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CULTURAL FILM SERIES

Logo for Cultural Film Series: Cinema with a Social Conscience: Italian Neorealism

This year’s film series will feature pictures from the Italian Neorealism film movement and movies related to that movement.

Films are screened in the Cinema of the Connelly Center on ÄĚĚÇÖ±˛Ąâ€™s campus on Sundays at 3:30 and 7 p.m. and Monday evenings at 7 p.m.

The speakers, who introduce the film and lead a discussion after the screening, are only present for the Monday evening screenings. As always, all screenings are free and open to the public.

For more information, email Dr. John O’Leary or call (610) 519-4454.

 

FALL 2024

Italy, 1945 | 105 minutes

DIRECTED BY Roberto Rossellini

This story about a Resistance leader on the run from the Nazis in 1944 Rome was described by Kenneth Turan of the Los Angeles Times as, “a world cinema landmark.”

MONDAY NIGHT SPEAKER: Millicent Marcus

Italy, 2005 | 53 minutes

DIRECTED BY Laura Muscardin

Director of the documentary Children of Open City, Laura Muscardin, will join us to discuss her documentary examining the making of Open City.

MONDAY NIGHT SPEAKER: Laura Muscardin

USA, 1944 | 173 minutes

DIRECTED BY John Cromwell, Edward Cline, & Tay Garnett

Following a mother raising two daughters when her husband leaves to fight in WWII, Wesley Lovell of Cinema Sight says of WWII movies, there are “none more fascinating or heart-wrenching as those of the lives of the people left behind at home.”

MONDAY NIGHT SPEAKER: Rick Worland

Italy, 1946 | 120 minutes

DIRECTED BY Roberto Rossellini

Featuring six vignettes of interactions between American forces and locals in Italy during WWII, “this remarkable film communicates how the war in Italy actually took place on a very personal level,” says John Nesbit of Old School Reviews.

MONDAY NIGHT SPEAKERS: Flavia Laviosa & Qi Wang Schlupp

45 minutes

DIRECTED BY John Huston; and Helen Levitt, Janice Loeb & James Agee

This double screening will feature two documentaries capturing vastly different places in the mid-1940’s: the Battle of San Pietro and the streets of Spanish Harlem.

MONDAY NIGHT SPEAKERS: Deirdre Boyle & Chet Pancake

Italy, 1948 | 88 minutes

DIRECTED BY Roberto Rossellini

This film, following the struggles of a young boy in post-WWII Berlin, “makes you feel the weight of every smashed facade and fallen stone,” says David Denby of the New Yorker.

MONDAY NIGHT SPEAKERS: Timothy Shary & Francesco Pitassio

2005 | 16 minutes

DIRECTED BY Guy Maddin

The short documentary My Dad is 100 Years Old features Isabella Rossellini discussing the life of her father, legendary Italian neo-realist film director Roberto Rossellini. 

MONDAY NIGHT SPEAKER: Alessandra Seggi

 

SPRING 2025

Italy, 1943 | 140 minutes

DIRECTED BY Luchino Visconti

Described as, “a landmark film in both Neo-Realist and giallo traditions,” (Alexandra Heller-Nicholas, Senses of Cinema) this story follows the love affair between a drifter and an inn-owner as they plan to murder her husband.

MONDAY NIGHT SPEAKERS: Saverio Giovacchini & Luca Cottini

USA, 1946 | 113 minutes

DIRECTED BY Tay Garnett

This, “masterclass in noir,” (Jennie Kermode, Eye for Film) tells the story of a married woman and a drifter who fall in love and plot to murder her husband.

MONDAY NIGHT SPEAKERS: Rick Worland & Susan Mackey-Kallis

Italy, 1948 | 160 minutes

DIRECTED BY Luchino Visconti

This film, following fisherman living in rural Sicily as they fight to break out of poverty, is, “one of the greatest films to emerge from the Italian neorealist movement” (TV Guide).

MONDAY NIGHT SPEAKERS: Nelson Moe & Luca Barattoni

Italy, 1951 | 108 minutes

DIRECTED BY Luchino Visconti

Bellissima, “the first honest self-portrait of the cinema,” (TV Guide) tells the story of a woman desperately trying to get her daughter into the movies.

MONDAY NIGHT SPEAKER: Mattia Cinquegrani

Italy, 1943 | 84 minutes

DIRECTED BY Vittorio De Sica

This family drama, centered around a four-year-old boy, depicts, “the painful and necessary maturation of a child and of Italian cinema,” says Fernando Croce of CinePassion.

MONDAY NIGHT SPEAKER: Simonetta Milli Konewko

Italy, 1948 | 99 minutes

DIRECTED BY Vittorio De Sica

This “brilliant, tactlessly real work of art,” (Peter Bradshaw, Guardian) tells the story of a father and son setting out to find the father’s stolen bicycle.

MONDAY NIGHT SPEAKERS: Karl Schoonover, Michael Altimore & John Carvalho

105 minutes

DIRECTED BY Vittorio De Sica; and Francois La Rosa

This double feature will show the film Umberto D, a story about an elderly man and his dog struggling to survive in Rome, followed by 40 Weeks in CinecittĂ , a documentary about Italian neorealist film director Federico Fellini.

MONDAY NIGHT SPEAKERS: Anastasia Valecce, Tania Romero & Francois Larosa

Italy, 1949 | 108 minutes

DIRECTED BY Giuseppe De Santis

This story about two criminals on the run, “fuses the class-based politics – and the on-location authenticity – of neorealism with a smoldering romantic melodrama,” says Richard Brody of the New Yorker.

MONDAY NIGHT SPEAKERS: Laura E. Ruberto & Charles Leavitt

All films are screened at the Connelly Center Cinema. Parking available in the St. Augustine (M2) lot behind the Connelly Center. 

CULTURAL FILM SERIES COMMITTEE

JOHN O’LEARY, Director

JARRYD KAINZ, Assistant Director

J.J. BROWN, Treasurer

TONY ALFANO, Associate Vice President of Auxiliary Services

ADVISORS

DAN JEFFERSON
SUSAN MARCOSSON
JOHN PAUL SPIRO
ELANA ROSE STARR


The 2024-25 Cultural Film Series was created, organized and facilitated by Alessandra Seggi.


INFORMATION

CALL (610) 519-4454
·ˇ˛Ń´ˇ±őł˘ĚýJOHN.OLEARY@VILLANOVA.EDU