Change Your Image
jdoobie105
Reviews
Paisà (1946)
Slow Storytelling Can Still Have Good Ideas
If there's one thing movies need, it's actors who can play the roles. Directors need people who are trained to perform their characters as best as the director visions them. Good actors get recognized and continue performing as well as they can. Yet, in the 1940s, Italian directors pioneered a certain form of filmmaking called "neorealism". This involved filming on location as opposed to a set and even had actual Italians performing the roles. Many of these had little to no experience acting, but the directors believed that their stories would be better told using actual Italians. Think of it as "for Italians, by Italians, starring Italians." One of the movies to incorporate this idea was Roberto Rossellini's post-WW II movie Paisan.
A large number of people would think that something like putting actual Italians to tell this movie would be a pretty interesting idea, and it actually is. Rossellini took something that hadn't really been done before at the time. Many of his movies are pretty famous because of it, and the idea itself has been pretty influential. Paisan really is no exception. Instead of using Italian actors, Rossellini used actual Italians in different roles combined with American actors. It's a pretty ingenious idea in terms of filmmaking. Unfortunately, the movie feels a little dry. It's probably the realism of the movie or the stories that come across in the film.
I say stories because the movie itself is actually a series of five vignettes as opposed to one full story. All of these have to deal with American soldiers in Italy after World War II. The first story deals with Americans in an Italian city who take one girl from the town to a seaside cliff. One of the soldiers tries to communicate with her but finds it hard because he doesn't know Italian. The second story is about a black American soldier who befriends a homeless boy that stole his boots. The third story has an American sleeping with an Italian prostitute musing about an Italian girl he used to love and tried to find again. He has no idea that the prostitute is the very girl. The fourth story has an American nurse meeting a painter who is a revolutionary leader named "Lupo". They struggle to get across the Ponte Vecchio and to safety. The last story is about American soldiers who are captured by the Nazis and executed before the war was over.
The interesting thing about this movie is that because these are actual Italian people portraying Italian people, it appeared as if they were Italian people. The little boy wasn't trying too hard to play a poor Italian boy because
well, he IS one. However, it's easy to tell that there is no experience with these people. The prostitute could have been done by an Italian actress, one who didn't really say her lines really monotonously. She realized who the guy she had was; she could be a little more shocked. The American actors were fine. Many of them felt like they actually were their characters as opposed to just acting them out. This makes it more interesting and even improves their acting. It's one thing to communicate with someone you know is faking it as well; it's another to communicate with someone who probably isn't. You have to be convincing enough to them, and that makes you convincing enough for the audience.
The ideas of communication and friendship are very heavy in this movie. The Italians are speaking Italian, but many of the Americans don't understand and find it hard to connect with these people. Rossellini tries to emphasize that in the first story. The Americans in the other stories knew some Italian, but it was the ignorance of the other Italian characters that cost them. The soldier with the boy didn't realize that the boy was homeless from the war and became mad at the boy when he stole his boots. The soldier with the prostitute didn't trust her judgment, and the story doesn't end too well for the both of them. The same can be said about the fourth story. Connecting with the people around you is important in these stories, and it becomes even easier if you understand them.
Unfortunately, this movie is a bit dry for me. When you try to make a story as real as humanly possible, you wind up making it so real that it feels like you're there. That works on numerous occasions such as mystery thrillers or suspenseful films, but these stories do come across as boring at times. The pacing of the movie has some part to play as the stories seem to go on and on. By the time something exciting or really dramatic happens, the scene is over. That may have been Rossellini's intent, but it doesn't help when there's nothing to keep us wanting to see these stories continue.
Bottom line: Paisan is a potentially good showcase because it uses potentially interesting concepts. The realism in the acting and the set really make the movie convincing. The ideas about communication and connection really do come across in the stories, but the stories don't pace well and have very little dramatic worth. The filmmaking ideas are influential and have good intents, but it helps when the story itself is interesting. Not everyone is an aspiring filmmaker, but those who are can learn a lot from this movie.
Metropolis (1927)
A Nightmarish Fable and a Beauty of Cinema
Metropolis's history is both famous and infamous. Fritz Lang, a leading director in the school of Expressionism, made this movie incorporating numerous themes of labor, heart, and proper communication between the mind and the working body. Using many tools of Expressionist cinema, he put together what many consider to be a cinematic masterpiece full of emotional tension, spectacular sets and strange scenes all in the attempt of bringing out what the characters are feeling. This new- world film had to be edited before being released to the masses, and a number of the cut scenes were lost. There have been numerous attempts to complete the missing work, the most recent being in 2010 in Argentinian print.
With the missing scenes added to the film, the movie truly becomes one of the greatest things to see on film. The sets bring out a scope of magnificence in the elaborate grandeur of the city above as well as the lowliness of the world below. The expression of the machines, both their size and functioning, make this world seem more industrial than ever. It's quite possibly a nod to the Industrial Revolution because it does express a lot about the worker and the work that it must do to keep the city, both above and below, alive.
The story is simple: Freder, the son of the founder of Metropolis, finds a woman named Maria in which he is captivated. She represents the workers that live in the city of the worker below the Metropolis, and he follows her down. He switches with a worker and discovers the world that was hidden from him and the rest of the world. Unfortunately, his father has bigger plans and goes to an inventor to make a machine-woman in her likeness to fool the workers and destroy her.
This world that Fritz Lang built is definitely elaborate and inventive as well as haunting. The idea that if people become ignorant of the human aspect of labor and invention, they destroy themselves and their society really makes you think about whether or not technological progress is truly a great thing. The movie does use a lot of religious ideas such as the Seven Deadly Sins and the story of the Tower of Babel, but the point that I got out is that the lack of God and the lack of goodwill towards each other will destroy humanity.
The acting in the movie is very expressive because there is no sound, so the expressions need to be big; but the actors work very well in bringing out the general feel of the moral and the story. The actress who played Maria also plays the robot that manipulates the people into destroying the city and fall victim to lust. It's the basic Jekyll-and- Hyde but with two separate monsters. What separates this performance from the rest is how well she sets the characters apart. Her facial expressions, her body movements and even her eyes are so different and so perfect with the character that you could believe they were not the same person. Freder is the most dynamic character in the film, being the inevitable hero, and you root for him from beginning to end as his emotions towards everything express the stress and the appreciation of the people that do the hardest work and the trauma and the fear when he sees all that goes wrong. Also most interesting is the father, Joh. He rarely shows emotion which shows how cold and calculating he is. He shows no contempt for the workers. Why should he? However, he does show love for his son and fears losing him, even though he doesn't really know it yet.
The story does have its predictable moments, but they end with different results so it's not entirely predictable. In the end, it shows that without a sense of humanity, humans are doomed to be destroyed for the things that aren't human, such as a lack of heart or sound mind, will lead to perpetual ruin for those that do not deserve it.
Bottom Line: Metropolis truly is one of the greatest movies ever made. The sets were creative, the acting was well done, the story is simple but not overdone, and it truly haunts people with its themes. This is a great example of Expressionist cinema and, in its most complete form, provides to be one of the strongest and emotionally provocative films to come out of early cinema.