Best of Italian Cinema

Ossessione (1943)

Image depicting the film Ossessione
Luchino Visconti's interpretation of American film noir is this grim yet masterfully executed psychological thriller, a film which laid the foundations for Italian neo-realism.

Read full review...

La Terra trema (1948)

Image depicting the film La Terra trema
A harsh yet compassionate portrayal of ordinary Sicilian fisher folk makes this one of the most naturalistic of neo-realist dramas from the Italian masters.

Read full review...

Paisa (1946)

Image depicting the film Paisa
Roberto Rossellini's World War II drama paints a harrowingly realistic picture of Italy during its period of liberation, showing a country shattered, divided and suspicious of all outsiders.

Read full review...

Rome Open City (1945)

Image depicting the film Rome Open City
No where else is the neo-realist style used to greater effect than in this compelling account of Rome under Nazi control. Anna Magnani, a future icon of Italian cinema, underscores the bleakness of Rossellini's vision.

Read full review...

Shoeshine (1946)

Image depicting the film Shoeshine
This early neo-realist masterpiece (winner of the first Oscar for a foreign film) shows how the friendship of two shoeshine boys is gradually destroyed in a world that seems to have lost all sense of compassion.

Read full review...

Germany Year Zero (1948)

Image depicting the film Germany Year Zero
A young boy's struggle to survive in post-war Germany provides an apt and moving metaphor for a nation humilated by defeat and scarcely able to pick up the pieces.

Read full review...

Bicycle Thieves (1948)

Image depicting the film Bicycle Thieves
This masterful example of Italian neo-realism is Vittorio Da Sica's intensely poignant, Oscar-winning portrait of a penniless father and his son struggling to survive at a time of post-war depression.

Read full review...

Miracle in Milan (1951)

Image depicting the film Miracle in Milan
An unlikely melange of social realism and surreal fantasy makes this one of strangest of the neo-realist masterpieces, De Sica's strikingly humanist depiction of the homeless poor.

Read full review...

Umberto D. (1952)

Image depicting the film Umberto D.
This supreme masterpiece of Italian neo-realism is a shocking indictment of how society treats its older citizens. Widely regarded as one of the greatest films of all time.

Read full review...

I Vitelloni (1953)

Image depicting the film I Vitelloni
Fellini's first great film is this ironic portrait of five young men who appear incapable of taking on the burden of adult responsibility. A foretaste of La Dolce Vita.

Read full review...

La Strada (1954)

Image depicting the film La Strada
Fellini won an Oscar for this compelling neo-realist portrait of street performers played with great force and humanity by Anthony Quinn and Giulietta Masina.

Read full review...

Mamma Roma (1962)

Image depicting the film Mamma Roma
Anna Magnani's gripping performance as an ill-fated mother makes this an emotionally charged neo-realist drama, an early masterpiece from the ever-controversial Pasolini.

Read full review...

Nights of Cabiria (1957)

Image depicting the film Nights of Cabiria
Fellini directed his wife in this devastatingly effective neo-realist drama, regarded by some as his finest work.

Read full review...

Rocco and His Brothers (1960)

Image depicting the film Rocco and His Brothers
Visconti combines the relentless grittiness of neo-realism with the power and poetry of grand opera in this celebrated social drama. Here we see Alain Delon in probably his greatest screen role.

Read full review...

L'Avventura (1960)

Image depicting the film L'Avventura
This meditation on dark existential themes established Antonioni's reputation and led to a revival of Italian cinema.

Read full review...

La Notte (1961)

Image depicting the film La Notte
Marcello Mastroianni and Jeanne Moreau star in this bleak portrayal of a dying romance, set in a world of bourgeois ennui where life has lost its meaning.

Read full review...

The Leopard (1963)

Image depicting the film The Leopard
Pasolini's first film was this compelling neo-realist drama, an evocative work which was informed by the director's own troubled experiences as a young man.

Read full review...

Il Vangelo secondo Matteo (1964)

Image depicting the film Il Vangelo secondo Matteo
A world apart from the lavish Hollywood Bible epics, Pasolini's film adaptation of St Matthew's Gospel stands as one of the most captivating and humanist films ever made.

Read full review...

8½ (1963)

Image depicting the film 8 half
Fellini's most unashamedly abstract film is this self-indulgent, exuberant fantasy, inspired by the director's own real-life mental block.

Read full review...

The Damned (1969)

Image depicting the film The Damned
Visconti's account of a dynastic German family succumbing to Nazi evil and reaping the consequences is a shocking yet totally absorbing work, arguably the director's most overtly political and controversial film.

Read full review...

Il Postino (The Postman) (1994)

Image depicting the film Il Postino (The Postman)
This marvellously rendered romantic drama captures the poetry and pain of human existence, mainly through the extraordinarily sympathic performance from its lead actor, Massimo Troisi.

Read full review...

Life is Beautiful (1997)

Image depicting the film Life is Beautiful
Roberto Benigni both directed and starred in this blisteringly humanist portrayal of the Nazi holocaust, in which burlesque comedy is used to great effect to shed a new perspective on one of the greatest of human tragedies.

Read full review...


Copyright © filmsdefrance.com 1998-2024
All rights reserved



All content on this page is protected by copyright