Dino Risi and the Commedia allitaliana

January 8 to February 8, 2010
From the late nineteen-fifties to the mid-seventies, the Commedia allitaliana (Comedy Italian Style) was synonymous with piercing social commentary in the shape of virtuoso entertainment - a stronger
popular cinema was hardly imaginable anywhere. The movement was not only a hit with audiences but also garnered numerous awards
for directing, writing and acting at the major film festivals - and at the Oscars. The father of this deeply realistic and
bittersweet style of comedy was Mario Monicelli; the former neorealist Pietro Germi became its best-known practitioner when
he achieved worldwide successwith films like Divorce, Italian Style; but the true master of the genre was Dino Risi, a modern-day genius of sardonic laughter. Risis early careers as a psychiatrist
and documentary filmmaker mark his later work: like no one else, he was able to reveal the vanity of the Italians to themselves
with a distorted yet illuminating mirror.
Starting on January 8, the Austrian Film Museum presents an in-depth look at the Commedia allitaliana. Comprising 34 works (including thirteen by Dino Risi), the series is a continuation and elaboration of last years
major retrospective on the Italian cinema of the 1960s. The richness of this period results from a productive coexistence
of art cinema, the arte povera of certain genre masters and the blossoming of a new generation of comedy actors, directors and screenwriters. The latter,
especially the writing team of Age & Scarpelli, learned their craft in satirical magazines, variety shows, and in working
with folk comedians like Totò. But they also transformed the lessons of neo-realism: In the fifties, it
was forbidden to poke fun at social problems. But we did it anyway. We loved creating a cinema that dealt directly with the
people we knew and those we met, in factories, train stations and on buses. (Mario Monicelli)
The seminal work of the Commedia allitaliana is Monicellis terrific caper comedy I soliti ignoti (Big Deal on Madonna Street) from 1958. It was the Year Zero of the Italian economic miracle, which five years later was honored with its own film: Il boom, Vittorio De Sicas darkly comic ballad about the eras social climbers and nouveau riche. As Dino Risi has stated,
the Boom changed our perspective. Neo-realism had become a mannerism. It was no longer enough to simply film reality,
one had to explain it. And explaining meant: stripping away illusions, demystifying social myths and exposing deeply-ingrained
ideologies - i.e., the cult of the family and the church; the entanglement of politics, economics and crime (Alberto Lattuadas
Mafioso); Italys self-deception about the wars (in Monicellis pioneering La grande guerra or Luigi Comencinis Tutti a casa); the Sicilian patriarchy (Germis Divorzio allitaliana and Sedotta e abbandonata); the regular downplaying of the fascist past (strongly countered in Risis La marcia su Roma or Luciano Salces Il federale) - and above all the widespread hypocrisy and conformity of the Italian bourgeoisie, as in Risis merciless Una vita difficile.
As the boom ended, so too did the halcyon era of the Commedia allitaliana. After 1964 the form began to mutate and produced several intriguing variations and tonalities: bitter and melancholic (Ettore Scolas masterpiece, Ceravamo tanto amati, 1974), darkly existential (Lo scopone scientifico, Luigi Comencini, 1972), sometimes approaching pure social horror (Monicellis Un Borghese piccolo piccolo, 1977) or escaping into dreamy nostalgia (Franco Brusatis Pane e cioccolata, 1974). Across the ocean, several of the New Hollywood filmmakers such as Robert Altman or Bob Rafelson also echoed and expanded on the Comedy Italian Style. In different ways, these later films are all descended from the bestiary fashioned by Dino Risi in 1963 with I Mostri (The Monsters) - followed by Antonio Pietrangelis similarly kaleidoscopic, if much more tragic lo la conoscevo bene (1965). These films bring the essence of the Commedia allitaliana into view: A small theater of infamy, a gallery of nuanced archetypes: the useless egotist, the cowardly bourgeois, the lazy opportunist, the hypocritical Catholic, the womanizer who refuses to grow up. (Gerhard Midding)
The cinema of the Commedia allitaliana can only be partially explained through the contribution of its auteur directors. No less important were the screenwriters - and the great actors: Vittorio Gassman, Alberto Sordi, Nino Manfredi,
Ugo Tognazzi, Marcello Mastroianni. Their performances not only gave expression to specific social masks and regional
peculiarities, they also exposed multiple layers of deception and intrigue. Sordi was the one who most fully embodied the
Commedia - he inspired all of the directors in the genre. Gassman, the eternal furbo, was the indisputable center and motor of Risis masterpieces, from Il sorpasso (1962) to Profumo di donna (1974). Tognazzis anarchic and antisocial energy stamped the films of Luciano Salce and also connects the work of Marco
Ferreri to the Commedia allitaliana. Mastroianni, in turn, lent every film in which he appeared a certain forlorn quality, a pastel melancholy that belongs
as much to the Commedia as Mario Monicellis muffled sounds of hope or the opaque anger that rages through the films of Dino Risi.
The retrospective includes lectures by Adriano Aprà, Gerhard Midding, Olaf Möller and Giovanni Spagnoletti. It is presented in collaboration with the Cineteca Nazionale and Cinecittà Luce, with the support of the Italian Cultural Institute in Vienna.
Programme:
- A cavallo della tigre (Der Ritt auf dem Tiger) (1961)
- Arrangiatevi! (Pech gehabt!) (1959)
- Buio in sala (Licht aus im Saal!) (1948)
- Ceravamo tanto amati (Wir haben uns so geliebt) (1974)
- Divorzio allitaliana (Scheidung auf italienisch) (1962)
- I compagni (Die Weber von Turin) (1963)
- I complessi (Die Komplexe) (1965)
- I mostri (Die Monster) (1963)
- I soliti ignoti (Diebe haben's schwer) (1958)
- Il boom (Der Boom) (1963)
- Il federale (Der Faschist) (1961)
- Il magnifico cornuto (Der große Hahnrei) (1964)
- Il siero della verità (Das Wahrheitsserum) (1949)
- Il sorpasso (Die Überholspur) (1962)
- Il vedovo (Der Witwer) (1959)
- In nome del popolo italiano (Im Namen des italienischen Volkes) (1971)
- Io la conoscevo bene (Ich habe sie gut gekannt) (1965)
- Larmata Brancaleone (Die unglaublichen Abenteuer des hochwohllöblichen Ritters Brancaleone) (1966)
- La grande guerra (Der große Krieg) (1959)
- La marcia su Roma (Marsch auf Rom) (1962)
- La visita (Der Besuch) (1963)
- Lo scopone scientifico (Teuflisches Spiel) (1972)
- Mafioso (1962)
- Mordi e fuggi (Dirty Weekend) (1973)
- Pane e cioccolata (Brot und Schokolade) (1974)
- Paradiso per 3 ore (3 Stunden Paradies) (1953)
- Poveri ma belli (Arm, aber schön) (1957)
- Profumo di donna (Der Duft der Frauen) (1974)
- Sedotta e abbandonata (Verführung auf sizilianisch) (1964)
- Signore e signori (Meine Damen und Herren) (1966)
- Tutti a casa (Der Weg zurück) (1960)
- Un borghese piccolo piccolo (Ein wirklich kleiner Kleinbürger) (1977)
- Una storia moderna: Lape regina (Die Bienenkönigin) (1963)
- Una vita difficile (Ein schweres Leben) (1961)
- Vortrag Adriano Aprà
- Vortrag Gerhard Midding
- Vortrag Giovanni Spagnoletti

