Journey to Italy
Journey to Italy | |
---|---|
Directed by | Roberto Rossellini |
Written by | Vitaliano Brancati Roberto Rossellini |
Based on | Duo by Colette |
Produced by | Adolfo Fossataro Alfredo Guarini Roberto Rossellini |
Starring | Ingrid Bergman George Sanders |
Cinematography | Enzo Serafin |
Edited by | Jolanda Benvenuti |
Music by | Renzo Rossellini |
Production companies | |
Distributed by | Titanus Distribuzione |
Release date |
|
Running time | 105 minutes (Italy) 88 minutes (France) 80 minutes (US) 70 minutes (UK) |
Countries | Italy France |
Languages | English (production) Italian (original release) |
Journey to Italy, also known as Voyage to Italy,
Journey to Italy is considered by many to be Rossellini's masterpiece,[2][3][4] as well as a seminal work of modernist cinema due to its loose storytelling. In 2012, it was listed by Sight & Sound magazine as one of the fifty greatest films ever made.[5]
Plot
Alex and Katherine Joyce (Sanders and Bergman) are a couple from England who have traveled by car to Italy to sell a villa near Naples that they have recently inherited from Alex's deceased Uncle Homer. The trip is intended as a vacation for Alex, who is a workaholic businessman given to brusqueness and sarcasm. Katherine is more sensitive, and the journey has evoked poignant memories of a poet friend, Charles Lewington, now deceased.
The film begins with Katherine and Alex Joyce conversing as they drive through the Italian countryside. They arrive in Naples and run into Judy, an old friend, and her party. They join and have drinks and dinner. The next day they are given a lengthy room-by-room tour of Uncle Homer's villa by its caretakers, Tony and Natalia Burton. Tony is a former British soldier, Natalia is the Italian wife he married after the war.
Within days of their arrival, the couple's relationship becomes strained amid mutual misunderstandings, buried anger that rises to the surface and a degree of jealousy on both sides. The two begin to spend their days separately. Alex takes a side trip to the island of Capri. His attempts to have a nice evening all fail, one with a woman who misses her husband, and one with a morose prostitute.
Katherine tours Naples. On the third day of her visit, she tours the large, ancient statues at the
On the last day of the film, they impetuously agree to divorce. Tony Burton suddenly appears, insisting that they go with him to Pompeii for an extraordinary opportunity. There, the three of them witness the discovery of another couple who had been buried in ashes during the eruption of Mount Vesuvius nearly 2000 years earlier.[7] Katherine is profoundly disturbed, and she and Alex leave Pompeii only to be caught up in the procession for Saint Gennaro in Naples.[8] Katherine is swept away in the crowd, and Alex goes after her and retrieves her. They embrace, and Katherine says, "Tell me that you love me!" He responds, "Well, if I do, will you promise not to take advantage of me?" The film concludes with a crane shot showing the couple embracing passionately amid the continuing religious procession.
Cast
- Ingrid Bergman as Katherine Joyce.
- George Sanders as Alexander 'Alex' Joyce (credited as Georges Sanders).
- Maria Mauban as Marie (credited as Marie Mauban).
- Anna Proclemer as a prostitute.
- Paul Muller as Paul Dupont.
- Leslie Daniels as Tony Burton (billed as Anthony La Penna). Burton is an Englishman living in Italy and married to Natalie. The Burtons are acting as caretakers for Uncle Homer's villa.
- Natalia Ray as Natalie Burton (credited as Natalia Rai). Natalie is an Italian woman married to Tony.
- Jackie Frost as Betty.
Production
The film originally was intended as an adaptation of the French writer Colette's novel Duo; Rossellini was, however, unable to get the rights to the novel and so was forced to draft a screenplay that differed sufficiently from the novel.[1] Rossellini and his co-author, Vitaliano Brancati, also apparently drew on a script entitled New Vine, by Antonio Pietrangeli, which described the argumentative relationship of an English couple touring Naples in a Jaguar automobile.[8] The film's storyline about Charles Lewington, the deceased poet who'd been in love with Katherine Joyce, is considered to be an allusion to the short story "The Dead" by James Joyce.[1][6][9]
Rossellini's directorial style was very unusual. The actors did not receive their lines until shortly before filming of a particular scene, which left them little if any chance to prepare or rehearse.[1] George Sanders' autobiography Memoirs of a Professional Cad (1960) tellingly describes Rossellini's methods of direction and their effects on the actors and production team.[10]
Theatrical releases
The film was completed in 1953, but it took 18 months to arrange for distribution of the film in Italy.[8] It was released in 1954 with the title Viaggio in Italia, with a running time of 105 minutes.[11] The receipts and critical reception were poor. The film had been dubbed into Italian, and now is used as an example of "monstrous" difficulties with dubbing.[12] In April 1955, an 88-minute version of the film, in English, was released in France as L'Amour est le plus fort.[13] There was little interest in the film in the U.S. and Britain despite the fact that the film had been made in English with noted actors in the leads. An American version, with an 80-minute running time, had a limited release in 1955 with the title Strangers.[14] In Britain, a cut version (70 minutes) was released in 1958 under the title The Lonely Woman.[15]
Reception and significance
Journey to Italy performed badly at the box office and was largely a critical failure.[16] It had a profound influence, however, on New Wave filmmakers working in the 1950s and 1960s. As described six decades later by film critic John Patterson: "French critics at the Cahiers du Cinéma – the likes of Jean-Luc Godard, Jacques Rivette, François Truffaut and Claude Chabrol – all saw it as the moment when poetic cinema grew up and became indisputably modern. Journey to Italy is thus one wellspring of the French New Wave. A film convulsed by themes of sterility, petrification, pregnancy and eternity, it finds its echo in such death-haunted Nouvelle Vague masterpieces as Chabrol's Le Boucher and Truffaut's La Chambre Verte."[17] Filmmaker Martin Scorsese talks about the film and his impressions of it in his own film My Voyage to Italy (1999).[1]
Today, Journey to Italy generally is regarded as a landmark film. Critic Geoff Andrew referred to it as "a key stepping stone on the path to modern cinema" in its shift away from
The Japanese filmmaker Akira Kurosawa cited this movie as one of his 100 favorite films.[24]
Home media and restoration
There have been several releases of Journey to Italy for home video. In 2013, the Criterion Collection released a newly restored version as a region 1 DVD.
References
- ^ ISBN 978-0-520-20053-1. Brunette's chapter incorporates a lengthy, close reading of the film.
- ISBN 978-0-8130-0967-4.
- ^ Kehr, Dave. "Voyage to Italy". Chicago Reader.
Roberto Rossellini's finest fiction film (1953), and unmistakably one of the great achievements of the art.
- ^ Schwartz, Dennis (February 9, 2006). "'Voyage in Italy' (Viaggio in Italia)". Ozus' World Cinema Reviews. Archived from the original on February 4, 2018. Retrieved September 12, 2016.
A magical love story that is beautifully told without one false note. It makes the best of its dead time, more so than any other film of this high quality has ever done before. Its passionate conclusion is still moving even at this date some fifty years after its release. This is Roberto Rossellini's finest film (his others with Ingrid Bergman as his wife include Joan of Arc at the Stake-1954 and Fear-1954).
- ^ Sight & Sound (September 2012). British Film Institute. Archived from the originalon August 2, 2012. Retrieved 6 June 2013.
- ^ OCLC 61529345.
it was dismissed on release, with only a few critics understanding that it was carefully constructed to undermine conventions of event-driven narrative and open out space and time for thought. The places included in the film were carefully chosen for their resonances and associations, from which Rossellini creates an implicit, idiosyncratic, commentary on the cinema, its reality, its indexical quality, as well as its uncanny ability to preserve light.
Mulvey identifies several of the locales near Naples that were used in filming. - ^ Giuseppe Forelli discovered that one could make plaster castings of the cavities left by the bodies of victims; the castings preserve the form of the body and its bones. See Nappo, Salvatore Ciro (February 17, 2011). "Pompeii: Its Discovery and Preservation". BBC. Retrieved September 19, 2016.
- ^ ISBN 9780306808739. See also a synopsis of Gallagher's chapter: Dixon, Wheeler Winston (July 2009). "Voyage to Italy". Senses of Cinema. No. 51.
- .
Rossellini's film uses "The Dead" as a point of departure for a creative contemplation of the ideas encountered in the short story.
- OCLC 475650.
- OCLC 1934530.
- ISBN 9780230317543.
- ^ "Viaggio in Italia - Fiche Film". Bibliothèque du film (BiFi) (in French). Retrieved 2016-09-10.
- ^ "Index to Motion Picture Credits - 'Strangers'". Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. Retrieved 2016-09-22. Los Angeles release August 31, 1955 (80 minutes).
- ISBN 9780230223189.
- ISBN 0415262682.
- ^ Patterson, John (May 5, 2013). "Journey To Italy: the Italian film that kickstarted the French New Wave". The Guardian.
- ^ Andrew, Geoff. "Realer than realism: Journey to Italy". British Film Institute. Retrieved March 3, 2017.
- ^ Scott, A. O. (April 30, 2013). "Revisiting a Rossellini Classic to Find Resonances of Today". The New York Times. Retrieved March 3, 2017.
- ^ "Journey to Italy (1954)". British Film Institute. Archived from the original on February 11, 2016. Retrieved March 3, 2017.
- ^ Georgaris, Bill (ed.). "1,000 Greatest Films (Full List)". Retrieved January 27, 2016. "77. Voyage in Italy (Rossellini, 1953)"
- ^ "Voyage to Italy (1953)". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved June 17, 2023.
- ^ "Voyage to Italy (re-release) 2013". Metacritic. Retrieved June 17, 2023.
- ^ Thomas-Mason, Lee (12 January 2021). "From Stanley Kubrick to Martin Scorsese: Akira Kurosawa once named his top 100 favourite films of all time". Far Out Magazine. Retrieved 23 January 2023.
- OCLC 857774031. The feature film runs 85 minutes. Also released as a Blu-ray disk.
- ^ Erickson, Glenn (September 25, 2013). "3 Films By Roberto Rossellini starring Ingrid Bergman - Savant Blu-ray Review". DVD Savant.
- OCLC 747191196. The feature film runs 80 minutes.
- ^ Tooze, Gary (2003). "Voyage to Italy". DVD Beaver.
- OCLC 26441934. The feature film runs 80 minutes.
Further reading
- Brody, Richard (31 August 2015). "Voyage to Italy". The New Yorker.
One of the most quietly revolutionary works in the history of cinema, Roberto Rossellini's third feature starring Ingrid Bergman (his wife at the time), from 1953, turns romantic melodrama into intellectual adventure. ... From Rossellini's example, the young French New Wave critics learned to fuse studio style with documentary methods, to make high-relief drama on a low budget.
- Callahan, Dan (15 November 2006). "You Must Change Your Life: The Films of Roberto Rossellini & Ingrid Bergman". Slant.
Voyage in Italy, their third movie together, is a key work in the history of film: thorny, alienated and alienating, it inaugurated the exquisite unease of the sixties art film (much to Rossellini's later dismay). ... Roberto's brother Renzo composed the scores for most of his films, and Renzo's work adds subtle, but extreme emotion to the often pitiless intellectual rigor of his brother's movies. His ominous music follows Katherine as she tours many a museum and is assailed again and again by the taunting sensuality of the past. Heat and leisure strip this couple of every defense mechanism they had, and their sudden uncertainty leads them to question everything, ...
- Scott, A. O. (30 April 2013). "Revisiting a Rossellini Classic to Find Resonances of Today". The New York Times.
In its time, this film represented the arrival of something new, and even now it can feel like a bulletin from the future.
A contemporary, highly favorable review.
External links
- Journey to Italy at IMDb
- Journey to Italy at Rotten Tomatoes
- Journey to Italy: Fun Couples an essay by Paul Thomas at the Criterion Collection