Open
City Movie Review:
I`ve
been lucky to receive, due to the kindness of my local independent
video store, access to a number of older foreign films,
films I`d never believe I`d see in the tiny province of
Prince Edward Island. Open City is my most recent acquisition,
and it is interesting, if not always my cup of tea.
The
film, directed by Roberto Rosselini and starring Anna Magaini
was made in 1945 just after the end of World War II. The
story depicts a situation in Italy during the Nazi occupation,
as a couple of members of a secret underground movement
attempt to keep the Nazis away from them. This movement
seems to be a response to the Italian`s poverty, the result
of the expense of the war, and other Nazi policies; there
is a scene where the locals break into a bakery and steal
all the bread. One of the members of the group is engaged
to Magaini`s character, and the wedding is about to take
place in a matter of days. But all sorts of problems ensue,
and all of this rrevolves around the fear that the Nazis
will finally catch up with these traitors to the Nazi will.
And the second and more effective portion of the film is
an astounding display of tragic melodrama.
There
is one major problem, and that has to do with the print
I viewed. The subtitling, obviously the original 1945 work,
is appalling. Numerous chunks of sentences and paragraphs
are untranslated, making the film very confusing. It is
really weird for a viewer to sit there and see a bunch of
people speaking a language we can`t speak, and wonder if
perhaps we are missing something by not knowing what is
being said. Despite the subtitling problem, I still enjoyed
the last portion of the film, in which the melodrama kicks
into high gear. The movie is shameless in making things
unbearable for our characters, and the purpose is to show
us how evil the Nazi occupation really was; that it resulted
in otherwise good people getting caught in betrayal, greed,
and, soon, the clutches of sorrow and death.
About
those evil Nazis -- apparently there is a lot of repressed
lesbianism in their ranks, or perhaps it`s just me! I am
talking about a curious moment when Magaini`s sister, after
having informed a female Nazi on the whereabouts of the
men in the film, is, in my view, being seduced by that same
woman. I suppose Rosolini saw "depraved" sexuality as another
aspect of how depraved the Nazis were.
Religion
is nudged a bit here as well, as a character of the priest
is forced to come to grips with the possibility that the
Nazis simply are evil, and can`t be fought using tradition.
Earlier, he tells Magaini that perhaps the occupation is
a punishment of sorts for the sins of Rome (a similar speech
involving the idea that misery is brought on by ourselves
is used in A Price Above Rubies). At the same time, the
priest has taken confession, in which secrets that the Nazis
desire was spoken, so of course, this means the priest will
never speak. But later on, the priest discovers to his horror
what following the rules of the confessional will wrought.
At
the time, this film was seen as very realistic - part of
the Italian neorealism movement, in fact, which included
films such as The Bicycle Thief. Open City is a lot different
from the Hollywood pictures of the 1930`s and 40`s, in that
there are not a lot of big stars, but it really is not much
more realistic than, say, The Grapes of Wrath, which also
told a dark story about real people in a harsh situation.
I think that much of the appeal of neo-realism was that,
instead of using the standard trappings of filmmaking, they
used a few unusual elements. For one, many of these films
used non-actors in a number of supporting roles. As well,
the films took advantage of the current situation in Italy;
both of these stories were shot in post-war Italy, thereby
placing a topicality and urgency to the content. Yet to
say that these films were hard-bitten in their realism is
to speak falsely. Open City is definitely a melodrama, and
to a lesser extent, so is The Bicycle Thief. To go back
to the John Ford example, The Grapes of Wrath, made five
or six years earlier, did not feel very much like a melodrama.
Poverty was depicted just as well here as it was in The
Bicycle Thief, and, overall, the movie did not attempt to
jerk too many emotions from us. It was a purely straightforward
picture. Open City definitely does not top John Ford`s classic.
Open
City is still interesting in many ways; for depicting a
situation which at the time happened not too long before,
during the Nazi occupation, and for the effective melodrama.
These facts ensure that Rosselini`s groundbreaking film
will remain important, if not always perfect.
David
Macdonald
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