Contents:
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Looking Back
1 National Identity by Means of Montage in Roberto Rossellini's Paisan
2 Luchino Visconti's Bellissima: The Diva, the Mirror, and the Screen
Italy by Displacement
3 Bernardo Bertolucci's The Last Emperor : Powerless in Peking
4 Mediterraneo and the ""Minimal Utopias"" of Gabriele Salvatores
5 From Salazar's Lisbon to Mussolini's Rome by Way of France in Roberto Faenza's Pereira Declares
Family as Political Allegory
6 Francesco Rosi's Three Brothers: After the Diaspora
7 The Alternative Family of Ricky Tognazzi's La scorta
8 The Gaze of Innocence: Lost and Found in Gianni Amelio's Stolen Children
Postmodernism; or, the Death of Cinema?
9 Ginger and Fred: Fellini after Fellini
10 Giuseppe Tornatore's Cinema Paradiso and the Art of Nostalgia
11 From Conscience to Hyperconsciousness in Maurizio Nichetti's The Icicle Thief
12 Postmodern Pastiche, the Sceneggiata, and the View of the Mafia from Below in Roberta Torre's To Die for Tano
The Return of the Referent
13 Filming the Text of Witness: Francesco Rosi's The Truce
14 The Seriousness of Humor in Roberto Benigni's Life is Beautiful
15 Caro diaro and the Cinematic Body of Nanni Moretti
Appendix: Plot Summaries and Credits
Notes
Bibliography
Videography
Index
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Description
""Scholars of film as well as those who enjoy Italian cinema will welcome this fine survey by Marcus.""