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© Pocket Essentials 2007


Italian Cinema
Arthouse to Exploitation

the pocket essential guide
Barry Forshaw

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ISBN13: 978-1-904048-55-8
extent: 160pp
binding: paperback
price £4.99
pub. date January 2006

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featuring:

Sergio Leone
Sergio Corbucci
The Italian Western
Michelangelo Antonioni
The Bicycle Thief
Marcello Mastroianni
Gialli and Horror
Cinema Paradiso
La Dolce Vita
Roberto Rossellini
Lucino Visconti
Anna Magnani
Neorealism
Dario Argento
Federico Fellini
Muscleman epics
Bernado Bertolluci
Pier Paulo Pasolini
The Garden of the Finzi-Continis
and more...

From the unbridled sensuality of the orgy scenes in silent Italian cinema, through a topless Sophia Loren in a 1950s historical epic and the image of Silvana Mangano, her skirt provocatively tucked into her underwear, in the neo-realist classic Bitter Rice, to the erotic obsessions of Fellini and the more cerebral but still passion-centred movies of Antonioni, eroticism is ever-present in Italian cinema. And then there are the popular movies: the acres of tanned flesh (both male and female) on offer in the many sword and sandal epics of the peplum era through to the inextricable mix of sexuality and violence in the gialli of such directors as Mario Bava and Dario Argento, in which death and sex meet in a blood-drenched, orgasmic coda.

Of course, there's far more to Italian cinema: it is one of the most glorious and energetic celebrations of the medium that any nation has ever offered. For many years, this astonishing legacy was largely unseen, but the DVD revolution is making virtually everything available, from Steve Reeves' muscle epics to long-unseen Italian art house movies.

The one characteristic that most of the great (and not so great) Italian movies have in common is the sheer individualism of the directors. And this applies to the populist moviemakers as much as to the giants of serious cinema. While Fellini, Visconti and Antonioni have rightly assumed their places in the pantheon, so have such talented popular auteurs as Sergio Leone, who was doing something with the Western that no American director would dare do, so radical was the rethink.

All the glory of Italian cinema is celebrated here in comprehensive essays, along with every key film in an easy-to-use reference format.

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