Tuesday, October 16, 2018

Neorealism in the Bicycle Thief by Sanaa El Alaoui


                                                             Sanaa El Alaoui     

written by Sanaa El Alaoui


Satisfactory to its name, Neorealism embodies the pure means of cinema in capturing 'wonderfulness' in mundane and insignificant events with almost self-organic situations. The Bicycle Thief is a great example of such a movement where De Sica responds to the post-war life of Italy to capture ‘ the history-from-below’ in a realistic manner to chronicle the hardship of wartime.

Throughout the film, objective reality is self-evident by the employment of non-professional actors, mundane language, interference of casual events instead of causal ones, real locations, unhappy ending etc.. Relatively, the power of this films lies in unifying the audience’s feelings with the characters thanks to the ‘faithful to the character’ preference of  De Sica. According to De Sica, faithfulness to the characters can only be achieved by ordinary people to portray 'ordinary people'.

For this reason, as viewers, we feel that we are no longer faced to the typical glamour – fantasy style of Hollywood narratives (which I believe does not give me enough access to the depth of the character as opposed to the realistic cinema where natural performance engage us fully).  The totality of reality is what distinguishes this film as a unique work where subject matter and form are aesthetically merged. This creates a poetic energy that enables the viewers to mirror the surroundings of the characters on their feelings (everything is interrelated: streets, people, setting...).

For this reason, certain technical elements are employed to reinforce this expression such as deep focus where all elements from foreground to background are equally and clearly observed as if De Sica provides a constant reminder of the social conditions (everything and everyone is equally important). Not only this but also lighting is poetic, for instance, most of the outdoor scenes are used with high-key lighting to stress on the spacious city, the mass and Antonio’s quest to find the bike in this large area.Whereas low-key lighting is used inside (sometimes) to reflect on his sadness and desperation. Another distinctive feature is that, as opposed to Hollywood films, the character is emphasized and the plot is driven organically.

 Additionally, the film provides freedom of interpretation for the viewers because they are exposed to long takes, shots and deep focus that allow for multiplicity in details, hence, the viewer is not forced to understand specific meanings but they can freely interpret the meanings from these shots and connect elements with each other (example, Rita Hayworth ad., the mass, the ladder and availability of multiple bicycles whereas Antonio needs only one to survive). To sum up, the uniqueness and paradox of this film are mirrored in achieving poetic elements with maintaining pure realistic roots of cinema (cinema verite).