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Synopsis

Outside the competition, the best film of the [Venice] festival was Roberto Rossellini’s Year One. Rossellini has here returned to the scene of his Neo-realist glories with a film about the political aftermath of the Italian liberation. Made in the history-book style of his recent films… Year One depicts the rise to power of Alcide De Gasperi and the Christian Democrat party in post-war Italy, describing their attempts to unite Italy’s anti-fascist parties under a moderate banner, and ending with De Gasperi’s own retirement from political life in 1954. The strength of Year One – indeed, I think, its greatness – lies in Rossellini’s ability to combine a personal viewpoint with a balanced, articulate and vigorously realistic presentation of history. The director makes no secret of his admiration for De Gasperi both as a man and as a politician. (The Premier’s family life is sketched in with beautiful economy and affection.) But while making him unashamedly the ‘hero’ of the film, Rossellini never suppresses or ridicules the political beliefs of his opposites. The intellectual discussions in the film are as crisp, vivid and hard-fought as the military action sequences (whose ‘you-are-there’ realism harks back to Open City and Paisan). There is arguably no other director who could have taken a difficult and unspectacular period of European history and dramatised it with such piercing clarity and resonance. —Nigel Andrews, Financial Times

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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Ennuyeux !

By Benoît on December 7, 2010

Ce film ressemble quelque peu à un cours universitaire. On a un professeur qui déblatère ce qu’il a à dire et qui utiliserait de temps en temps un extrait vidéo ou un powerpoint pour sortir de sa torpeur…  read review

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