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Author:  Pierre Sorlin
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Product Summary

Format: Paperback
ISBN-10: 0415116988
ISBN-13: 9780415116985
Buy.com Sku: 30064326
Publish Date: 7/11/2003
Dimensions:  (in Inches) 9.25H x 6.25L x 0.75T
Pages:  216
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From such films as La Dolce Vita and Bicycle Thieves to Cinema Paradiso and Dear Diary, Italian cinema has provided striking images of Italy as a nation and a people. In the first comprehensive study of Italian cinema from 1886-1996, Pierre Sorlin explores the changing relationship of Italian cinema and Italian society and asks whether the national cinema really does represent Italian interests and culture.
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From such films as La Dolce Vita and Bicycle Thieves to Cinema Paradiso and Dear Diary, Italian cinema has provided striking images of Italy as a nation and a people. In the first comprehensive study of Italian cinema from 1886 onward, Sorlin explores the changing relationship of Italian cinema and Italian society and asks whether the national cinema really does represent Italian interests and culture. Sorlin discusses the work of major filmmakers, considering both films which became internationally acclaimed and those which, though popular with the domestic audience, were never released outside Italy. Sorlin's examination spans Italian cinema from the earliest days of film technology, through the dark years of fascism to postwar Neorealism and lastly explores the era of big budget commercial films.

From such films as La Dolce Vita and Bicycle Thieves to Cinema Paradiso and Dear Diary, Italian cinema has provided striking images of Italy as a nation and a people. In the first comprehensive study of Italian cinema from 1886 onward, Sorlin explores the changing relationship of Italian cinema and Italian society and asks whether the national cinema really does represent Italian interests and culture. Sorlin discusses the work of major filmmakers, considering both films which became internationally acclaimed and those which, though popular with the domestic audience, were never released outside Italy. Sorlin's examination spans Italian cinema from the earliest days of film technology, through the dark years of fascism to postwar Neorealism and lastly explores the era of big budget commercial films.

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