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Bicycle Thieves Streaming.
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I first saw this movie as a student decades ago, and now seeing it all these years later on DVD, I’m amazed how well it holds up. It’s a lesson in what can be done on the mask with so little; there’s no budget here, largely amateur actors and a very simple site. It’s about an unemployed man, who gets a job offer that requires a bike, the sacrifice his family must invent to accumulate his bike out of hock, and what happens when the bike is stolen on the job. It’s successful because I mediate the writers and director focus on some universal truths–about human nature, appreciate, pride, survival and–yes–family values. It’s disheartening to read some reviews that say: “I was bored,” “It wasn’t bright enough,” or “Enough with the dusky & white.” It’s also disheartening to spy reviews from people with no opinion of this film’s historical context. The poverty of post-WWII Europe produced a revolution in cinema, and this movie was one that redefined the medium’s possibilities. I can’t imagine someone not being moved by the spot faced by the lead character in this film. I do regret that this movie has not gotten a pudgy “Criterion Collection” restoration, and I would have liked more “extras” on the DVD–like background information on the time the director and the Italian neo-realist movement. BTW, the more apt translation of the Italian title is “Bicycle Thieves,” which (after you glance the movie) you must agree is more appropriate.
(This review is for the Criterion Collection release of this dvd — not for the Image Entertainment release that many other reviews here refer to.)
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“Bicycle Thieves” (as it is wisely retranslated from the Italian for this recent Criterion release) is one of the few “perfect films” — by which I mean a film that is in its absorb arrangement impartial as it should be, lacking nothing, the kind of film where even apparent missteps tend to contribute indelibly to the overall impression of a film in which nothing could have been changed without damaging the film. Recall, for example, the scenario that instead of an unknown day laborer in the role of Antonio, de Sica had gone with David Selznick’s suggestion of Cary Grant (which was a condition for the film getting funded through American studios) . I have no doubt that this would have remained an captivating film, and that Grant would have done an admirable job — but it would have been a totally different film and would have lost the fragility and vulnerability and delicacy (combined with hardness and objectivity) that execute this film so precious. We can all be grateful that De Sica chose to wait for an Italian investor who allowed him to form the film the device he and Zappatini had planned.
Without giving away anything of the space, I will say that the conclusion of the film is one of the most considerable I have seen — and carries an emotional weight that is earned rather than manipulated, and that can be compared only to a very few films: Chaplin’s City Lights and Kiarostami’s Close-up are the only films that reach to mind. De Sica strikes a very comely balance between realistic depiction of the harsh realities of life in postwar Rome, and a humanistic vison of the resourcefulness of individuals in the face of hopelessness and the enduring power of empathy, forgiveness, and appreciate.
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The film looks better than ever on this novel Criterion edition — it seemed to me that a few shots were a bit washed out but I can only bewitch that is due to the condition of the available negatives. Spots and dust and other imperfections seem to have been removed entirely, and the subtitles are quite capable and easy to read. The film alone would design this spot an distinguished one, but the booklet (containing some splendid essays, including a very illuminating essay by Andre Bazin) and attached documentaries (one on neorealsm, one on screenwriter Zappatini, and one on De Sica) earn this space as a whole like a master course on one of the undisputed masterpieces of cinema.
