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Region: 1 Video: Black & White DVD Aspect Ratio: Pre-1954 Standard (1.33:1) Audio: Dolby Digital Mono Language: English, italian Subtitles: English Weight factor: 3 item(s)
Plot Synopsis
This landmark Italian neorealist drama became one of the best-known and most widely acclaimed European movies, including a special Academy Award as "most outstanding foreign film" seven years before that Oscar category existed. Written primarily by neorealist pioneer Cesare Zavattini and directed by Vittorio DeSica, also one of the movement's main forces, the movie featured all the hallmarks of the neorealist style: a simple story about the lives of ordinary people, outdoor shooting and lighting, non-actors mixed together with actors, and a focus on social problems in the aftermath of World War II. Lamberto Maggiorani plays Antonio, an unemployed man who finds a coveted job that requires a bicycle. When it is stolen on his first day of work, Antonio and his young son Bruno (Enzo Staiola) begin a frantic search, learning valuable lessons along the way. The movie focuses on both the relationship between the father and the son and the larger framework of poverty and unemployment in postwar Italy. As in such other classic films as Shoeshine (1946), Umberto D. (1952), and his late masterpiece The Garden of the Finzi-Continis (1971), DeSica focuses on the ordinary details of ordinary lives as a way to dramatize wider social issues. As a result, The Bicycle Thief works as a sentimental study of a father and son, a historical document, a social statement, and a record of one of the century's most influential film movements. ~ Leo Charney, All Movie Guide
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Editorial Reviews:
Though not the first Italian Neo-Realist film seen outside of Italy (or even Vittorio De Sica's first Neo-Realist work), The Bicycle Thief (1948) is considered the seminal film of the movement, alongside Roberto Rossellini's Rome, Open City (1945). Following the guiding Neo-Realist precept of drawing stories from the daily life of post-war Italy, De Sica and writer Cesare Zavattini carefully interweave a wider view of Italian culture with a portrait of the bond between a father and son, revealing the impact of poverty and bureaucratic absurdities on one of many struggling families. Shooting on location with non-professional actors in the two leads (well-coached by actor De Sica), De Sica's mobile camera transforms moments of Antonio's odyssey into poetic images of isolation and despair, while never losing sight of the gritty hardships of quotidian experience. An even greater international sensation than his first Neo-Realist film (Shoeshine (1946)), The Bicycle Thief earned a special Oscar for Best Foreign Film and became a signature work for a movement that also included Bitter Rice (1948), Luchino Visconti's La Terra Trema (1948), and De Sica's Umberto D. (1952). Inspiring filmmakers across the world as an alternative to expensive Hollywood fantasy, The Bicycle Thief revealed the potential power of combining local concerns with an unflinching cinematic style. ~ Lucia Bozzola, All Movie Guide
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Though not the first Italian Neo-Realist film seen outside of Italy (or even Vittorio De Sica's first Neo-Realist work), The Bicycle Thief (1948) is considered the seminal film of the movement, alongside Roberto Rossellini's Rome, Open City (1945). Following the guiding Neo-Realist precept of drawing stories from the daily life of post-war Italy, De Sica and writer Cesare Zavattini carefully interweave a wider view of Italian culture with a portrait of the bond between a father and son, revealing the impact of poverty and bureaucratic absurdities on one of many struggling families. Shooting on location with non-professional actors in the two leads (well-coached by actor De Sica), De Sica's mobile camera transforms moments of Antonio's odyssey into poetic images of isolation and despair, while never losing sight of the gritty hardships of quotidian experience. An even greater international sensation than his first Neo-Realist film (Shoeshine (1946)), The Bicycle Thief earned a special Oscar for Best Foreign Film and became a signature work for a movement that also included Bitter Rice (1948), Luchino Visconti's La Terra Trema (1948), and De Sica's Umberto D. (1952). Inspiring filmmakers across the world as an alternative to expensive Hollywood fantasy, The Bicycle Thief revealed the potential power of combining local concerns with an unflinching cinematic style. ~ Lucia Bozzola, All Movie Guide
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Chapters
Disc #1 -- Bicycle Thieves: A Film By Vittorio De Sica
1. A Job for Ricci [5:16]
2. Wedding Linens [5:36]
3. The Fortune-Teller [3:23]
4. Preparations [3:34]
5. Disaster on the Job [4:09]
6. No Help From the Police [3:37]
7. Advice From a Friend [4:30]
8. "A Lighweight Fides, 1935 Model" [4:58]
9. "We're All Honest In Piazza Vittorio!" [3:41]
10. Rain on Sunday [4:04]
11. A Sighting [3:29]
12. A Plea in Church [8:02]
13. An Outburst and a Scare [1:21]
14. Eating Like Kings [2:23]
15. Right Away or Never [6:21]
16. Confrontation [4:33]
17. Nothing to Hide [6:19]
18. A Desparate Act [4:29]
19. Father and Son [5:47]
1. Color Bars [3:27]
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DVD Menu
Disc #1 -- Bicycle Thieves: A Film By Vittorio De Sica
Play the Movie
Chapters
Languages and Subtitles
Original Italian Soundtrack
English-Dubbed Soundtrack
Subtitles On
Subtitles Off
Disc #2 -- Bicycle Thieves: A Film By Vittorio De Sica
Working With De Sica
Play
Life as It Is: The Neorealist Movement in Italy
Play
Index
Seven Key Works/Origins
Postwar Subjects
Stylistic Characteristics
Response at Home and Abroad
Crisis and Controversy
Towards the "Art Cinema"
Widespread Influence
Cesare Zavattini
Play
Index
A Complete Filmmaker
Beginnings and Success in Milan
A Passion for Painting
Exchanging Experiences / De Sica
Postwar Period / Bicycle Thieves
Miracle in Milan / New Collaborations
Umberto D. / The Writer's Crisis
"The Heart of the Situation"
Subtitles
On
Off
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4 - customer reviews
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Cast
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Production Credits
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Adolfo Franci
| - | Screenwriter | |
Alessandro Cicognini
| - | Composer (Music Score) | |
Antonio Traverso
| - | Art Director | |
Carlo Montuori
| - | Cinematographer | |
Cesare Zavattini
| - | Screenwriter | |
Eraldo Da Roma
| - | Editor | |
Luigi Bartolini
| - | Book Author | |
O. Biancoli
| - | Screenwriter | |
Suso Cecchi D'Amico
| - | Screenwriter | |
Vittorio De Sica
| - | Director, Producer, Screenwriter |
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Format: DVD
Release Date: 2/13/2007
UPC: 715515022224
Item ID: 772887
Studio: CRITERION
ProductID: CRRN1681DVD
Region: 1 Video: Black & White DVD Aspect Ratio: Pre-1954 Standard (1.33:1) Audio: Dolby Digital Mono Language: English, italian Subtitles: English Weight factor: 3 item(s)
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Features
Disc one: The film
New, restored high-definition digital transfer
Optional English-dubbed soundtrack
New and improved English subtitle translation
Disc two: The supplements
Working with De Sica, a collection of new interviews with screenwriter Suso Cecchi d'Amico, actor Enzo Staiola, and film scholar Callisto Cosulich
Life as It Is: The Neorealist Movement in Italy, a new program on the history of Italian neorealism, featuring scholar Mark Shiel
A 2003 documentary on screenwriter and longtime Vittorio De Sica collaborator Cesare Zavattini, directed by Carlo Lizzani
Plus: A book featuring new essays by critic Godfrey Cheshire and filmmaker Charles Burnett, remembrances by De Sica and his collaborators, and classic writings by Zavattini and critic André Bazin
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