nineteenth-century Risorgimento) as Visconti’s Senso and shares that film’s operatic extravagance. The title character is a bored, spoiled young Roman princess whose father is an important figure in the papal council (the astonishing Paolo Stoppa, who eats up his scenes). She falls for an anti-papist patriot who takes refuge in her home after being wounded in a plot to assassinate a traitor to his group of Freemasons. Though their engulfing passion for each other is threatened by the growing tension between her Catholic beliefs and his revolutionary commitment, Vanina follows him to the north, ultimately committing an act of treachery in her attempt to liberate her lover from his political preoccupations. There is plenty of the kind of period spectacle that Rossellini would subdue or make strange in his subsequent historical films, many picturesque shots of Rome, and an aggressively painterly colour scheme (watch that visit to the bordello, which is like something out of Minnelli!), but the informational or documentary impulse of Rossellini’s cinema keeps asserting itself, and many critics consider Vanina Vanini a triumph of historical accuracy. He himself considered the ending mystical, more so, in fact, than the mysterious finale of Stromboli. —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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