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Italian Cinema

The history of Italian cinema began with a few seconds footage of Pope Leo XIII blessing the camera. Historical dramas were most popular in these early years before sound. During and after WWI, funds were short and nothing much of interest was made until the 1920s. With the rise of fascism the film industry was encouraged and in 1937 Cinecitta was built on the outskirts of Rome. Literally a 'cinema city', it contained everything a film maker could need or want, including theatres, and even a cinematography school. The slogan on posters at the time read "Cinema is The Most Powerful Weapon". Newsreels and propagandistic documentaries were filmed here but by 1939, feature film productions were underway. Visconti ('Ossessione'), Rossellini (Rome, Open City') and De Sica ('Bicycle Thief') all began their careers here. Post-war, two distinct trends emerged in Italian cinema: on the one hand, the neo-realist films of Rossellini and De Sica, made chiefly on location in the streets of Rome and surrounding towns; and on the other, the American megaproductions, filmed almost entirely on sets constructed in the Cinecitta studios. In 1948, 'Quo Vadis?', 'Roman Holiday (1952), 'Three Coins in a Fountain' (1954), 'Farewell to Arms' (1957), 'Ben Hur' (1958) and 'Cleopatra' (1961), to cite only the most famous. Federico Fellini shot most of his films, at least in part at Cinecitta and to this day the studios are used for television and film productions. Mention must also be made of Pasolini, Bertolucci, Zeffirelli, Antonioni, Sergio Leone - Italy has given cinema some of its greatest individuals and auteurs. Pictured: The lost kisses from 'Cinema Paradiso'

Three Men and a Leg (1997)

Director: Aldo Baglio, Giacomo Poretti, Giovanni Storti, Massimo Venier
Starring: Aldo Baglio, Giacomo Poretti, Giovanni Storti, Marina Massironi

"Three Men and a Leg" is the feature film debut of popular Italian comics - Aldo, Giovanni and Giacomo, and an Italian box office smash hit. As a brot... Read more

To Chiara (2021)

Follows the story of 15-year-old Chiara whose close-knit family falls apart after her father abandons them in Calabria. Read more

Twice Born (2012)

7.4/10
Director: Sergio Castellitto
Starring: Penelope Cruz, Emile Hirsch

A.k.a. "Venuto al mondo". Gemma visits Sarajevo with her son, Pietro. 16 years earlier, they escaped the war-torn city while Diego, the boy's father,... Read more

Two Women (1960)

7.9/10
Director: Vittorio De Sica
Starring: Sophia Loren, Raf Vallone, Eleanora Brown

Sophia Loren won an Academy Award for her portrayal of a mother ravaged by war as she and her 13-year-old daughter become the focus of attack by retre... Read more

Umberto D. (1952)

8.2/10
Director: Vittorio De Sica
Starring: Carlo Battisti, Maria Pia Casilio, Lina Gennari

One of the masterpieces of Italian Neo-Realist cinema - the Italian postwar Renaissance. The story centres on a retired civil servant, living only on... Read more

We Have a Pope ( Habemus Papam ) (2012)

6.7/10
Director: Nanni Moretti
Starring: Margherita Buy, Michel Piccoli, Nanni Moretti, Jerzy Stuhr

At the Vatican, following the demise of the Pope, the conclave to elect his successor settles on Cardinal Melville. But the faithful gathered in St Pe... Read more

Where Am I Going? ( Quo vado? ) (2016)

6.6/10
Director: Gennaro Nunziante
Starring: Eleonora Giovanardi, Checco Zalone

Checco is born on the privileged side of life in an Italian small town, with a guaranteed job as a public servant. When a new reformist government vow... Read more