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Italian Directors - Vittorio De Sica

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Umberto D
Vittorio De Sica
One of the masterpieces of Italian Neo-Realist cinema - the Italian postwar Renaissance. The story centers on a retired civil servant, living only on his pension, whose best friend is his dog. Unable to survive on his meager income, he sacrifices a part of his pension for his dog, and is evicted by his landlady for non-payment of rent. "Infused with so much awareness that the screen seems luminous" (Pauline Kael, The New Yorker). In Italian with English subtitles. The DVD is a Criterion Collection edition, and includes a new high-definition digital transfer, an interview with actress, Maria Pia Casilio, an essay by Stuart Klawans, the made-for-Italian television documentary, This Is Life: Vittorio De Sica. Italy, 1952, 89 mins.
DVD
$44.95  


Italian Directors - Vittorio De Sica


After the Fox
Vittorio De Sica
An interesting stab at slapstick farce from one of the fathers of Italian neo-realism, Vittorio De Sica. Peter Sellers is Italy's most wanted criminal, the Fox. He devises a scheme to enlist the aid of an entire coastal village to smuggle gold bullion, by posing as a movie director who needs local talent in his new picture. With Britt Ekland and Victor Mature. Script by Neil Simon. In English. Great Britain/Italy, 1966, 103 mins.
DVD
$37.95  

The Bicycle Thief
Vittorio De Sica
Perhaps the single most important and moving film of Italian neo-realism, Bicycle Thief tells the deceptively simple story of an unemployed man finding work to paste up signs, work requiring a bicycle, which is then stolen. A landmark of cinema. The DVD is a 2 disc Criterion Collection Edition with a new restored, high-definiton transfer, and includes a new collection of interviews, a new program on Italian neorealism, a documentary on screenwriter Cesare Zavattini, optional English-dubbed soundtrack, improved English subtitles, and a booklet with new essays and classic writings. Italian with English subtitles. Italy, 1948, 90 mins.
DVD
$59.95  

Boccaccio '70
Federico Fellini/Vittorio De Sica/Luchino Visconti/Mario Monicelli
Boasting an unbelievable confluence of talent on both sides of the camera, this omnibus collection features contributions by some of the biggest names in Italian cinema. Each of the directors attempts to tell a story that Boccaccio might write if he was alive in the modern era. The Temptation of Doctor Antonio (Federico Fellini) stars Anita Ekberg in the dreamy, humorous tale of a billboard starlet who springs to life in front of an amorous professor. The Job (Luchino Visconti) stars Romy Schneider as a young office worker in love with her boss (Tomas Milian) in a witty tale about marriage and infidelity. The Raffle (Vittorio De Sica) stars Sophia Loren as a woman who opens up a can of worms when she offers herself up as first prize in a shooting gallery. Finally, Renzo & Luciana (Mario Monicelli), is included for the first time after having been cut for the original release. 2-DVD set. Letterboxed. Includes poster and stills gallery, trailers, archival footage, original U.S. main titles sequence, and collectible booklet with talent bios and a reprint of the rare original U.S. press book. In English and Italian with English subtitles. Italy 1962 208 mins.
DVD
$44.95  

A Brief Vacation
Vittorio De Sica
The words of French poet Guillaume Apollinaire - "sickness is the vacation of the poor" - formed the premise of this film from the director of the neorealist classics The Bicycle Thief and Umberto D. Florinda Bolkan stars a working woman who must support herself, her children, her incapacitated husband and his family on her meager wages from a local factory. After collapsing at work with a lung disease, she is sent to recover at a sanatorium in the snowy mountains where she finds a new world, new friends and, possibly, new love. Includes excerpts from De Sica's Woman Times Seven. In Italian with English subtitles. Italy, 1973, 112 mins.
DVD
$44.95  

The Children Are Watching Us
Vittorio De Sica
With his fifth film, Vittorio De Sica surprised everyone by turning into a vicious critic of society. The film, set among the bourgeoisie, focuses on a marital triangle. The mother of a four-year-old boy leaves her husband for another man; the husband, unable to stand the humiliation, commits suicide. The boy, lonely and unwanted, is sent to an orphanage. The script was written by six scenarists, including Cesare Zavattini, who, through the film, emerged as a driving force in Italian cinema for many years to come. B&W. Italian with English subtitles. Italy, 1944, 92 mins.
Videocassette
$44.95  

The Garden of the Finzi-Continis
Vittorio De Sica
Vittorio De Sica's (The Bicycle Thief, Miracle in Milan) Academy Award-winning masterpiece stars Dominique Sanda as the daughter of a cultured Italian Jewish family of immense wealth, languishing in aristocratic privilege on their estate, oblivious, until the end, to the danger that Fascism poses for their precious world. "...understated, elegant, and hauntingly poignant" (Strictly Film School). Italian with English subtitles. Italy, 1971, 94 mins.
DVD
$44.95  

Indiscretion of An American Wife
Vittorio De Sica
Italian neo-realist master Vittorio De Sica lost out to David O. Selznick for control of this drama about the ill-fated romance between an American woman (Jennifer Jones) and her Italian lover (Montgomery Clift). Much of De Sica's distinctive touch remains, but Selznick (Jones' husband at the time) brought in Truman Capote to juice up Cesare Zavattini's story and later cut the film by more than 24 minutes for its American release. What remains is a compromised but still compelling work, standing halfway between Italian neo-realism and Hollywood melodrama. De Sica's 87-minute cut, titled Terminal Station, was released in other countries and received an American revival in the early 1980s, but that version has yet to come to video. USA/Italy, 1954, 63 mins.
DVD
$19.95  

Indiscretion of an American Wife & Terminal Station
Vittorio De Sica
Italian neo-realist master Vittorio De Sica lost out to David O. Selznick for control of his drama, Terminal Station, about the ill-fated romance between an American woman (Jennifer Jones) and her Italian lover (Montgomery Clift). Selznick (Jones' husband at the time) cut footage, brought in Truman Capote to juice up Cesare Zavattini's story, and later renamed the film, Indiscretion of an American Wife, for its American release. What remains is a compromised, yet compelling, work that retains much of De Sica's distinctive touch, resulting in a film halfway between Italian neo-realism and Hollywood melodrama. This Criterion Collection edition presents Indiscretion of an American Wife (72 mins.) together with De Sica's original cut of Terminal Station (89 mins.) for the first time. Includes an audio commentary by film scholar Leonard Leff, the original theatrical trailer, promotional materials and more. Italy/USA, 1954, 161 mins.
DVD
$59.95  

Italian Masterworks
Vittorio De Sica/Roberto Rossellini
Two classics of Italian cinema. Two Women (Vittorio de Sica, 1961, 99 mins.) stars Sophia Loren in an Academy Award-winning role as a mother ravaged by war as she and her 13-year old daughter become the focus of attack by retreating German soldiers. A heartwrenching film. Paisan (Roberto Rossellini, 1946, 115 mins.) is one of the landmarks of Italian neo-realism: six episodes of the Battle of Italy from 1943-45. Improvised dialog, non-actors, and the story of the people in the War, the film became a cornerstone of postwar Italian cinema. Both films dubbed in English. Italy, 1961/1946, 214 mins.
DVD
$37.95  

Marriage Italian-Style
Vittorio De Sica
Vittorio De Sica's slick sex romp based on Eduardo De Filippo's 1946 play Filumena. Sophia Loren schemes to seduce Marcello Mastroianni and sustain his romantic interest. With Aldo Puglisi, Pia Lindstrom and Vito Moriconi. An Oscar nominee for Best Foreign Language Film and Best Actress. In Italian with English subtitles. Italy, 1964, 102 mins.
DVD
$44.95  

Shoeshine
Vittorio De Sica
One of the great films of Italian neo-realism. In post-war Rome, two young shoeshine boys get involved in a black market deal in order to raise money for a horse. "If Mozart had written an opera set in poverty, it might have had this kind of painful beauty" (Pauline Kael, The New Yorker). A collaboration between De Sica and Cesare Zavattini, the novelist and screenwriter many view as the father of neo-realism. A work of incredible emotion and power. In Italian with English subtitles. Italy, 1946, 93 mins.
DVD
$44.95  

Two Women
Vittorio De Sica
Sophia Loren won an Academy Award for her portrayal of a mother ravaged by war as she and her 13-year old daughter become the focus of attack by retreating German soldiers. A heartwrenching film - one of the best known - by Vittorio De Sica. Italian with English subtitles. Italy, 1961, 99 mins.
DVD
$37.95  

Umberto D
Vittorio De Sica
One of the masterpieces of Italian Neo-Realist cinema - the Italian postwar Renaissance. The story centers on a retired civil servant, living only on his pension, whose best friend is his dog. Unable to survive on his meager income, he sacrifices a part of his pension for his dog, and is evicted by his landlady for non-payment of rent. "Infused with so much awareness that the screen seems luminous" (Pauline Kael, The New Yorker). In Italian with English subtitles. The DVD is a Criterion Collection edition, and includes a new high-definition digital transfer, an interview with actress, Maria Pia Casilio, an essay by Stuart Klawans, the made-for-Italian television documentary, This Is Life: Vittorio De Sica. Italy, 1952, 89 mins.
DVD
$44.95  

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