Luchino Visconti

IF 0.2 0 FILM, RADIO, TELEVISION
B. Hennessey
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引用次数: 4

Abstract

Luchino Visconti (b. 1906–d. 1976) was one of Italy’s foremost directors of cinema, theater, and opera. A cultural figurehead of the Italian Communist Party (PCI), Visconti was seen as a major cinematic interpreter of the Italian Hegelian-Marxist philosopher Antonio Gramsci. To this political affiliation, one can also attach his upbringing as a Milanese nobleman and background as a gay man that would also influence interpretations of his films. Following a tutelage under French director Jean Renoir on films Une partie de campagne (1936) and Tosca (1940), Visconti inaugurated his own career in cinema with Ossessione (1942), the presumptive first film of Italian neorealism when directors in Italy turned their attention to the plight of the commoner, struggling in the wake of the Fascist dictatorship and the Second World War. Ossessione was followed by neorealist landmarks La terra trema (1948) and Bellissima (1951), and a few years later, the neorealist-inspired Rocco e i suoi fratelli (1960). These films introduced the conflux of realism, formalism, and melodrama for which Visconti’s cinema would be subsequently associated. Such characteristics were also evident in his parallel career on the Italian stage, where Visconti established himself as one of the nation’s pre-eminent directors of prose theater and opera. This activity on stage would contribute to Visconti’s reputation for working across media. In his cinema, structures from and allusions to theater, painting, and literature abound. Twelve of his eighteen films were based on one or more literary works, with Morte a Venezia (1971) celebrated as a groundbreaking chapter in European literary adaptation. His 1967 film, Lo straniero (1967), on the other hand, was panned for its slavish illustration of Camus’s book. To these and other literary-inspired works, Visconti added a few documentaries and numerous films set in contemporary Italy (episodes of Anna Magnani [1953] and Il lavoro [1961]; Le notti bianche [1957]; Vaghe stelle dell’Orsa [1965]) together with some of the largest-scale historical films in postwar European cinema. Senso (1954) and Il Gattopardo (1963) instantiate historiographically-rich analyses of Italian independence in the late 19th century. The biopic Ludwig (1974) is set in Bavaria during the same period, while La caduta degli dei (1969) pictures the rise of Nazism in Germany of the 1930s. During the filming of Ludwig, Visconti suffered a stroke that would cast a pall over Gruppo di famiglia in un interno (1974) and the posthumous L’Innocente (1976), an ornate tragedy based on a novel by Gabriele D’Annunzio.
卢奇诺·维斯康蒂(1906-d)1976年)是意大利最重要的电影、戏剧和歌剧导演之一。作为意大利共产党(PCI)的文化领袖,维斯康蒂被视为意大利黑格尔马克思主义哲学家安东尼奥·葛兰西(Antonio Gramsci)的主要电影诠释者。这种政治关系也可以将他作为米兰贵族的成长经历和同性恋的背景联系起来,这也会影响对他电影的解读。在法国导演让·雷诺阿(Jean Renoir)的指导下拍摄了《一个政党的运动》(1936)和《托斯卡》(1940)之后,维斯康蒂以《奥塞西翁》(1942)开始了自己的电影生涯,这部电影被认为是意大利新现实主义的第一部电影,当时意大利的导演们把注意力转向了平民的困境,他们在法西斯独裁统治和第二次世界大战之后挣扎。继奥塞松之后,新现实主义的标志性作品《大地》(1948)和《Bellissima》(1951)紧随其后,几年后,受新现实主义启发的洛可又创作了《我爱你的兄弟》(1960)。这些电影引入了现实主义、形式主义和情节剧的融合,维斯康蒂的电影随后与之联系在一起。这些特点在他在意大利舞台上的平行生涯中也很明显,维斯康蒂在那里成为了意大利最杰出的散文、戏剧和歌剧导演之一。这种舞台上的活动将有助于维斯康蒂在跨媒体工作方面的声誉。在他的电影中,戏剧、绘画和文学的结构和典故比比皆是。他的18部电影中有12部改编自一部或多部文学作品,1971年的《威尼斯之夜》(Morte a Venezia)被誉为欧洲文学改编的开创性篇章。另一方面,他1967年的电影《怪人》(Lo straniero, 1967)则因对加缪著作的盲目模仿而受到严厉批评。除了这些和其他文学灵感的作品,维斯康蒂还增加了一些纪录片和许多以当代意大利为背景的电影(安娜·马格纳尼[1953]和Il lavoro[1961]的剧集;Le notti bianche [1957];《女人的风格》(Vaghe stelle dell’orsa[1965])以及战后欧洲电影中一些规模最大的历史电影。Senso(1954)和Il Gattopardo(1963)对19世纪后期意大利独立进行了丰富的史学分析。传记片《路德维希》(1974)以同一时期的巴伐利亚为背景,而《上帝的孩子》(1969)则描绘了20世纪30年代纳粹主义在德国的兴起。在拍摄《路德维希》期间,维斯康蒂患了中风,这给他的《家庭小组》(1974年)和《无辜》(1976年)蒙上了阴影。《无辜》是根据加布里埃尔·达南齐奥的小说改编的华丽悲剧。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.40
自引率
50.00%
发文量
53
期刊介绍: Journal of Italian Cinema & Media Studies is an English-language forum for theoretical, methodological and critical debate on Italian film and media production, reception and consumption. It provides a platform for dialogue between academics, filmmakers, cinema and media professionals. This peer-reviewed journal invites submissions of scholarly articles relating to the artistic features, cultural themes, international influence and history of Italian film and media. Furthermore, the journal intends to revive a critical discussion on the auteurs, revisit the historiography of Italian cinema and celebrate the dynamic role played by new directors. The journal includes a book and film review section as well as notes on Italian film festivals abroad and international conference reports. The profound transformation undergone by the rapidly expanding media environment under the impact of digital technology, has lead scholars in the field of media studies to elaborate new theoretical paradigms and methodological approaches to account for the complexities of a changing landscape of convergence and hybridization. The boundaries between cinema and media as art forms and fields of inquiry are increasingly hybridized too. Taking into account this evolving scenario, the JICMS provides an international arena for critical engagement with a wider range of issues related to the current media environment. The journal welcomes in particular contributions that discuss any aspects of Italian media production, distribution and consumption within national and transnational, social, political, economic and historical contexts.
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