Italian cinema occupies a singular place in the history of film. In the decades following the Second World War, a succession of Italian directors produced works of such originality, emotional power, and visual beauty that they redefined the possibilities of the medium. From the rubble-strewn streets of neorealist Rome to the baroque dreamscapes of Federico Fellini, Italian filmmakers created a body of work that continues to influence directors, cinematographers, and storytellers around the world.
The Birth of Neorealism
The story of Italy’s cinematic golden age begins in the ruins of war. When the Allied forces liberated Rome in 1944, the famous Cinecitta studios — Mussolini’s purpose-built film production complex — had been damaged and partially converted into a refugee camp. Italian filmmakers, deprived of studio facilities and working with minimal resources, took their cameras into the streets.
The result was neorealism (neorealismo), a movement that would transform world cinema. Neorealist films were characterised by their use of real locations rather than studio sets, non-professional actors alongside trained performers, natural lighting, and stories drawn from the daily lives of ordinary people. The movement rejected the polished escapism of Fascist-era cinema in favour of an unflinching engagement with the social realities of post-war Italy: poverty, unemployment, the black market, and the struggle of ordinary families to survive.
Roberto Rossellini (1906—1977)
Roberto Rossellini is generally credited with launching neorealism through his “War Trilogy” of films. Roma, citta aperta (Rome, Open City, 1945), shot in the streets of Rome mere weeks after the German withdrawal, depicted the Italian resistance with a raw immediacy that stunned audiences worldwide. Paisa (1946) traced the Allied advance up the Italian peninsula in six episodes of devastating power. Germania anno zero (Germany Year Zero, 1948) took the neorealist approach to the ruins of Berlin. Together, these films established a new cinematic language — direct, unadorned, morally urgent — that influenced filmmakers from Satyajit Ray to Martin Scorsese.
Vittorio De Sica (1901—1974)
Vittorio De Sica, working in close collaboration with the screenwriter Cesare Zavattini, produced a series of neorealist masterpieces that are among the most emotionally powerful films ever made. Sciuscia (Shoeshine, 1946) told the story of two Roman street boys caught up in the black market. Ladri di biciclette (Bicycle Thieves, 1948) followed an unemployed man’s desperate search through Rome for his stolen bicycle, without which he cannot keep his job. Umberto D. (1952) portrayed the quiet desperation of a retired civil servant struggling to survive on his pension.
These films achieved their extraordinary impact through simplicity of means and depth of human sympathy. De Sica’s use of non-professional actors, his patient attention to the textures of daily life, and his refusal to offer easy consolation created a cinema of profound emotional honesty.
Visconti: Aristocrat of the Screen
Luchino Visconti (1906—1976) occupies a unique position in Italian cinema. Born into one of Italy’s most ancient aristocratic families, he brought a patrician sensibility and a Marxist political consciousness to filmmaking, producing works that spanned neorealism, historical drama, and operatic spectacle.
His early film La terra trema (The Earth Trembles, 1948), shot among the fishing communities of Sicily with an entirely non-professional cast, is one of the purest expressions of neorealist principles. Yet Visconti’s later career moved in a very different direction, toward lavishly mounted historical films that explored the decline of the European aristocracy and the passage of entire social orders.
Il Gattopardo (The Leopard, 1963), based on Giuseppe Tomasi di Lampedusa’s novel about a Sicilian prince during the Risorgimento, is widely regarded as one of the greatest historical films ever made. Its meticulous recreation of nineteenth-century Sicily, its complex meditation on social change, and its magnificent central performance by Burt Lancaster combine to create a work of sweeping grandeur and melancholy beauty.
Visconti’s later films — Morte a Venezia (Death in Venice, 1971), Ludwig (1973), and L’innocente (The Innocent, 1976) — continued his exploration of beauty, decadence, and the relationship between art and mortality, establishing him as one of cinema’s most visually sumptuous and intellectually ambitious directors.
Fellini: The Supreme Dreamer
No Italian filmmaker has captured the world’s imagination more completely than Federico Fellini (1920—1993). Over a career spanning four decades, Fellini evolved from a neorealist screenwriter and director into a visionary artist whose films created entire worlds of fantasy, memory, and desire.
His early films, including I vitelloni (1953) and La strada (1954), combined neorealist observation with a poetic sensibility and a gift for characterisation that set them apart from the more austere works of the movement. La strada, the story of a brutish strongman and the gentle young woman he purchases as an assistant, won the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film and established Fellini’s international reputation.
La dolce vita (1960) marked a turning point. This panoramic portrait of Roman society — its decadence, its spiritual emptiness, its desperate search for meaning — became an international sensation and gave the English language a new word (paparazzi, named after a photographer character in the film). The film’s iconic images — Anita Ekberg wading in the Trevi Fountain, Marcello Mastroianni wandering through the Roman night — have become part of the visual vocabulary of modern culture.
With Otto e mezzo (8 1/2, 1963), Fellini created what many consider the greatest film about filmmaking ever made. A director suffering from creative block retreats into fantasy, memory, and hallucination as he struggles to begin his next project. The film’s fluid interweaving of reality and imagination, its autobiographical candour, and its visual inventiveness made it a landmark in the history of cinema and a touchstone for directors seeking to explore the inner life of the creative artist.
Fellini’s later work became increasingly fantastical and personal. Films such as Giulietta degli spiriti (Juliet of the Spirits, 1965), Fellini Satyricon (1969), Amarcord (1973), and E la nave va (And the Ship Sails On, 1983) created self-contained imaginative worlds of extraordinary richness and strangeness. The adjective “Felliniesque” entered the language to describe anything characterised by extravagant fantasy, surreal imagery, and a carnivalesque celebration of the absurdity and beauty of human existence.
Other Masters
The golden age produced other directors of immense stature. Michelangelo Antonioni (1912—2007) explored alienation, modernity, and the breakdown of communication in films of austere visual beauty, including L’avventura (1960), La notte (1961), and L’eclisse (1962). Pier Paolo Pasolini (1922—1975), poet, novelist, and provocateur, created films of raw power and intellectual daring that engaged with questions of class, sexuality, and the sacred. Bernardo Bertolucci (1941—2018) brought a lyrical visual style and a Freudian intensity to films such as Il conformista (The Conformist, 1970) and Ultimo tango a Parigi (Last Tango in Paris, 1972).
Italian Cinema and Australia
Italian cinema has left a deep impression on Australian film culture. The Italian film festivals held annually in Melbourne, Sydney, Brisbane, and other Australian cities draw enthusiastic audiences and serve as important cultural events for the Italian-Australian community. Italian films are regularly screened in art-house cinemas across the country, and the influence of Italian cinematic techniques and storytelling can be detected in the work of many Australian filmmakers.
For Italian-Australians, the films of the golden age hold a particular resonance. The neorealist depictions of post-war Italian life portray the very world that many Italian-Australian families left behind when they migrated. Fellini’s evocations of provincial Italian life in films such as Amarcord — with its small-town characters, family meals, and seasonal rituals — touch chords of recognition for those whose parents and grandparents grew up in similar settings.
An Enduring Legacy
The golden age of Italian cinema demonstrates that a national film tradition, working with modest resources but boundless artistic ambition, can produce works that change the way the world sees and understands the art of cinema. The films of Rossellini, De Sica, Visconti, Fellini, Antonioni, and their contemporaries remain as vital and compelling today as when they were first shown, their insights into the human condition undimmed by the passage of time.
For anyone seeking to understand Italian culture in its fullest expression, these films are essential viewing. They capture the beauty, the contradictions, the vitality, and the melancholy of Italian life with an honesty and an artistry that no other medium can match. And for Australians of Italian heritage, they offer a window into the world their families came from — a world transformed by war, migration, and modernity, but preserved forever in the luminous images of Italian cinema’s greatest age.
Italian Cinema’s Influence on Australian Filmmaking
The influence of Italian cinema on Australian filmmakers has been both direct and pervasive. The Australian New Wave of the 1970s and 1980s, which produced some of the country’s most celebrated films, drew on Italian neorealist principles of location shooting, naturalistic performance, and engagement with social reality.
Australian directors such as Fred Schepisi, whose film The Chant of Jimmie Blacksmith (1978) employed neorealist techniques to tell a story of Indigenous dispossession, and Paul Cox, a European-born director who worked extensively in Melbourne, have acknowledged the influence of Italian cinema on their work. Cox, in particular, shared with the Italian masters a commitment to personal filmmaking and an interest in the interior lives of his characters that owes much to the traditions established by Fellini and Antonioni.
The Italian-Australian experience itself has been the subject of several notable Australian films. Stories of migration, cultural adjustment, and the tensions between Italian heritage and Australian modernity have provided rich material for Australian screenwriters and directors. These films, which often feature Italian-Australian characters and settings, represent a creative intersection between the two cinematic traditions.
The annual Italian Film Festival in Australia, which screens in Melbourne, Sydney, Brisbane, Adelaide, Perth, Canberra, and other cities, remains one of the most popular cultural events for the Italian-Australian community and for Australian film enthusiasts more broadly. The festival showcases both contemporary Italian cinema and restored classics from the golden age, providing Australian audiences with access to a cinematic tradition of extraordinary depth and richness.
The Art of Italian Film Music
No discussion of Italian cinema’s golden age would be complete without acknowledging the extraordinary contribution of Italian film composers. Italian cinema produced some of the greatest film music ever written, and Italian film scores have become an integral part of the world’s musical heritage.
Nino Rota (1911-1979) was perhaps the most celebrated of all Italian film composers. His collaborations with Fellini produced scores of haunting beauty and wit, from the circus-like themes that accompany Fellini’s visual extravaganzas to the tender, melancholy melodies that underpin his more intimate moments. Rota’s music for The Godfather films, directed by Francis Ford Coppola, demonstrated the international reach of Italian film music and its capacity to enhance storytelling of the highest order.
Ennio Morricone (1928-2020) is another towering figure in the history of film music. Although best known internationally for his scores for Sergio Leone’s spaghetti westerns, Morricone composed music for more than five hundred films across a career spanning six decades. His work encompasses an extraordinary range of styles and moods, from the sweeping orchestral scores of his epic westerns to the spare, experimental textures of his art-house collaborations.
The Italian tradition of film music continues to influence composers worldwide, and its impact can be heard in the scores of Australian films that draw on the emotional directness and melodic richness that characterise the Italian approach to film scoring.
Spaghetti Westerns and Genre Cinema
While the art-house masterpieces of Fellini, Visconti, and Antonioni represent the most critically acclaimed dimension of Italian cinema, the golden age also produced a vibrant tradition of genre filmmaking that has had its own lasting influence on world cinema.
The spaghetti western, pioneered by Sergio Leone in the 1960s with films such as A Fistful of Dollars (1964) and The Good, the Bad and the Ugly (1966), reinvented the American western genre with a distinctly Italian sensibility — operatic in scale, stylised in violence, and accompanied by Morricone’s unforgettable scores. These films, which were shot on shoestring budgets in the deserts of southern Spain and the studios of Cinecitta, became international sensations and established a template for action filmmaking that continues to influence directors today.
Italian horror cinema, particularly the giallo subgenre developed by directors such as Mario Bava and Dario Argento, created a distinctive style of visually extravagant, psychologically intense filmmaking that has influenced horror directors worldwide. Italian science fiction, historical epics, and comedy films also constituted important branches of a national cinema that was as diverse in its popular output as it was distinguished in its art-house achievements.
These genre films, while often dismissed by critics at the time of their release, have undergone significant critical reappraisal in recent decades. Australian film scholars and critics have been active participants in this reassessment, contributing to the growing recognition of Italian genre cinema as a significant body of work worthy of serious study and appreciation.
How to Explore Italian Cinema from Australia
For Australians wishing to explore the riches of Italian cinema, there has never been a better time to begin. Streaming platforms have made many classic Italian films available for home viewing, often with English subtitles. Specialist streaming services and DVD retailers also offer curated collections of Italian cinema that cater to viewers at all levels of familiarity.
Art-house cinemas in Australian cities regularly screen Italian films, both new releases and restored classics. The Palace, Lido, and Classic cinema chains in Melbourne, the Ritz and Golden Age in Sydney, and independent cinemas in other Australian cities are all reliable venues for Italian film programming.
University film studies programmes across Australia include Italian cinema as a core component of their curricula, and many institutions offer public lectures and screening programmes that are open to community members. The Alliance Francaise and Dante Alighieri societies also host film screening events that provide opportunities to see Italian films in a communal setting.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is Italian neorealism?
Italian neorealism was a cinematic movement that emerged in the aftermath of the Second World War. Its defining characteristics include the use of real locations rather than studio sets, non-professional actors, natural lighting, and stories drawn from the daily lives of ordinary people. Key directors include Roberto Rossellini, Vittorio De Sica, and Luchino Visconti.
Which Italian film should I watch first?
For newcomers to Italian cinema, Vittorio De Sica’s Bicycle Thieves (1948) is an ideal starting point — it is emotionally powerful, visually beautiful, and easy to follow. Fellini’s La Strada (1954) and Visconti’s The Leopard (1963) are also excellent introductions to the golden age.
Where can I see Italian films in Australia?
Italian films are screened at art-house cinemas in all major Australian cities. The annual Italian Film Festival tours nationally, and streaming platforms offer extensive catalogues of both classic and contemporary Italian cinema.
Did Italian cinema influence Australian filmmakers?
Yes, significantly. The Australian New Wave drew on Italian neorealist principles, and individual Australian directors have acknowledged the influence of Fellini, Antonioni, and other Italian masters on their work. The Italian-Australian migration experience has also been a rich source of material for Australian filmmaking.
What are spaghetti westerns?
Spaghetti westerns are Italian-made western films, primarily produced in the 1960s and 1970s. The term was originally pejorative but has become a badge of honour. Sergio Leone’s films, with their operatic style and Ennio Morricone’s iconic scores, are the best-known examples and have had a lasting influence on action cinema worldwide.
Who was Ennio Morricone?
Ennio Morricone (1928-2020) was an Italian composer who wrote scores for more than five hundred films over six decades. His music for Sergio Leone’s westerns and numerous other films made him one of the most celebrated and influential film composers in history.