Historical dictionary of Italian cinema

ROSSELLINI, ROBERTO

(1906-1977)
Director and screenwriter. Universally acknowledged as the father of Italianneorealism, Rossellini was born into a wealthy family and a privileged environment. His father was a successful builder-architect with a love of music and a published writer, and the family home was a place of encounter for many local artists and intellectuals. Among the many buildings that Rossellini's father built in Rome was the Corso cinema and it was here that the young Roberto, thanks to a permanent pass provided by his father, was able to watch a multitude of films and to develop a particular love of American cinema.
He had an easy upbringing, avoiding school and doing largely whatever he pleased, which included driving fast cars and chasing women. His extensive womanizing, in fact, led to an early marriage with actressAssia Noris, although the marriage was soon annulled. Rossellini would then marry Marcella De Marchis, with whom he would have two sons, but he would also carry on myriad affairs with, among others,Anna Magnaniand Ingrid Bergman, who also bore him several children. But that was still to come.
In the early 1930s, with much of the family fortune dissipated and confronted with the necessity of finding a job, Rossellini began to work in the film industry, first as a dubbing assistant and then as an uncredited script editor. His first attempts at filmmaking began in 1936 when he made the first of what would be a handful of short animated nature fantasies, two of which,Il tacchino prepotente(The Bullying Turkey, 1939) andLa vispa Teresa(Lively Teresa, 1939), would be photographed by a youngMario Bava. At the same time Rossellini was able to work as fully accredited screenwriter and assistant toGoffredo AlessandrinionLuciano Serra pilota(Luciano Serra, Pilot, 1938), a heroic action melodrama nominally produced and supervised by Il Duce's son, Vittorio Mussolini.
Two years later Rossellini was given his first chance to direct withLa nave bianca(The White Ship, 1941), a film about an Italian hospital ship that he took over from navy commander turned film director Francesco De Robertis.The film, which used stock footage and nonprofessional actors, was highly praised and received a special jury prize, which allowed Rossellini to go on to make the other films that form part of what is commonly called his Fascist trilogy:Un pilota ritorna(A pilot returns, 1942), from a story written by Vittorio Mussolini and withMichelangelo Antonionicollaborating on the screenplay, andL'uomo dalla croce(The Man of the Cross, completed 1942 but released only in 1943), recounting the deeds of a heroic Italian military chaplain at the Russian front. These films, largely financed and made at the behest of the Italian military, would later be cited by hostile critics as proof of Rossellini's active support of the war and of Fascism, but a more dispassionate view might see them as generically humanist in tone rather than stridently nationalistic.
Rossellini's first major triumph, however, and his elevation to the front ranks of international directors, came withRoma citta aperta(Rome Open City, also known asOpen City, 1945), a film set during the recent German occupation of the city, recounting the heroism of bothResistancefighters and the ordinary Roman populace. The film's relatively rough and improvised style, dictated in part by circumstances, was hailed both at home and abroad as marking the birth of a radically new form of socially committed cinema that came to be labeledneorealism. Written bySergio AmideiandFederico Fellini, the film was feted everywhere, winning the American Board of Review Award, the Grand Prize at the Cannes Festival, and a nomination for an Academy Award. Its remarkable success turned Rossellini into a celebrity overnight and allowed him to finance the other two films that comprise what is usually referred to as his neorealist trilogy:Paisa(Paisan, 1946) andGermania anno zero(Germany Year Zero, 1947), both portraying wartime situations with a very strong sense of realism.
With the war now beginning to recede from memory, Rossellini began to focus more on an exploration of inner psychological conflict, beginning with the two episodes ofL'amore(Ways of Love, 1948), both starringAnna Magnani, and continuing with a series of films made with Hollywood star Ingrid Bergman, who had chosen to join him in Italy (and whom he would soon marry):Stromboli, terra di Dio(Stromboli, 1950),Europa '51(The Greatest Love, 1952), andViaggio in Italia(Voyage to Italy, 1953). However, in spite of their strong realism and their undeniable dramatic power, the Bergman films were received very poorly by most Italian critics for what was seen as an emphasis on the individual and thus a deviation from the more socially oriented concerns of the earlier films. The films were, however, greatly appreciated in France, especially by the young critics who would later become the directors of the French New Wave, for whom Rossellini became something of a mentor. Following the lack of success of other films such asDov'e la liberta?(Where Is Freedom?1954) andLa paura—Non credo piu all'amore(Fear, 1954), Rossellini and cinematographer Aldo Tonti spent almost two years in India gathering material for what would become a 10-episode documentary series for Italian television, as well as a quasi-documentary full feature for the big screen,India Matri Bhumi(India, 1959), which was enthusiastically acclaimed when shown at Cannes and raised Rossellini's stock at home, where the film was favorably compared with the work of Robert Flaherty. With his reputation slightly restored, Rossellini returned to the theme of the war and the Resistance withIl Generale della Rovere(General della Rovere, 1959) andEra notte a Roma(Escape by Night, 1960), before makingViva l'Italia(Garibaldi, 1961), a film that served to celebrate the centenary of Garibaldi's expedition to southern Italy and which effectively initiated that didactic exploration of the past that would soon become the distinguishing feature of his television productions. And indeed, followingVanina Vanini(The Betrayer, 1961), another historical costume drama set in the context of theRisorgimento, andAnima nera(Black Soul, 1961), a modest contribution to thecommedia all'italiana, Rossellini turned his attention almost exclusively to television and, for the next decade and a half, attempted to use it as a didactic tool.La prise de pouvoir par Louis XIV(The Rise of Louis XIV, 1966), made originally for French television, is undoubtedly the most accomplished of the television films, but Rossellini continued his exploration of history with the encyclopedicLa lotta dell'uomo per la sua sopravvivenza(Man's Struggle for Survival, made 1967-1969 and shown in twelve episodes, 1970-1971),Atti degli Apostoli(Acts of the Apostles, made 1968, screened in five episodes, 1969),Socrate(Socrates, 1970),Blaise Pascal(1971),Agostino d'Ippona(Augustine of Hippo, 1972),L'eta di Cosimo de' Medici(The Age of the Medici, 1973), andCartesius(Descartes, 1973). He returned to the big screen in 1974 withAnno Uno(Year One, 1974), a film about Christian Democrat leader and long-serving Italian prime minister Alcide De Gasperi, but neither it norIl Messia(The Messiah, 1975), Rossellini's attempt to present the life of Christ from a layman's perspective, found anything more than a cordial reception in an Italy that had changed radically since the days ofRome Open City. Unperturbed, Rossellini began preparing a film on Karl Marx. TitledVivere per l'umanita(To Live for Humanity), it was apparently in an advanced stage of preparation when Rossellini died suddenly from a heart attack in 1977.

  1. rossellini, robertoDirector and screenwriter. Universally acknowledged as the father of Italian neorealismstrong Rossellini was born into a wealthy family and a privileged environment. His ...Guide to cinema
  2. rossellini, robertoRegarded by many as Italys greatest film director Rossellini made his international reputation with a depiction of the resistance to the Nazi occupation Roma citta aperta...Historical Dictionary of modern Italy