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Emotion and Cognition in the Films <strong>of</strong> Bernardo Bertolucci<br />

Silvana SERRA<br />

Ph.D. Thesis 2011


Emotion and Cognition in the Films <strong>of</strong> Bernardo Bertolucci<br />

Silvana SERRA<br />

School <strong>of</strong> Humanities, Languages and Social Sciences<br />

<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Salford</strong>, <strong>Salford</strong>, UK<br />

Submitted in Partial Fulfilment <strong>of</strong> the Requirements <strong>of</strong><br />

the Degree <strong>of</strong> Doctor <strong>of</strong> Philosophy, March 2011


Contents<br />

Acknowledgements 1<br />

Abstract 2<br />

Introduction 3<br />

Literature Review j j<br />

Theoretical Framework: 28<br />

Cognitive/Affective Theory 28<br />

Cognitive Theory 37<br />

Brecht 43<br />

Godard 46<br />

Affective Theory 49<br />

Section 1- Pessimism and Melancholia 55<br />

La commare secca I The Grim Reaper: An Exercise in Style 57<br />

Prima della rivoluzione I Before the Revolution: Aesthetics,<br />

Politics, and the Nouvelle Vague 72<br />

La strategia del ragno I The Spider's Stratagem: Political and<br />

Cinematic Liberation 87<br />

La tragedia di nn uomo ridicolo I The Tragedy <strong>of</strong> a Ridiculous Man:<br />

A Requiem for the Left 105<br />

Section 2 - The Sensitizing <strong>of</strong> the Viewer; Cognitive and Intellectual Reflection 124<br />

Partner: Social Discontent and Artistic Purity 128<br />

Ultimo tango a Parigi I Last Tango in Paris: Bertolucci's Cinematic<br />

Manifesto 144<br />

Isognatori I Tlie Dreamers: 1968 Revisited: Replacing the Political<br />

with a Cinematic Education 162


Section 3 - Between History and Nostalgia 179<br />

// Conformista I The Conformist: The Foundation <strong>of</strong> Bertolucci's Theoretical<br />

Third Way' 181<br />

Novecento 11900: Reflection and Nostalgia 202<br />

Section 4 - The Pinnacle <strong>of</strong> the 'film spettacolo' 220<br />

L 'ultimo imperatore I The Last Emperor: Wonder and Disenchantment 223<br />

II te nel deserto I The Sheltering Sky: Time and Memory 240<br />

Piccolo Buddha I Little Buddha: A Journey into the Ethical through<br />

the Marvellous 257<br />

Section 5 - Women at the Forefront 270<br />

La lima I Luna: Stylistic Incoherence and Affective/Cognitive<br />

Incongruence 272<br />

lo ballo da sola I Stealing Beauty: A Contemporary Gaze on Women 294<br />

L 'assedio I Besieged: A Cognitive Approach to On-Screen Emotion 311<br />

Conclusion 329<br />

Glossary 336<br />

Bibliography 338<br />

Filmography <strong>of</strong> Bernardo Bertolucci's Films 346<br />

Select Filmography 3 51


Acknowledgements<br />

I am very grateful to the European Studies Research Institute at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Salford</strong> for<br />

<strong>of</strong>fering me the possibility <strong>of</strong> accomplishing this project. ESRI's assistance has been<br />

invaluable and has constantly given me a sense <strong>of</strong> reassurance and support. I would like to<br />

thank my supervisor Dr. William Hope, whose academic rigour has helped to clarify certain<br />

aspects <strong>of</strong> the thesis. I would like to extend my thanks to the staff at the <strong>University</strong> for the<br />

valuable and timely assistance I have received at every stage <strong>of</strong> this research. Special thanks<br />

go to my daughter Lorenza for her constant encouragement.


Emotion and Cognition in the Films <strong>of</strong> Bernardo Bertolucci<br />

ABSTRACT<br />

Bernardo Bertolucci continues to be regarded as one <strong>of</strong> the most talented Italian filmmakers,<br />

and although his work has provoked controversy, his films have allowed him to enjoy an<br />

international reputation as a cinematic auteur. Critical assessments <strong>of</strong> his cinematic oenvre<br />

have tended to centre on two main perspectives: political readings <strong>of</strong> the content and style <strong>of</strong><br />

his films which characterizes much Italian scholarship and the psychoanalytical<br />

interpretations <strong>of</strong> his work that have emerged from American academia since the 1970s. The<br />

present study proposes a different approach to Bertolucci's films, partly in terms <strong>of</strong> its scope<br />

- analysing each <strong>of</strong> the director's full-length fiction releases up to / sognatorilThe Dreamers<br />

(2003) - and partly in terms <strong>of</strong> its theoretical viewpoint, which is based on affective and<br />

cognitive theory, a transnational branch <strong>of</strong> film studies that has become influential since the<br />

mid-1990s. The project focuses on identifiable uses <strong>of</strong> the camera, music, mise-en-scene and<br />

narrative structure in his films, tracing common denominators and evolutions in his work<br />

since the early 1960s, and contexrualizing these filmic mechanisms within affective and<br />

cognitive theory. In particular this study outlines the way in which the earlier phase <strong>of</strong><br />

Bertolucci's film-making is not bereft <strong>of</strong> emotional tonalities, whereas his later work, which<br />

is increasingly tailored to a viewing public wanting to be captivated by the filmic spectacle,<br />

still preserves certain aesthetic and intellectual elements <strong>of</strong> art cinema. These are identified in<br />

the presence <strong>of</strong> complex narrations demanding an active cognitive involvement on the part <strong>of</strong><br />

viewers, and in films with emotion structures which, rather than being predicated on close<br />

viewer identification with characters, privilege the creation <strong>of</strong> moods ranging from<br />

melancholy to estrangement.


INTRODUCTION<br />

Over the past five decades, assessments <strong>of</strong> Bernardo Bertolucci's work have tended to centre<br />

on two purported career phases: an early period influenced by the French Nouvelle Vague and<br />

particularly by the work <strong>of</strong> Jean-Luc Godard, and a later phase characterized by a shift <strong>of</strong><br />

orientation towards more mainstream film-making. Inevitably, the critical reception <strong>of</strong><br />

Bertolucci's films at given stages <strong>of</strong> his career has been determined by the prevailing<br />

theoretical frameworks espoused by scholars who have published in those particular periods.<br />

These have ranged from the politicized evaluations <strong>of</strong> the style and content <strong>of</strong> Bertolucci's<br />

films which characterize much Italian scholarship, to the psychoanalytical interpretations <strong>of</strong><br />

his work that have emerged from American academia since the 1970s. The present study<br />

differs from its predecessors in its approach to Bertolucci's films, partly in terms <strong>of</strong> its scope<br />

- analysing each <strong>of</strong> the director's full-length fiction releases up to / sognatorilTlie Dreamers<br />

(2003) and partly in terms <strong>of</strong> its theoretical approach, which is based on affective and<br />

cognitive theory, a transnational branch <strong>of</strong> film studies that has acquired momentum since the<br />

mid-1990s. This study is a departure from existing scholarship on Bertolucci, as it identifies<br />

how, through aesthetics, film technique and narrative construction, the director's films are<br />

primed to elicit intense emotional and cognitive viewing experiences from spectators. The<br />

project focuses on identifiable uses <strong>of</strong> the camera, music, mise-en-scene and narrative<br />

structure in his films, tracing common denominators and evolutions in his work since the<br />

early 1960s, and contextualizing these filmic mechanisms within affective and cognitive<br />

theory, a branch <strong>of</strong> scholarship based on scientifically verified research into human responses<br />

to emotional and intellectual stimuli.<br />

Bertolucci's individual films and their aesthetic and narratological features therefore<br />

constitute the focus <strong>of</strong> this study, differentiating it from existing politicized and<br />

3


psychoanalytical scholarship. The Literature Review will outline the perspectives <strong>of</strong> the<br />

existing literature on Bertolucci and will engage briefly with the findings <strong>of</strong> scholars such as<br />

Robert Kolker and Yosefa Loshitzky, but the thesis will then use different critical tools to<br />

analyse the viewing experiences that Bertolucci's films elicit. While paying due attention to<br />

the scholarship that has preceded this project, the present study is not concerned with the<br />

application <strong>of</strong> psychoanalytical theories to Bertolucci's films. Similarly, the thesis<br />

contexrualizes Bertolucci's work and certain socio-political themes that emerge from it<br />

within Italy's political cinema <strong>of</strong> the 1960s and early 1970s (the difference in terminology is<br />

important here), but it does so to clarify the nature <strong>of</strong> the cognitive and intellectual experience<br />

<strong>of</strong> viewing his full-length fiction films, both at the time and from modern day perspectives.<br />

The political aspects <strong>of</strong> certain <strong>of</strong> Bertolucci's films are herein discussed only as a tangential<br />

element, useful to cast light on some directorial choices both in terms <strong>of</strong> themes and style.<br />

Bertolucci has followed an individual, creative path which is not characterized by<br />

mainstays <strong>of</strong> the cinematic mainstream such as close viewer/protagonist identification; yet, at<br />

the same time, his re-elaborations <strong>of</strong> phenomena such as film noir like // confomustalTlie<br />

Conformist (1970), indicate an affinity with the aesthetics and storytelling <strong>of</strong> classic cinema.<br />

What emerges from films as diverse as La commare seccalThe Grim Reaper (1962) and /<br />

sognatori/The Dreamers is their rich emotional textures and refined narrative structures<br />

through which viewers are engaged cognitively and affectively. As regards the viewer's<br />

affective engagement with Bertolucci's films, the study will describe the way in which the<br />

emotional resonance <strong>of</strong> his work progressively increases, <strong>of</strong>ten deriving from depictions <strong>of</strong><br />

natural and artistic beauty. By contrast, processes <strong>of</strong> viewer identification with Bertolucci's<br />

screen protagonists are less instrumental in conditioning the emotional texture <strong>of</strong> his work<br />

and such processes undergo negligible change throughout his career; close viewer<br />

identification with characters is frequently inhibited and replaced by the creation <strong>of</strong> shifting


moods punctuated by emotional phenomena ranging from brief empathy to estrangement.<br />

Often, the moods <strong>of</strong> individual films are closely related to their particular narrative structures,<br />

and my study will outline how Bertolucci creates intricate narratives which induce cognitive<br />

forms <strong>of</strong> hypothesis-making, a mode <strong>of</strong> engagement frequently strengthened by the viewer's<br />

awareness <strong>of</strong> the director's stylized, self-conscious use <strong>of</strong> the cinematic medium. This<br />

volume stems from a desire to re-examine Bertolucci's feature films away from the<br />

parameters <strong>of</strong> established critical canons, to delineate the fascinating fusion <strong>of</strong> the emotional<br />

and the intellectual that has positioned him at a point between the cinematic mainstream and<br />

art cinema. This is a position from which he continues to be regarded worldwide as one <strong>of</strong><br />

Italy's most talented filmmakers, a reputation that has survived mixed reactions to his work.<br />

The modes <strong>of</strong> viewer engagement envisaged by this study are largely predicated on<br />

the director's two distinct career phases outlined on the first page <strong>of</strong> this introduction - the<br />

period <strong>of</strong> experimentalism up to the release <strong>of</strong> Partner during which a sophisticated,<br />

cinephile viewer was envisaged, while subsequently, with Bertolucci moving more towards<br />

the cinematic mainstream, his films appear to cater for two distinct audiences, those with<br />

cinematic expertise as well as those viewers primarily seeking to be captivated by the<br />

cinematic spectacle. Regarding the kind <strong>of</strong> audience he was pursuing, Bertolucci asserted: 'In<br />

the 60s, film-making focused on expressivity and on language; however at a certain point I<br />

discovered that I needed to communicate, to privilege communication. In fact with Stratagem<br />

and Conformist I started making films which had a wider circulation' (Ungari, 1982: 230). A<br />

closer examination <strong>of</strong> this issue will occur in the subsequent analysis <strong>of</strong> individual films, as<br />

the interplay between the cognitive and affective structures <strong>of</strong> each work <strong>of</strong>ten displays a<br />

refined cinematic and intellectual sensibility as well as a pr<strong>of</strong>ound appeal to the senses.<br />

A further aim <strong>of</strong> this study <strong>of</strong> Bertolucci's films is that re-establishing a sense <strong>of</strong><br />

proportion with regard to the psychoanalytical interpretations <strong>of</strong> his work on which much


esearch has been based; in particular, the omnipresence <strong>of</strong> the Oedipus complex and the<br />

consequent proliferation <strong>of</strong> perceived father and mother figures. Much psycholanalytical<br />

research on his films arguably stemmed from the director's period under analysis, and was<br />

fostered by his tendency to accept Freudian interpretations <strong>of</strong> his films. However, by<br />

investigating the form and structures <strong>of</strong> Bertolucci's films, and also certain <strong>of</strong> his declarations<br />

after the negative critical response to his first three films, this study has matured the<br />

conviction that Bertolucci's work can <strong>of</strong>ten be more revelatory than his verbal declarations in<br />

interview situations. The director has himself admitted: 'I think that I am a repressed person.<br />

I think I can express my energy, my libido, my aggression, only in my work' (Quinn, 1977:<br />

102). hi particular, the view expressed in this study is that a common critical focus for<br />

interpretations <strong>of</strong> Bertolucci's films - that <strong>of</strong> attritional father-son relationships - should pay<br />

closer attention to the director s pr<strong>of</strong>essional life and his struggle for artistic recognition in<br />

the early part <strong>of</strong> his career. This emphasis on the pr<strong>of</strong>essional, rather than the personal, is<br />

corroborated by the importance <strong>of</strong> Godard's influence within Bertolucci's work, whereas<br />

biographical information about Bertolucci's relationship with his biological father repeatedly<br />

points to a harmonious rapport.<br />

With regard to Bertolucci's artistic decisions and career orientation, this volume<br />

emphasizes two key factors. The first relates to his acknowledgment after the critical and<br />

economic failure <strong>of</strong> Prima della rivoluzionelBefore the Revolution (1964) and Partner (1968)<br />

- <strong>of</strong> the difficulty in introducing new modes <strong>of</strong> film-making to Italy, a position explained in<br />

his interview with Maurizio Fantoni Minnella, Conversazione con Bemardo Bertolucci<br />

(Fantoni Minnella, 2004: 230), which will be discussed in the chapters related to the two<br />

films, hi this context, Bertolucci notes how even Pasolini was initially unimpressed by<br />

Godard's work, by relating his comment on A bout de souffle - 'an intellectualist film,<br />

ridiculous and with no natural qualities' (Ungari, 1982: 29). Objectively speaking, it is


comprehensible why a nation that developed one <strong>of</strong> the most significant modes <strong>of</strong> film-<br />

making - Neorealism - and which was still anchored to mimetic forms <strong>of</strong> representation, had<br />

difficulty embracing the Nouvelle Vague''s innovations. During that period <strong>of</strong> his career, the<br />

disillusionment caused by this rejection affected Bertolucci's artistic self-confidence. Talking<br />

about the failure <strong>of</strong> Partner, he asserted: "This film caused me a tremendous psychological<br />

trauma, because nobody, almost nobody, accepted it' (Bachmann, 1973: 96).<br />

The second factor prompting him to re-evaluate his work was that both films also<br />

received a negative response for their thematic content. This reaction was caused by the<br />

sensitivity <strong>of</strong> intellectuals connected to the PCI (Italian Communist Party) regarding internal<br />

dissent, since the two films exposed a lack <strong>of</strong>, and a need for, collective action. The<br />

combination <strong>of</strong> these factors, resulting in the excruciating experience <strong>of</strong> getting no funding<br />

for his projects, drove Bertolucci to distance himself from avant-garde cinema and to develop<br />

a disapproval <strong>of</strong> the PCI's hypocritical attitude towards dissent. While the political content<br />

within Bertolucci's films only constitutes a tangential element within this study, occasionally<br />

illuminating choices <strong>of</strong> themes and style in the film-maker's work, his search for an artistic<br />

identity will be traced in his growing interest for certain genres and styles, and their adroit<br />

incorporation in his personal cinematic discourse will be closely examined.<br />

Although aware <strong>of</strong> the problematic connotations that the issue <strong>of</strong> authorial 'control* <strong>of</strong><br />

films has assumed in recent times, particularly in an age in which projects are shaped by<br />

transnational funding arrangements and by the input <strong>of</strong> high pr<strong>of</strong>ile technicians, designers<br />

and composers, this study is centred on an auteurist discourse. This approach is based<br />

primarily on the empirical evidence contained throughout Bertolucci's output but also on his<br />

assessments <strong>of</strong> his predominant position in every phase <strong>of</strong> a film's development. Talking<br />

about the creative limits that he imposes on his collaborators, even those <strong>of</strong> the calibre <strong>of</strong><br />

Vittorio Storaro as director <strong>of</strong> photography, Bertolucci has affirmed: 'I am very jealous <strong>of</strong> my<br />

7


camera. I have a very exclusive and demanding relationship with it' (Ungari, 1982:117).(1)<br />

Nevertheless the key contribution that Storaro made to the ambience and aesthetics <strong>of</strong> several<br />

films - from The Spider's Stratagem onwards - will be discussed in the relevant chapters,<br />

together with the strategic input that Franco Arcalli, Mark Peploe and Ferdinando Scarfiotti<br />

also gave to Bertolucci's film-making. This study focuses on all Bertolucci's feature films,<br />

from The Grim Reaper to The Dreamers. The documentaries that the director made will be<br />

mentioned only in the filmography, due to notable differences in their construction and the<br />

different mode <strong>of</strong> reception intended, compared with feature-length fiction films. Agonia<br />

(1967-69) - a short film which the director contributed to the collective work Vangelo 70,<br />

and later distributed with the title Amore e rabbia seems to have a marginal relation with<br />

Bertolucci's production, although it will be discussed on account <strong>of</strong> the influence that the<br />

encounter between Bertolucci and The Living Theatre had on the making <strong>of</strong> Partner.<br />

Bertolucci's later short film, Histoire d'eaux, for the collective film Ten Minutes Older<br />

(2002), will be discussed in the Conclusion. It is appropriate at this point to include a brief<br />

overview <strong>of</strong> cognitive/affective approaches to film viewing in order to outline, at this point <strong>of</strong><br />

the introduction, how this volume differs from existing scholarship on Bertolucci; a more<br />

detailed discussion <strong>of</strong> the applications <strong>of</strong> cognitive and affective theory will form the basis <strong>of</strong><br />

the theoretical framework later in this study.<br />

Cognitive/affective approaches to film posit that viewers watch films in a conscious<br />

state, actively evaluating characters and situations with the help <strong>of</strong> emotional reactions to<br />

what they see, and then elaborating hypotheses about the actions that characters will take and<br />

expectations regarding plot development. In this context, psychoanalytical notions such as<br />

unconscious drives recede in importance; cognitive/affective theory privileges the viewer's<br />

conscious engagement with presentations <strong>of</strong> character and situation, and with elements <strong>of</strong> the<br />

mise-en-scene. The theories <strong>of</strong> Torben Grodal underpin this study, concepts which


foreground a reception process in which cognition and emotion interact. His concepts are<br />

central to this volume's purpose <strong>of</strong> tracing how Bertolucci's films create viewing experiences<br />

where emotional, cognitive and intellectual components overlap, each conditioning the<br />

others. Similarly, Murray Smith's work on the different degrees <strong>of</strong> viewer identification with<br />

characters in fiction films - attachments which also involve a cognitive/affective process -<br />

sheds light on how viewers (fail to) form attachments to Bertolucci's characters. Noel<br />

Carroll's writings on how emotional states in films are governed by cognitive assessments <strong>of</strong><br />

given situations, such as the way a person's/viewer's evaluation <strong>of</strong> situational elements<br />

implying danger will trigger fear, are significant for Bertolucci's work; similarly, his<br />

discussion <strong>of</strong> the kpre-digested' quality <strong>of</strong> emotions in some fiction films, where certain<br />

scenes are served up to viewers as emotional 'set pieces' with a directorial expectancy (which<br />

is sometimes mistaken) that they will trigger certain reactions from viewers, sheds further<br />

light on the difficulty <strong>of</strong> viewers in developing compassion towards some <strong>of</strong> Bertolucci's<br />

protagonists.<br />

A further component <strong>of</strong> the affective element <strong>of</strong> the director's films, the importance <strong>of</strong><br />

mood in film structures, will draw on studies by Greg Smith; similarly, the volume will also<br />

reference Berys Gaut and Carl Plantinga with regard to the use <strong>of</strong> bodily posture, facial close-<br />

ups and facial reaction shots <strong>of</strong> characters to create empathy. The study's exploration <strong>of</strong> the<br />

ways in which Bertolucci's films elicit cognitive forms <strong>of</strong> engagement from viewers by<br />

manipulating narrative components such as a film's temporal structure or by unconventional<br />

use <strong>of</strong> elements <strong>of</strong> the mise-en-scene will draw on the work <strong>of</strong> scholars such as David<br />

Bordwell and Edward Branigan. Therefore, in order to examine the engaging, absorbing and<br />

sometimes disconcerting viewing experiences elicited by Bertolucci's films, the present study<br />

adopts theoretical approaches that have not previously been applied to the director's output


while also engaging with, and sometimes questioning, the findings <strong>of</strong> prior scholarship on<br />

Bertolucci's life and work.<br />

Notes<br />

Ungari, E. (1982), Scene Madri di Bemardo Bertolucci, Milan: Ubulibri. Regarding his rapport with<br />

Grimaldi during the filming <strong>of</strong> 1900 Bertolucci asserted: 'Things were easy, the producer was a devil's<br />

advocate whom I could summon when I needed him and silence when I was tired <strong>of</strong> listening to him'<br />

(p.128). Regarding the close rapport with Clare Peploe while filming La luna he affirmed: 'I tend to eat my<br />

collaborators, after having nurtured them pretty well... [with her] I start to think that, for once, I was the<br />

one who was eaten up' (p.195). In this volume, the translations <strong>of</strong> all quotations from original Italian texts<br />

are my own.<br />

References<br />

Bachmann, G. (1973) 'Every Sexual Relationship Is Condemned: An Interview with<br />

Beraardo Bertolucci', in Gerard, F.S., Kline, TJ. and Sklarew, B. (ed.) (2000)<br />

Bernardo Bertolucci Interviews, Jackson: <strong>University</strong> Press <strong>of</strong> Mississippi.<br />

Fantoni Minnella, M. (2004) Non riconciliati, Turin: UTET Diffusione S.r.l.<br />

Mirabella, J.C. and Pitiot, P. (1991) Intennsta a Bernardo Bertolucci, Rome: Gremese<br />

Editore.<br />

Quinn, S. (1977) '1900 Has Taken Its Toll on Bernardo Bertolucci', in Gerard, F.S., Kline,<br />

TJ. and Sklarew, B. (ed.) (2000) Bernardo Bertolucci Interviews, Jackson: <strong>University</strong><br />

Press <strong>of</strong> Mississippi.<br />

Ungari, E. (1982) Scene madri di Bemardo Bertolucci, Milan: Ubulibri.<br />

10


LITERATURE REVIEW<br />

While this study will approach Bertolucci's films using a conceptual framework that has been<br />

developed in film studies over the past fifteen years, it will also reference significant<br />

publications dating back to earlier phases <strong>of</strong> his career, studies which drew on the prevalent<br />

theoretical perspectives <strong>of</strong> the time. It is therefore opportune to present a chronological<br />

overview <strong>of</strong> key monographs and essays on Bertolucci. Bernardo Bertolucci by Francesco<br />

Casetti (1978) includes films from Tlie Grim Reaper to 1900, and covers aspects <strong>of</strong><br />

Bertolucci's life and work, dedicating considerable space to biographical material on the<br />

director, his shift in film-making orientation towards the mainstream, and his politics. Casetti<br />

expresses reservations about the tendency <strong>of</strong> critics to interpret recurrent themes in<br />

Bertolucci's films as indicators <strong>of</strong> his obsessions and personal complexes. Casetti's view -<br />

shared by the writer <strong>of</strong> this volume - was that 'through retrospective psychoanalysis [...] they<br />

have carried out a somewhat gratuitous juxtaposition between real biography and symbolic<br />

transformation' (Casetti, 1978: 17). In order to go 'beyond this rather facile juxtaposition<br />

between the real biography and the imaginary one', Casetti identified three key themes in the<br />

director's work: that <strong>of</strong> journeys, ambiguity <strong>of</strong>ten connected to a sense <strong>of</strong> generational<br />

unease, and that <strong>of</strong> death, connected to father/son relationships (Casetti, 1978: 17). Analysing<br />

Bertolucci's work as a whole, my study considers that the journey theme is significant to<br />

specific films such as The Sheltering Sky and Little Buddha in which journeys generate a<br />

change in characters or situations; as regards ambiguity, I would add that this is arguably also<br />

a manifestation <strong>of</strong> Bertolucci's reluctance to delineate a political position or philosophy in<br />

clear terms. Casetti's definition <strong>of</strong> Bertolucci's work using the term 'ambiguity' is valid even<br />

now; he argues that Bertolucci's films are shaped by a dual value system: on the one hand,<br />

the director seeks to ascertain and preserve the functions <strong>of</strong> classical cinema, <strong>of</strong>fering his<br />

11


work to unrestricted international audiences and taking into consideration their expections; on<br />

the other, there is an openness towards different forms and styles generated by cinematic<br />

innovation (Casetti, 1978:24-25).<br />

This conviction informs the critic's discussion <strong>of</strong> the complexity <strong>of</strong> Bertolucci's<br />

position in respect to the means <strong>of</strong> production for his films in the late 1960s and 1970s.<br />

Partner was financed by the State company Italnoleggio; The Spider's Stratagem was funded<br />

by RAI, the Italian state television network; Tlie Conformist by the private company<br />

Paramount-Universal; the documentary La salute e malata by the election campaign <strong>of</strong> the<br />

Italian Communist Party in Rome, while another (unfinished) documentary about the<br />

exploitation <strong>of</strong> workers was commissioned by the CGIL, a Communist trade union. In this<br />

economic context, Casetti sees an intention on Bertolucci's part to avoid 'linking his own role<br />

to the destiny <strong>of</strong> a cinema produced by the State 1 , deciding, instead, to explore different<br />

options, adapting his film-making according to different financial circumstances (Casetti,<br />

1978: 71). For Casetti, Tlie Conformist is the statement <strong>of</strong> a 'new work plan', which manages<br />

to maintain an auteurial imprint despite the more commercial aims <strong>of</strong> the project (Casetti,<br />

1978:71). For the critic, it is - in effect - Bertolucci choosing Renoir over Godard (Casetti,<br />

1978:77). In response to this reasoned assessment, I would suggest that the negative response<br />

to Bertolucci's first three films, combined with their economic failure and the director's<br />

subsequent, forced inactivity, should be given more prominence in critical assessments <strong>of</strong><br />

Bertolucci's consequent career decisions. On a similar point, it is noteworthy how Casetti<br />

emphasizes the 'paradox' <strong>of</strong> Before the Revolution representing Italy at the Cannes Film<br />

Festival in 1964, being awarded the Jeune Critique prize, receiving high praise in an<br />

Entretien in 1965 by Cahiers du Cinema, but being either negatively reviewed or ignored by<br />

Italian critics. Casetti's comment about Before the Revolution remaining a semi-underground<br />

12


film for 'jealous cinephiles or, more rarely, film reviewers feeling guilty' is also significant<br />

(Casetti, 1978:39-40).<br />

Casetti warns against the facile temptation to evoke the Oedipus complex and attempt<br />

to endow it with real biographical substance, while suggesting that the rapport between death<br />

and the paternal presence is connected to Bertolucci's relationship with his cinematic<br />

'parents', identified in realism, Neorealism, and classic American cinema. He says that in<br />

Bertolucci's work 'All classic cinema is revisited, rechecked, abused, re-proposed, etc., in an<br />

unremitting tension between an insane love and a distancing hatred' (Casetti, 1978: 28-29).<br />

To these cinematic 'parents' Godard should certainly be added, and my study also posits that<br />

a more objective awareness <strong>of</strong> the true relationship between Bertolucci and his father Attilio<br />

would benefit future scholarship on the director's work. Another idea elaborated in my study<br />

is that the troubled rapport between Bertolucci and the Italian Communist Party which can<br />

be envisaged as a father figure - plays a role in films such as The Spider's Stratagem and Tfie<br />

Tragedy <strong>of</strong> a Ridiculous Man, and this interpretation correlates with Casetti's indication that<br />

the director's modifications to Borges' novel for Tfie Spider's Stratagem made the film<br />

definitively Italian, aiming for a 'direct and precise foregrounding <strong>of</strong> a political theme: the<br />

theme <strong>of</strong> the Resistance and its legacy' (Casetti, 1978: 62). With regard to Tfie Grim Reaper,<br />

Casetti dissociates himself from his contemporaries who dismissed the film as a 'Pasolinism<br />

without Pasolini", a perspective which he attributes to a superficial and episodic reading <strong>of</strong><br />

the film (Casetti, 1978: 35). The differences that Casetti recognizes in both the social<br />

perspective and the style <strong>of</strong> the film become the subject <strong>of</strong> a detailed investigation in my own<br />

volume.<br />

Enzo Ungari, author <strong>of</strong> Scene madri di Bernardo Bertolucci (1982), was one <strong>of</strong><br />

Bertolucci's friends and collaborators (Ranvaud, 1987: 265). The volume's second edition<br />

(1987) includes an interview by Donald Ranvaud regarding Tiie Last Emperor (by then<br />

13


Ungari had sadly passed away). The English translation <strong>of</strong> the volume - by the same<br />

publisher - was entitled Bertolucci by Bertolucci. My study utilizes the Italian version <strong>of</strong> the<br />

book and I have preferred to translate original quotations into English myself (this applies to<br />

all quotations cited from Italian texts in this volume), since certain nuances in the original<br />

volume appear to have been lost in translation. Although the book is structured like a long<br />

interview, Ungari's utterances are rarely phrased as direct questions, and seldom query<br />

Bertolucci's cinematic choices and decisions. Ungari's input provides a platform for<br />

Bertolucci to narrate himself in respect to his films and his idea <strong>of</strong> cinema. The book presents<br />

a series <strong>of</strong> subheadings, two <strong>of</strong> which are particularly significant. One is entitled Coda<br />

Iniziale/Opening Tail, an oxymoron that arguably hints at the dual nature <strong>of</strong> the following<br />

sequence and acts as a caveat regarding the nature <strong>of</strong> Bertolucci's answers. Remembering<br />

how the director Raoul Walsh's approach to a two hour interview was that <strong>of</strong> telling<br />

anecdotes, Bertolucci expresses his desire to do the same, to be allowed to speak in the 'first<br />

person', with no shyness and with a lot <strong>of</strong> affection towards 'some nonsense' that was dear to<br />

him (Ungari, 1982: 9). Bertolucci declares his admiration for other director s way <strong>of</strong><br />

discussing their own work, [...] comparing their reflections to 'liquid words that rinse the<br />

bodies <strong>of</strong> the films'. He concludes by stating: 'for me, however, cinema is a life or death<br />

issue' (Ungari, 1982: 9). I believe that this sort <strong>of</strong> incipit reflects the essence <strong>of</strong> Bertolucci's<br />

interview answers, which are <strong>of</strong>ten framed in poetic or epic terms, and whose emphatic<br />

language contrasts with the elusiveness <strong>of</strong> the responses.<br />

Another example <strong>of</strong> this attitude can be found in Bertolucci's answer to Ungari's<br />

question about writing his first 'mainstream' film Once Upon a Time in the West. Bertolucci<br />

merely recalls a telephone conversation with Sergio Leone about The Good, the Bad and the<br />

Ugly, in which he praised Leone for being the only European director to frame horses from<br />

behind. Apparently, the comment startled Leone and prompted him to say 'We must do a film<br />

14


together' (Ungari, 1982: 51). This recollection may be considered interesting and perhaps<br />

amusing, but it is not particularly relevant to the crux <strong>of</strong> the question. Fortunately, in other<br />

contexts Bertolucci is more open, and the book represents a source <strong>of</strong> declarations about his<br />

life, his films, and about his relationships with collaborators and producers. On this issue, a<br />

substantial section articulates Bertolucci's views on the distribution battle for his film 1900 -<br />

(Ungari, 1982: 128-132) and on different shifts <strong>of</strong> orientation in his film-making, such as in<br />

his attitude towards editing (Ungari, 1982: 71-73). Several <strong>of</strong> these declarations will be<br />

referred to in this study, sometimes in parallel with statements on the same topics given by<br />

Bertolucci to other interviewers, in an attempt to clarify his artistic discourse.<br />

The second section <strong>of</strong> significance for my study <strong>of</strong> Bertolucci's films is entitled<br />

'Hollywood versus Eisenstein versus Renoir versus Godard', because it reflects the<br />

ambiguities and contradictions <strong>of</strong> Bertolucci's entire output. The director asserts that his idea<br />

<strong>of</strong> cinema is that <strong>of</strong> a lengthy film whose sequences bear the hallmarks <strong>of</strong> many directors in a<br />

complex game <strong>of</strong> cross-references, quotations, influences and so on. But this imaginary film<br />

also includes turning points that break the continuity, as exemplified by Godard's A bout de<br />

souffle. Bertolucci also clarifies that for the notion <strong>of</strong> a 'cinema <strong>of</strong> seduction' he intends the<br />

cinema <strong>of</strong> Max Ophuls, Orson Welles and Joseph von Sternberg and their use <strong>of</strong> the camera;<br />

the work <strong>of</strong> Yosujiro Ozu and John Ford, and their portrayal <strong>of</strong> lived experience; and the<br />

films <strong>of</strong> Jean Renoir, whose work combines both <strong>of</strong> the above qualities (Ungari, 1982: 177).<br />

On the one hand, this statement reflects the sophisticated influences on Bertolucci's film-<br />

making, and also, therefore, his ambition to address audiences able to appreciate them; on the<br />

other, it is revealing in terms <strong>of</strong> the light it sheds on the 'accumulation factor' <strong>of</strong> influences<br />

that are traceable in his films, which, when incorporated into a coherent filmic vision or<br />

structure, result in effective cinematic art, but which, when applied to Bertolucci's later work<br />

such as Hie Dreamers, create a detrimental, overloaded effect. Ranvaud's interview with<br />

15


Bertolucci about the imminent shooting <strong>of</strong> The Last Emperor contains a discussion about the<br />

film-maker's perceptions <strong>of</strong> China. The essence <strong>of</strong> these comments reflect the mixed<br />

sentiments that my study identifies within the film, consisting <strong>of</strong> Bertolucci's fascination for<br />

China's millenary culture and revolutionary period, and his sense <strong>of</strong> unease at the 'absence <strong>of</strong><br />

the ghost <strong>of</strong> freedom" in contemporary times (Ranvaud, 1987: 237).<br />

Peter Bondanella's Italian Cinema: From Neorealism to the Present (1983) is a<br />

critical overview <strong>of</strong> Italian cinema from the silent era to the films <strong>of</strong> the 80s. In line with<br />

other scholarship on Bertolucci, he emphasizes the influence <strong>of</strong> Pasolini and Godard on the<br />

young film-maker, and focuses on the implications <strong>of</strong> what he perceives as Marxist and<br />

Freudian perspectives within the director's films. Bondanella also provides information<br />

regarding Bertolucci's involvement in the screenplay <strong>of</strong> Sergio Leone's Once Upon a Time in<br />

the West, affirming that although it was rejected (together with Dario Argento, Bertolucci<br />

was only credited for the theme or 'treatment') because it was full <strong>of</strong> references to famous<br />

Hollywood westerns, 'the film remains the most deeply indebted <strong>of</strong> all Leone's Westerns to<br />

the classic Westerns' (Bondanella, 1997: 261).<br />

The volume Art Politics Cinema: Tlie Cineaste Inten'iews (1984) is a collection <strong>of</strong><br />

conversations between film-makers and scholars, which includes two interviews with<br />

Bertolucci on The Conformist and 1900 respectively, to which this study will refer in<br />

subsequent chapters. It also includes an interview with The Times' film critic Vincent Canby,<br />

an interview prompted by Bertolucci's complaint about the 'arrogant' attitude and also the<br />

influence <strong>of</strong> the newspaper's critics who were unable to appreciate films from foreign lands<br />

which employed non-traditional forms (Georgakas and Rubenstein, 1984: 282). Recognizing<br />

that Bertolucci's statement had a significance beyond that <strong>of</strong> personal recrimination (La lima<br />

having been 'solidly panned' by the The Times' critics) Cineaste decided to question Canby<br />

about the issue in general (Georgakas and Rubenstein, 1984: 282). After an initial denial,<br />

16


Canby implicitly agrees with Cineaste's observation about the impact that critics' reviews<br />

had on distributors' decisions, given that the cultural taste and awareness <strong>of</strong> the newspaper's<br />

readership made them part <strong>of</strong> the potential audience for European art cinema (Georgakas and<br />

Rubenstein, 1984: 283). Moreover, during the interview, Canby reveals his scorn for 'avant-<br />

garde', 'abstract' films, (Georgakas and Rubenstein, 1984: 289-290) an attitude which is,<br />

perhaps surprisingly, supported by Cineaste in its affirmation that 'there really isn't an<br />

audience for those films', because if you take away other film-makers or filmmakers-to-be,<br />

the only audience left is 'a few people from the Council on the Arts who think they have to<br />

do something for artists' (Georgakas and Rubenstein, 1984: 290). These assertions, coming<br />

from sources with a certain cultural sensitivity and open-mindedness, give an insight into the<br />

sort <strong>of</strong> reception that would be given to work such as La luna in countries such as America,<br />

and Bertolucci's complaint seems to have some basis to it.<br />

hi his volume Bernardo Bertohicci, Robert Kolker (1985) analyses the film-maker's<br />

work from The Grim Reaper to The Tragedy <strong>of</strong> a Ridiculous Man. But his interesting premise<br />

concerning the importance <strong>of</strong> going beyond 'author theory' to embrace the more complex<br />

idea <strong>of</strong> investigating 'how the film text operates, how meanings are generated by all the<br />

elements <strong>of</strong> the film within the context <strong>of</strong> all the other films that make up cinema' (Kolker,<br />

1985: 2) appears conditioned by Kolker's recognition that it is difficult 'to separate the<br />

personality <strong>of</strong> the creator from the creation <strong>of</strong> that personality' given the 'score <strong>of</strong> interviews<br />

in which he [Bertolucci] enjoys inserting and asserting his own personality' (Kolker, 1985:<br />

3). Consequently, Kolker's actual investigation <strong>of</strong> the films as texts focuses on small portions<br />

<strong>of</strong> each film, with biographical elements regarding the director <strong>of</strong>ten overshadowing the<br />

discussion. Kolker's perspective revolves fundamentally around two points: the influence <strong>of</strong><br />

other directors, such as Pasolini and Godard, who are seen as father figures within the<br />

17


Freudian theory <strong>of</strong> the Oedipus complex, and Bertolucci's shift <strong>of</strong> orientation towards<br />

mainstream film-making.<br />

Kolker expresses his views with an initial incisiveness, stating arguments which,<br />

however, are sometimes reversed by the author himself. For instance, after positing that<br />

Partner was an 'imitation" <strong>of</strong> Godard in order to 'absorb and expel the father', he affirms that<br />

'there are explanations other than the psychological' which 'clarify the film as Bertolucci's<br />

attempt to position himself within contemporary cinema" (Kolker, 1985: 30). He dismisses<br />

Bertolucci's earlier work, that <strong>of</strong> the early to mid 1960s, stating that while 'the young film-<br />

makers <strong>of</strong> France were establishing their own styles' Bertolucci 'lurched about' (Kolker,<br />

1985: 38-39), yet ultimately, returning to Before the Revolution, he recognizes that 'on closer<br />

examination there are major elements in the film that set it <strong>of</strong>f from contemporary French and<br />

Italian influences, [...] a complexity <strong>of</strong> intellectual struggle [...] within the film's formal<br />

apparatus that goes beyond the mere imitation <strong>of</strong> Bertolucci's cinematic contemporaries'<br />

(Kolker, 1985: 40). The author's observation that with 1900 Bertolucci embraced 'traditional<br />

cinematic forms' is reversed by the assertion that the film 'subverts' 'its ostensible use <strong>of</strong> the<br />

classical codes', thereby positioning the film within the realm <strong>of</strong> 'meta-realism' (Kolker,<br />

1985: 81-82). Kolker's assessment <strong>of</strong> Partner as 'a strange attempt to end the relationship<br />

[with Godard] by turning influence into imitation" (Kolker, 1985: 15) seems abrupt and<br />

chronologically simplistic. My study will suggest that Partner exemplifies Bertolucci's<br />

attempt to diffuse within Italian cinema 'that rupture <strong>of</strong> the cinematic grammar' that he<br />

praised Godard for, (Ungari, 1982: 177) and that the film also constitutes the peak <strong>of</strong> his<br />

admiration for the French director given its references to Godard's approach to film, while<br />

demonstrating Bertolucci's own ability to create an original mise-en-scene. With regard to a<br />

particular film that foregrounds the end <strong>of</strong> the relationship with Godard, my study posits that<br />

18


it is Last Tango in Paris, and in the relevant chapter I will also explain my reservations about<br />

some interpretations that condition Kolker's analysis.<br />

As regards the use <strong>of</strong> Verdi's music in The Spider's Stratagem, Kolker's view that it<br />

contributes to intensify Bertolucci's way <strong>of</strong> displaying the 'spectacle <strong>of</strong> fascism and the<br />

spectacle <strong>of</strong> Athos's production <strong>of</strong> history' is persuasive, (Kolker, 1985: 124) but less<br />

convincing is the connection that he makes between the characters <strong>of</strong> Verdi's opera Rigoletto<br />

and those <strong>of</strong> Stratagem, notably Rigoletto/Athos senior and Gilda/Athos junior. Rigoletto is a<br />

despicable personality, whose ill fate - that <strong>of</strong> suffering the same abuse that he has helped the<br />

Duke to inflict upon courtiers - appears deserved. The eventual pity elicited towards his<br />

character derives from the high price he pays, that <strong>of</strong> the killing <strong>of</strong> his young, innocent<br />

daughter.(l) The case <strong>of</strong> Athos senior is different, not only because he ultimately <strong>of</strong>fers his<br />

own life for the benefit <strong>of</strong> a cause, but also because the film's ending does not solve the<br />

riddle <strong>of</strong> his actions or establish whether his behaviour betrays the expectations <strong>of</strong> his<br />

<strong>of</strong>fspring, Athos junior; instead it remains shrouded in ambiguity. For the same reason I do<br />

not think that TJre Spider's Stratagem features 'in a reverse <strong>of</strong> the events <strong>of</strong> the opera, a son<br />

who mistakes the identity <strong>of</strong> his father' (Kolker, 1985: 123). Finally, with regard to Kolker's<br />

view that in The Tragedy <strong>of</strong> a Ridiculous Man terrorism is merely 'the initiating element <strong>of</strong><br />

the film's discourse' as 'it remains, by and large, outside <strong>of</strong> that discourse - or buried deep<br />

within it' (Kolker, 1985: 166), I will counterpoint that terrorism is the focus <strong>of</strong> the whole<br />

film. However, there is a closer convergence between this volume and Kolker s consideration<br />

<strong>of</strong> La luna more as 'an indication <strong>of</strong> Bertolucci's momentary loss <strong>of</strong> formal and narrative<br />

control [...] - possibly in reaction to the debacle <strong>of</strong> 1900 - than as a Freudian exercise'<br />

(Kolker, 1985:8).<br />

In this context, Kolker's observation that the potential <strong>of</strong> Bertolucci's work for<br />

Freudian interpretation 'has been <strong>of</strong> great interest to American critics' (Kolker, 1985: 8)<br />

19


anticipates T. Jefferson Kline's Bertolucci 's Dream Loom: A Psychoanalytic Study <strong>of</strong> Cinema<br />

(1987), as it typifies the way Bertolucci's interviews fuelled the psychoanalytical readings<br />

that were prevalent in contemporary film scholarship. Kline introduces his work by asserting<br />

that "given the implications <strong>of</strong> the Orpheus myth for Last Tango in Paris and the director's<br />

own tendency to speak <strong>of</strong> his work in relation to his own analysis, a psychoanalytical<br />

approach virtually imposed itself on this critical undertaking' (Kline, 1987: ix). By referring<br />

to Bertolucci's assertion that: 'the Greek concept <strong>of</strong> fate is the unconscious. My unconscious<br />

is the fate <strong>of</strong> my movies', Kline sees in the character <strong>of</strong> Paul and his behaviour the Greek<br />

myth <strong>of</strong> Orpheus (Kline, 1987: 107). The critic perceives Paul as being set on 'rescuing' the<br />

deceased character <strong>of</strong> Rosa through Jeanne - who is seen as Rosa's double - and both are<br />

interpreted as mother figures; Paul's interdiction <strong>of</strong> the use <strong>of</strong> names in his encounters with<br />

Jeanne embodies 'the divine command not to look back', and therefore when he later states<br />

his name as 'Orpheus disobedience', this 'coincides precisely with Paul's ultimate failure at<br />

recovery <strong>of</strong> his maternal figure' (Kline, 1987: 112). It is difficult to debate this very personal<br />

interpretation <strong>of</strong> the film, since the fact that Rosa is dead and that Paul has a robust sexual<br />

relationship with Jeanne makes problematic the concept <strong>of</strong> any 'rescue' <strong>of</strong> Rosa on Paul's<br />

part, whose conduct is <strong>of</strong> his own volition and is not dependant on any other entity whether<br />

real or metaphorical. However, even if Rosa - from a psychoanalytical perspective - can be<br />

assimilated into a maternal figure, since she has taken care <strong>of</strong> Paul and his needs, it is<br />

difficult to envisage Jeanne in the same role. If a parallel with classical literature has to be<br />

drawn, there is more potential in evoking Dante Alighieri's Divine Comedy, in the context <strong>of</strong><br />

which Jeanne might be envisaged as Virgil guiding Paul/Dante - lost in a existential midlife<br />

crisis - through his personal inferno, with Bertolucci ultimately preventing them from<br />

eventually coming forth 'to rebehold the stars'.(2) hi my analysis <strong>of</strong> the film, I will posit that<br />

Paul's behaviour is generated by social discontent, and therefore a different motivation will<br />

20


e attributed to Paul's abolition <strong>of</strong> names, a perspective which I will discuss in the relevant<br />

chapter.<br />

With regard to Kline's interpretation <strong>of</strong> Bertolucci's oeuvre as a struggle to liberate<br />

himself from paternal figures, (Kline, 1987: 7) some misinterpretations in his study are<br />

symptomatic <strong>of</strong> an eagerness to derive Freudian readings <strong>of</strong> Bertolucci's work. In particular,<br />

reflecting on Bertolucci's assertion about using psychoanalysis as another lens on his camera,<br />

Kline asserts that 'this particular metaphor derives <strong>of</strong> course from Bertolucci's own<br />

experience <strong>of</strong> analysis over the period in which he created his first five films' (Kline, 1987:<br />

8), whereas Bertolucci actually started analysis a few weeks before shooting The Spider's<br />

Stratagem (Socci 1996: 7). Also, Kline bases another line <strong>of</strong> psychoanalytical reasoning on a<br />

link between the name Attila (a character in 1900) and that <strong>of</strong> Attilio, Bertolucci's father's<br />

name, the critic mistakenly attributing the character's first name to Bertolucci's father; this<br />

erroneous premise leads him to envisage another manifestation <strong>of</strong> the Oedipus complex,<br />

namely an "ongoing struggle for/with author-ity" between Bertolucci and his father within<br />

what, objectively, is a screen character who represents reactionary social, economic and<br />

political forces in 1920s Italy and who embodies the violent forces at the service <strong>of</strong> the<br />

landowners (Kline, 1987: 138). More generally, while Kline's notion <strong>of</strong> the dark cinema<br />

auditorium functioning as an area within which the viewer's role resembles that <strong>of</strong> a dreamer,<br />

is evocative (Kline, 1987: 13), my study articulates a different notion <strong>of</strong> viewer engagement<br />

with screen fiction based on cognitive-affective theory, and its basis is that viewers are fully<br />

cognisant during the viewing experience, constantly evaluating and reacting to what is seen.<br />

In her anthology Italian Film in the Light <strong>of</strong> Neorealism (1986), Millicent Marcus<br />

includes an essay on The Conformist stressing how Bertolucci's intention 'to force his<br />

viewers to confront their Fascist past and to rethink their relationship to it, constitutes a plea<br />

for moral responsibility akin to the early Neorealists' (Marcus, 1986: 286). The significance<br />

21


placed by Marcus on Bertolucci's shift away from the sense <strong>of</strong> 'inexorable fate' in Moravia's<br />

original novel in favour <strong>of</strong> a greater emphasis on 'Marcello's sovereign free will' and the<br />

moral consequences <strong>of</strong> this, is supported in my own study (Marcus, 1986: 296). Nevertheless,<br />

having outlined this assumption, there is a contradiction when Marcus indicates that where<br />

Marcello Clerici is concerned, the film's cinematic devices 'all suggest an abnormal, chaotic<br />

mental state' (Marcus, 1986: 296). While the notion <strong>of</strong> abnormality can be defended, that <strong>of</strong><br />

mental chaos is less tenable; my analysis will identify a cold determination in Clerici ? s<br />

pursuit <strong>of</strong> conformism and a lucid awareness <strong>of</strong> Fascism's threatening and repressive nature.<br />

Yosefa Loshitzky, in The Radical Faces <strong>of</strong> Godard and Bertolucci (1995), analyses in<br />

parallel the career <strong>of</strong> the two directors. Her analysis <strong>of</strong> Bertolucci's films generally mirrors<br />

other scholarly analysis, in terms <strong>of</strong> reaffirming Godard's influence on Bertolucci, the<br />

implication <strong>of</strong> an Oedipus complex in their relationship, and Bertolucci's departure from<br />

Godard's avant-garde view on cinema. On the latter point, and without any intention <strong>of</strong><br />

mounting a defence or criticism <strong>of</strong> the decision that led to this different strand <strong>of</strong> film-<br />

making, I believe that more consideration should be given to the question <strong>of</strong> cinema and<br />

elitism that troubled Bertolucci and other directors in the early 1970s, film-makers such as<br />

Elio Petri, as both Bertolucci and Petri added their own reflections to the debate. In 1973,<br />

while discussing politically committed films, Bertolucci asserted: 'The great problem <strong>of</strong> the<br />

political film is very difficult. I see a great contradiction in my work when I do political films<br />

like Before the Revolution and Partner, because political films must be popular films, and<br />

Partner, for example, was anything but popular' (Georgakas, Rubenstein, 1984: 38). hi<br />

commenting on Solanas's regret at having been unable to show his film Hour <strong>of</strong> the Furnaces<br />

(1973) to the people he would have liked to, Bertolucci affirmed that a revolutionary film<br />

'never goes into a revolutionary space' but 'into festivals. So you do revolutionary films for<br />

the cinephiles' (Georgakas, Rubenstein, 1984: 38-39). This was a preoccupation shared by<br />

22


Petri, who - in 1972 - talking about Godard's work, asserted: 'I still like his work, although I<br />

think that his efforts are useless. I don't believe one can make a revolution with cinema. To<br />

speak to an elite <strong>of</strong> intellectuals is like speaking to nobody' (Georgakas, Rubenstein, 1984:<br />

60). Petri also adds that within the strategy <strong>of</strong> initiating a dialectical process 'involving the<br />

great masses', 'Godard's films are important, especially when they are clear. Unfortunately,<br />

when you appeal to an elite, you fall into the trap <strong>of</strong> intellectualism' (Georgakas, Rubenstein,<br />

1984: 60). Significantly, there is a reference in Loshitzky's book to Godard confronting the<br />

issue himself, Loshitzky affirming: 'Reflecting on this rather sharp transition from voluntary<br />

seclusion to the big capitalist market he [Godard] said: 'My Grenoble experience has been<br />

fascinating. But I realize now that it was too abstract, lacking in contact and means. I cut<br />

myself <strong>of</strong>f from certain subjects and from a certain public. Whereas we must base our aims<br />

on the public's desire and prolong them 7 (Loshitzky, 1995: 83). At this point in the<br />

introductory sections to my own study I have referred to this issue because <strong>of</strong> its importance<br />

not just to Bertolucci's career but also to film-making nowadays.<br />

With regard to the analysis Loshitzky makes <strong>of</strong> individual films, several elements will<br />

be debated in the relevant chapters in this volume. These include her use <strong>of</strong> Marcuse's<br />

reading <strong>of</strong> Freud in his Eros and Civilization which will be examined in my discussion <strong>of</strong><br />

Last Tango in Paris in the context <strong>of</strong> the implied social perspectives in the way the<br />

Paul/Jeanne relationship is narrated. This will lead to a different contextualization both <strong>of</strong> the<br />

representation <strong>of</strong> sexuality in the film and <strong>of</strong> the function <strong>of</strong> the apartment in the film's mise-<br />

en-scene. As regards Loshitzky's interpretation that in Bertolucci's film-making, at a certain<br />

point, 'the East became, in opposition to West, a Utopia' (Loshitsky, 1995: 89) this study will<br />

contend that Bertolucci did not see the East as a Utopia, but as a means <strong>of</strong> warning Western<br />

contemporary society about the degradation <strong>of</strong> human relationships. Finally, although this<br />

project does not pursue a feminist critique <strong>of</strong> Bertolucci's work, I will contrast Loshitzky's<br />

23


negative evaluation <strong>of</strong> the representations <strong>of</strong> women in his films (Loshitzky, 1995: 186) by<br />

arguing that although female characters rarely share the pivotal importance <strong>of</strong> their male<br />

counterparts in the development <strong>of</strong> both the filmic story and the making <strong>of</strong> History in general,<br />

they are depicted as intellectually equal, if not superior, and <strong>of</strong>ten endowed with a stronger<br />

existential determination than male characters, as in the case <strong>of</strong> The Conformist and The Last<br />

Emperor.<br />

InBernardo Bertolucci (1996), Stefano Socci provides information about Bertolucci's<br />

documentaries, and analyses his fiction films from The Grim Reaper to Stealing Beauty,<br />

while the book's second edition <strong>of</strong> 2003 also includes Besieged. Socci skims through all the<br />

director's films, his examination dense with references to, and subjective evocations <strong>of</strong>,<br />

Italian and international literature, paintings, and films. This pr<strong>of</strong>usion <strong>of</strong> cross-references is<br />

sometimes accompanied by dismissive comments about individual films, which, in the case<br />

<strong>of</strong> The Tragedy <strong>of</strong> a Ridiculous Man and The Sheltering Sky will be discussed in the chapters<br />

relevant to the films. Socci's analysis also follows the dual optic <strong>of</strong> Marxist and Freudian<br />

perspectives, with a stern leftist evaluation <strong>of</strong> the political perspective <strong>of</strong> Bertolucci's films,<br />

which in the case <strong>of</strong> 1900 leads him to criticize a supposedly unconfrontational political<br />

attitude on Bertolucci's part. My analysis <strong>of</strong> the film, drawing partly on Bertolucci's<br />

declarations about wanting to diffuse the idea <strong>of</strong> Communism amongst American audiences<br />

in a different climate from that <strong>of</strong> the usual anti-communist hysteria, suggests that this was<br />

never intended (Socci, 1995: 61). Socci <strong>of</strong>ten praises the aesthetic aspects <strong>of</strong> the director's<br />

films, as well as his tendency to weave the viewer into webs <strong>of</strong> intertextual references. In<br />

this respect, Socci's closing reflection that Bertolucci's films are able 'to charm us with all<br />

the fascination <strong>of</strong> the seventh art [...] but remain 'slightly indecipherable' (Socci, 1995: 100)<br />

corroborates this volume's view that Bertolucci's entire output is characterized by the<br />

24


tw<strong>of</strong>old aim <strong>of</strong> <strong>of</strong>fering viewers sophisticated aesthetic experiences that are embedded in<br />

complex narrations.<br />

In the year 2000, a set <strong>of</strong> interviews with Bertolucci edited by Fabien S. Gerard, T.<br />

Jefferson Klein, and Bruce Sklarew was published as Bemardo Bertolucci: Interviews. The<br />

interviews cover the film-maker's work from Before the Revolution to Stealing Beauty, and<br />

they will be considered in the relevant chapters <strong>of</strong> this volume where appropriate. However,<br />

the interview 'Who Were You?' (1973) by Dacia Maraini - a well-known writer - contains<br />

two noteworthy elements: Bertolucci's blissful early life comes across in its entirety, the<br />

director declaring: 'I discovered the word aggressiveness only after I was twenty. Up until<br />

then all the hard edges were s<strong>of</strong>tened by my father' (Maraini, 1973: 89). Coupled with<br />

Bertolucci's awareness that he had grown up 'in an earthly paradise where poetic and natural<br />

realities were one',(Maraini, 1973: 81) this invites, at the very least, some caution regarding<br />

the notion <strong>of</strong> an allegedly troubled relationship between Attilio and Bemardo Bertolucci<br />

which seems to underpin some <strong>of</strong> the psychoanalytical scholarship on the director's work.<br />

The relationship with his father seems closer to that <strong>of</strong> an over-protected experience that<br />

prevented him from developing a more realistic view <strong>of</strong> life with its setbacks and failures;<br />

this inability to cope with the negative responses to his early films may therefore account for<br />

some <strong>of</strong> Bertolucci's changes in career direction. The second significant element from the<br />

Maraini interview regards the director's recollection <strong>of</strong> the first memory <strong>of</strong> his mother, while<br />

sitting in the wicker basket <strong>of</strong> her bicycle, Bertolucci linking this image to the form <strong>of</strong> the<br />

moon. In later years he indicated that this memory was a recurring dream that inspired the<br />

making <strong>of</strong> La luna (Maraini, 1973: 82; Ungari, 1982: 127).<br />

In general, as regards the use <strong>of</strong> Bertolucci's declarations within academic writing on<br />

his work, I would point out that I share Roger Ebert's wariness concerning the nature and<br />

effect <strong>of</strong> interviews: 'I suspect that with all good directors, the spirit <strong>of</strong> the artist dominates<br />

25


on the location, and the philosopher emerges only in the post-mortem interview' (Ebert,<br />

1985: ix). I would not go as far as saying that sometimes Bertolucci 'speaks arrant nonsense'<br />

(Kolker, 1985: 7), but I will highlight what I believe are discrepancies between Bertolucci's<br />

verbal declarations and cinematic articulations.<br />

Notes<br />

1. The jester Rigoletto mocks the courtiers cuckolded by the Duke, who takes advantage <strong>of</strong> their wives<br />

and daughters. So when Rigoletto mocks Count Monterone's appeal to the Duke for the return <strong>of</strong> his<br />

dishonoured daughter, Rigoletto is cursed by Monterone to suffer the same fatherly pain. And<br />

circumstances bring Rigoletto's daughter - Gilda - to become the Duke's lover. The jester's plan to<br />

murder the Duke is overheard by Gilda who resolves to die in the place <strong>of</strong> the man she loves. So when<br />

Rigoletto is delivered a sack supposedly containing the dead Duke and is about to dispose <strong>of</strong> it, he<br />

hears a female voice. Desperately he opens it to find his dying daughter, and he recalls Monterone's<br />

curse. Rigoletto, G. Verdi (1850).<br />

2. The Divine Comedy, (1308-1321). The last verse <strong>of</strong> Inferno reads: 'Thence we came forth to rebehold<br />

the stars'. Available at www.readprint.com/chapter 189/Inferno-Dante-Alighieri [Accessed on<br />

15/06/10].<br />

References<br />

Alighieri D., (1308-1321) Divine Comedy, [Online] available:<br />

www.readprint.com/chapter 189/Inferno-Dante-Alighieri<br />

Bondanella, P. (1997) Italian Cinema From Neorealism to the Present. (New Ed.) New York:<br />

The Continuum Publishing Company<br />

Casetti, F. (1978) Bemardo Bertolucci, Florence: "La Nuova Italia" Editrice<br />

Ebert, R. (1985) 'Foreword', in Georgakas, D. and Rubenstein, L. (ed.) (1985) Art Politics<br />

Cinema: Tlie Cineaste Interviews, London and Sydney: Pluto Press<br />

Georgakas, D., and Rubenstein, L. (ed.) (1985) Art Politics Cinema: The Cineaste Interviews,<br />

London and Sydney: Pluto Press<br />

Kline, TJ. (1987) Bertolucci's Dream Loom: A Psychoanalytic Study <strong>of</strong> Cinema, Amherst:<br />

The <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Massachusetts Press<br />

Kolker, R. P. (1985) Bernardo Bertolucci, London: BFI Publishing<br />

Loshitzky, Y. (1995) The Radical Faces <strong>of</strong> Godard and Bertolucci, Detroit: Wayne State<br />

<strong>University</strong> Press<br />

26


Maraini, D. (1973) 'Who were you?', in Gerard, F.S., Kline, TJ. and Sklarew, B. (ed.) (2000)<br />

Bernardo Bertolucci Interviews, Jackson: <strong>University</strong> Press <strong>of</strong> Mississippi<br />

Marcus, M. (1986) Italian Film in the Light <strong>of</strong> Neorealism, Princeton: Princeton <strong>University</strong><br />

Press<br />

Ranvaud, D. (1987) 'L'Ultimo Imperatore di Bernardo Bertolucci', in Ungari, E. (1982)<br />

Scene Madri di Bernardo Bertolucci, 2nd Ed., Milan: Ubulibri<br />

Socci S., (1996) Bernardo Bertolucci, Milan: II Castoro Cinema<br />

Ungari, E. (1982) Scene madri di Bernardo Bertolucci, (2nd Ed. 1987), Milan: Ubulibri<br />

27


Cognitive/Affective Theory<br />

THEORETICAL FRAMEWORK<br />

This study is based on the notion <strong>of</strong> interaction between the viewer's cognitive and affective<br />

faculties while engaging with screen fiction. Where psychoanalytical methodologies<br />

conceptualize humanity as 'torn [...] between principles <strong>of</strong> pleasure and principles <strong>of</strong> reality',<br />

with principles <strong>of</strong> reality and 'reason' considered as 'secondary processes', Torben Grodal<br />

attributes greater importance to ecological/evolutionary theories according to which humans<br />

have developed cognitive skills, not 'in opposition to their emotions and their bodies' but 'to<br />

carry out the preferences <strong>of</strong> the body-mind totality' (Grodal, 1997: 5). In other words, it is<br />

easier to obtain sustenance, preserve one's safety, and thereby experience pleasurable<br />

emotions if we are aware <strong>of</strong> the nature <strong>of</strong> worldly phenomena. In the context <strong>of</strong> the reception<br />

<strong>of</strong> film, Grodal's starting point is that 'visual fiction is viewed in a conscious state and it is<br />

mostly about human beings perceiving, acting and feeling [...] in relation to a visible and<br />

audible world' (Grodal, 1997: 6). In his view, individuals evaluate and process human<br />

behaviour 'by making mental models <strong>of</strong> act-schemata and motive schemata (Grodal 1997: 8)<br />

in other words, by using acquired experience to deduce the reasons behind a person's conduct<br />

or a given event and then to formulate hypotheses about the person's future actions or about<br />

possible developments in the light <strong>of</strong> an event that has occurred. There are similarities<br />

between this process and that <strong>of</strong> the progression <strong>of</strong> 'a classical and a canonical narrative",<br />

given that both occur in a 'coherent and consistent time and space"; Grodal therefore<br />

identifies the potential for visual fiction to be formally analysed (for example in ideological<br />

or stylistic terms) and related to 'fundamental formulas <strong>of</strong> consciousness' because it is<br />

motivated by 'fundamental aspects <strong>of</strong> the mental architecture <strong>of</strong> humans' (Grodal, 1997: 8).<br />

28


In discussing different narrative theories, Grodal asserts that all aspects <strong>of</strong> the viewing<br />

experience, such as the perceptual, the cognitive, the emotional, the temporal and the spatial,<br />

are equally important; therefore he rejects the notion <strong>of</strong> 'hierarchies <strong>of</strong> mental functions',<br />

since they interact with one another. For example, an individual's perception <strong>of</strong> real-life or<br />

screen events provides information that is 'analyzed cognitively and evaluated emotionally',<br />

and therefore a film's narrative structure is conceptualized as the 'framework within which<br />

[the functions] interact' (Grodal, 1997: 9-10). hi this context, Grodal indicates the key<br />

function <strong>of</strong> cognitive evaluations <strong>of</strong> the 'reality status' <strong>of</strong> a given narrative event, and because<br />

the process involves emotions, he stresses the importance <strong>of</strong> analysing the reality status 'cued<br />

by a given sequence', as its cinematic manipulation 'can be used for evoking emotions and<br />

feelings'(Grodal, 1997: 28). On the basis <strong>of</strong> an individual's holistic experience <strong>of</strong> reality,<br />

which is composed <strong>of</strong> many visual and aural components, Grodal provides the example <strong>of</strong><br />

how the removal <strong>of</strong> sound from a dramatic scene 'is <strong>of</strong>ten done to produce an 'unreal' and<br />

'subjective effect' (Grodal, 1997: 29). This aesthetic device - as Grodal terms it - is a feature<br />

<strong>of</strong> Jean-Luc Godard's mode <strong>of</strong> film-making, for example.<br />

Grodal discusses the findings <strong>of</strong> scientific research into the ways in which higher<br />

animals and humans react to their surroundings, and to 'purposive', 'goal-oriented' acts<br />

within them, the critic referencing experiments on monkeys who were monitored as they<br />

observed a person moving around a room; increased neuronal activity was detected in the<br />

primates 'when the person moved toward a door leading out <strong>of</strong> the laboratory" (Grodal, 1997:<br />

86). Grodal argues that such cognitive processes are 'based on innate circuits and is not a<br />

result <strong>of</strong> a cultural process', and on a comprehension <strong>of</strong> an individual's movements and<br />

objectives, and he suggests that 'when people are "fascinated" by films, this may be an effect<br />

<strong>of</strong> the number <strong>of</strong> movements and purposive acts represented in them' (Grodal, 1997: 87).<br />

Hence, he posits that in cinematic contexts a viewer participates in constructed fiction by<br />

29


'cognitively identifying himself with the agents <strong>of</strong> fictions', which also involves a simulation<br />

<strong>of</strong> the emotions generated by such identification. He asserts that 'cognition is intimately<br />

linked to emotions' and that 'the superior connection between cognition and emotion is that<br />

<strong>of</strong> motivation' based on the recognition <strong>of</strong> the basic human preferences underpinning the<br />

screen actant's situation, in spheres such as 'food, security, erotic gratification, and social<br />

acceptance' (Grodal, 1997: 87). hi the light <strong>of</strong> this theory, Grodal explains why- in watching<br />

a film about Gandhi - a European 'can easily make a cognitive identification with him' by<br />

recognizing general patterns based on, for example, 'the opposition between social<br />

humiliation and social acceptance" (Grodal, 1997: 92).<br />

According to Grodal, viewing screen fiction initiates a mental flow that he terms the<br />

downstream, beginning with the perception <strong>of</strong> images and sounds on screen which induce<br />

affective reactions within viewers, possibly based on personal memories and associations,<br />

and these then 'activate representations <strong>of</strong> possible actions, and perhaps induce muscle<br />

tension' (Grodal, 1999: 132). The way viewers experience the downstream can be<br />

categorized in three modes: 'telic (Ideological), paratelic, and autonomic' (Grodal, 1999:<br />

133-34). The telic mode relates to 'voluntary goal-directed actions and thoughts', Grodal<br />

exemplifying this with Raiders <strong>of</strong> the Lost Ark (1981) and individual scenes featuring the<br />

protagonist pursuing and taking possession <strong>of</strong> the ark. The paratelic mode relates to actions<br />

that 'take place without an explicit goal, in relation to the protagonist's moment-to-moment<br />

experiences', typified by the first shots <strong>of</strong> E.T. (1982), a perception-based sequence where no<br />

telic framework' or narrative goal is provided (Grodal, 1999: 134). Other examples <strong>of</strong> the<br />

paratelic mode <strong>of</strong> viewer experience can be traced in many sequences <strong>of</strong> Fellini's Amarcord<br />

(1973) in which the evocation <strong>of</strong> bizarre characters and situations is again bereft <strong>of</strong> any telos,<br />

or goal-orientation. Finally the third mode, the autonomic, 'is activated when characters<br />

become victims <strong>of</strong> exterior forces, such as history, nature or fate and are unable to affect<br />

30


outcomes. The viewer and character react to such situations with tears, shudders or laughter'<br />

(Grodal, 1999: 134); this is exemplified by the sequence in Raiders <strong>of</strong> the Lost Ark when<br />

Indiana Jones initially 'experiences fearful despair in the snakepit' before switching to a more<br />

goal-directed response to solve the situation (Grodal, 1999: 132-134).<br />

Using some <strong>of</strong> the sequences mentioned before as test cases, Grodal shows how the<br />

mental flow can also have four modal qualities experienced by viewers in the following<br />

forms: 'intense' (the film activates vivid perception, as in the opening sequence <strong>of</strong> E.T.);<br />

'saturated' (the film activates memory associations charged with emotion; I would indicate<br />

the scene in Giuseppe Tornatore's Cinema Paradiso (1988), when the adult Toto revisits the<br />

now derelict cinema in his home town, as an example <strong>of</strong> this); 'tense' (here, the film activates<br />

action-readiness, such as muscular tension, as a boulder thunders towards Indiana Jones), and<br />

'emotive 5 (activating autonomic outlets such as tears, laughter or shivers) (Grodal, 1999:<br />

136). By contrast, an alternative viewing process may occur when films interrupt this mental<br />

flow from perception to reaction; Grodal likens this to looking 'upstream', against the normal<br />

experiential flow. This occurs when a film blurs or blocks the viewers' perception <strong>of</strong> forms,<br />

Grodal's example being the first flashback to Harmonica's past in Once Upon a Time in the<br />

West (1968), which is shot completely out-<strong>of</strong>-focus. Another form <strong>of</strong> blocking may occur<br />

when action is halted 'as in a freeze-frame', which halts the completion <strong>of</strong> an action (Grodal,<br />

1999: 136), one example <strong>of</strong> this being the ending to Once Upon a Time in America (1984).<br />

In many narratives, the subject-actant on screen and the viewer-persona merge as a<br />

consequence <strong>of</strong> close emotional and cognitive identification between the two, but more<br />

complicated narrative forms can create distance between viewers and screen actants. One<br />

device to reduce the immediacy <strong>of</strong> a viewer's emotional and physiological reactions to what<br />

is perceived on screen, and to distance the viewer from the fictive world is the creation <strong>of</strong><br />

'contextual frames and embeddings that force the spectator to double his position <strong>of</strong><br />

31


eception, by creating an awareness <strong>of</strong> the reception situation' (Grodal, 1997: 178). Viewers,<br />

in effect, engage with the screen action, while being simultaneously aware <strong>of</strong> an implied role<br />

that the film intends them to play while viewing; contextual frames can, for example, take the<br />

form <strong>of</strong> conspicuous, characteristic elements <strong>of</strong> film genre, as a dark, rainy urban street<br />

illuminated by neon signs might signpost noir and put the viewer into the role <strong>of</strong> a knowing<br />

cinephile. A spectator, for example, might identify himself 'with a viewer <strong>of</strong> art film or a<br />

scientifically detached observer <strong>of</strong> the sordidness <strong>of</strong> human nature" (Grodal, 1997: 178). The<br />

viewer's shifts <strong>of</strong> attention from the diegetic action to a film's 'special frames' will create the<br />

effect <strong>of</strong> 'an emotional buffer or filter' distancing the viewer from the screen action (Grodal,<br />

1997:178). Consequently, the viewer's affective and physiological reactions to such films<br />

may be conditioned by the viewer's awareness <strong>of</strong> the implied role that s/he is occupying<br />

(Grodal, 1997: 180).<br />

The second theoretical cornerstone <strong>of</strong> this study is constituted by Murray Smith's<br />

writings on the viewer's imaginative engagement with fictional narratives; Smith also<br />

envisages an interaction between the cognitive and the affective, and divides the notion <strong>of</strong> the<br />

viewer's engagement with screen characters into three concepts, or phases: recognition,<br />

alignment, and allegiance, which constitute a 'structure <strong>of</strong> sympathy" involving 'empathic<br />

phenomena' that are exemplified by viewers sharing and simulating the emotions <strong>of</strong><br />

characters at given moments in films (Smith, 1995: 73). He asserts that the film narration, 'as<br />

the ultimate "organizer" <strong>of</strong> the text', is the force which generates the processes <strong>of</strong><br />

recognition, alignment and allegiance (Smith, 1995: 75). More in detail, recognition is the<br />

process by which viewers recognize and construct the screen character's traits according to<br />

analogical characteristics found in real human behaviour. Alignment is the process by which<br />

viewers are placed in relation to characters, through 'two interlocking functions: spatio-<br />

temporal attachment and subjective access'; viewers effectively share the visual and aural<br />

32


information to which the character has access (Smith, 1995: 82-83). Allegiance, however, is<br />

the process by which viewers develop a moral evaluation <strong>of</strong> characters, who are thus 'ranked<br />

in a system <strong>of</strong> preference'. For Smith, such an evaluation 'has both cognitive and affective<br />

dimensions' since it involves categorizing the conduct <strong>of</strong> a character and being 'affectively<br />

aroused by this categorization', this leading to a 'sympathetic' or 'antipathetic' response<br />

(Smith, 1995: 84-85). In a film such as Vincenzo Marra's L'ora di pimta (2007) viewers<br />

recognize the character traits <strong>of</strong> the protagonist, the ambitious police <strong>of</strong>ficer Filippo, as<br />

reflecting the value system and amoral careerism typified by entrepreneurs such as Silvio<br />

Berlusconi, and they assess Filippo's transformation into a ruthless property developer as<br />

being harmful to his trusting partner Caterina. From this assessment develops an evaluation<br />

which leads to an antipathetic response towards the character, and the likelihood <strong>of</strong> a sense <strong>of</strong><br />

allegiance towards Caterina.<br />

Smith asserts that as a consequence <strong>of</strong> close alignment with a screen character - even<br />

without full allegiance forming - empathic phenomena may evolve between viewers and<br />

certain characters, due to the fact that empathy is connected to the 'cognitive ability to<br />

perspective-take [...] to imagine being in the situation <strong>of</strong> the perceived subject' (Smith, 1995:<br />

96). The notion <strong>of</strong> empathy can split into 'further mechanisms' which can be voluntary, like<br />

the 'emotional simulation' <strong>of</strong> a character's reactions or involuntary, such as replicating gasps<br />

<strong>of</strong> horror - 'affective mimicry and autonomic reactions' in Smith's terminology (Smith,<br />

1995: 96). hi the context <strong>of</strong> L'ora di pimta and its protagonist Filippo, transient empathic<br />

phenomena may develop in situations <strong>of</strong> tension when Filippo's property empire risks<br />

collapse. Here, Grodal's notion <strong>of</strong> the importance <strong>of</strong> purposive, goal-oriented actions also<br />

comes into play; viewers may not share the character's values, but they have a cognitive<br />

awareness <strong>of</strong> the serious implications <strong>of</strong> Filippo's situation, and are drawn into the action<br />

accordingly. The tight camera close-ups <strong>of</strong> the protagonist's tense features are an example <strong>of</strong><br />

33


the film's narration eliciting affective and cognitive responses towards the character. The<br />

importance <strong>of</strong> Smith's delineation <strong>of</strong> concepts such as alignment and allegiance should not be<br />

underestimated, as they enable film studies to move away from the nebulous notion <strong>of</strong> viewer<br />

'identification' with characters. In the context <strong>of</strong> my study, Smith's concepts, when applied to<br />

Bertolucci's films, are invaluable in terms <strong>of</strong> the light they shed on the viewer's difficult<br />

engagement with protagonists such as Marcello Clerici in TJw Conformist.<br />

Noel Carroll's articulation <strong>of</strong> the relation between fiction films and emotions stems<br />

again from a cognitive-affective methodology. The symptoms <strong>of</strong> anger at a lover's betrayal<br />

may be a sense <strong>of</strong> 'inner bodily turmoil' and stomach churning, and the link between these<br />

bodily sensations and one's lover is the cognition <strong>of</strong> a situation <strong>of</strong> betrayal, either real or<br />

imagined (Carroll, 1999: 25). Emotions are therefore more than just bodily feelings, because<br />

cognitions are 'necessary constituents' <strong>of</strong> the process <strong>of</strong> most emotions, apart from<br />

autonomic responses such as startled reactions to horrific scenes. In this way cognition not<br />

only causes the feeling, but it also allows the identification <strong>of</strong> the emotional state that we are<br />

in, since it involves a categorization <strong>of</strong> the cause <strong>of</strong> the emotion, in this case, a sense <strong>of</strong><br />

wrongfulness (Carroll, 1999: 25-26). Carroll's view is that the emotional states 'are governed<br />

cognitively by criteria <strong>of</strong> appropriateness'; for example, situations that are cognitively<br />

assessed as harmful or dangerous lead to fear (Carroll, 1999: 27). hi cinematic contexts, an<br />

example <strong>of</strong> this governing criterion might be found in Deliverance, (1972) in which suspense<br />

and fear originate from the harmful/threatening presence <strong>of</strong> the three strangers accompanying<br />

the friends on their trip.<br />

Carroll asserts that once the objects or stimuli for emotional states are detected, such<br />

as a source <strong>of</strong> danger to trigger fear, emotional states are episodic and 'endure over time<br />

intervals' (Carroll, 1999: 27); the individual's emotions guide his/her perceptions to further<br />

elements in the scenario (whether real or fictitious, on screen) that are relevant to the<br />

34


emotional state that the individual is in. Carroll uses a real-life example to illustrate this:<br />

'Alerted by fear to the potential that there is someone or something prowling around our<br />

campsite, we scope out the scene in search <strong>of</strong> further signs <strong>of</strong> threat which, if found, reinforce<br />

both the state we are in and its related feedback processes. In this way the emotions manage<br />

attention over time' (Carroll, 1999: 28). Whether occurring in real-life or on screen, our<br />

emotions enable us to identify the significant details we see and organize them into a<br />

plausible whole; subsequently, the presiding emotion prompts us 'to form expectations about<br />

the kinds <strong>of</strong> things that we should watch for as the situation evolves' (Carroll, 1999: 28). In<br />

the case <strong>of</strong> Bertolucci's films, one <strong>of</strong> this study's lines <strong>of</strong> enquiry focuses on how the<br />

emotional moods <strong>of</strong> key sequences are sustained by cognitive prompts and by film technique<br />

and mise-en-scene , rather than by close alignment and allegiance to characters.<br />

Carroll stresses, however, that with respect to fiction films, the events 'have been<br />

emotionally pre-digested for us by filmmakers' through elements <strong>of</strong> the mise-en-scene and<br />

narrative structure (Carroll, 1999: 29). He observes that this process does not guarantee a set<br />

emotional response, in that the film structure also needs to generate in viewers a concern or<br />

'pro-attitude' towards what is happening in the story; while this process can be<br />

straightforward in films such as CarrolFs example <strong>of</strong> Battleship Potemkin (1925) which<br />

'enlists a pro-attitude in the audience toward the crew <strong>of</strong> the battle cruiser", (Carroll, 1999:<br />

31-32) the critic also acknowledges that the emotional address in certain films 'may be<br />

designedly ambiguous' (Carroll, 1999: 34). While he does not <strong>of</strong>fer textual examples to<br />

illustrate this premise, this volume will posit that several <strong>of</strong> Bertolucci's films, such as La<br />

luna, exemplify this phenomenon, and may even unwittingly induce the inverse <strong>of</strong> the 'pro-<br />

attitudes" envisaged by the film-maker. Carroll's examination <strong>of</strong> film genres in the context <strong>of</strong><br />

their dominant emotion focuses results in a taxonomy that also helps to shed light on the<br />

ways in which Bertolucci's manipulations <strong>of</strong> cinematic codes condition the viewer s<br />

35


emotional engagement with his films (Carroll, 1999: 34-46).<br />

The importance <strong>of</strong> music in Bertolucci's films deserves a study <strong>of</strong> its own, although<br />

this volume will limit itself to an analysis <strong>of</strong> key examples <strong>of</strong> how the director uses diegetic<br />

and non-diegetic music to amplify or condition the emotion structure within individual films.<br />

Consideration will also be given to the use <strong>of</strong> non-diegetic music to orient viewers between<br />

different segments <strong>of</strong> certain narratives, as in the case <strong>of</strong> The Grim Reaper and Last Tango in<br />

Paris. To shed light on such processes, concepts by Claudia Gorbman will be incorporated<br />

into discussions <strong>of</strong> Bertolucci's use <strong>of</strong> music. In her study on the function <strong>of</strong> music in films,<br />

Gorbman indicates how, on the basis <strong>of</strong> 'Wagnerian principles <strong>of</strong> motifs and leitmotifs',<br />

music in film <strong>of</strong>ten 'becomes associated with a character, a place, a situation, or an emotion'<br />

(Gorbman, 1987: 3). In general, music is used to create 'rhythm, atmosphere, cinematic<br />

space, spectatorial distance, and point <strong>of</strong> view', by being either expressive or informative<br />

(Gorbman, 1987: 16). In analysing Stagecoach (1939), she indicates how rhythmic music can<br />

be used 'as a denotative tag' (Gorbman, 1987: 28) to indicate menace when it is associated<br />

with the same narrative reference, the Indians. She states that music has a range <strong>of</strong><br />

connotative values, such as the seduction/sophistication <strong>of</strong> jazz, and these qualities are<br />

instrumental in establishing a film's emotional tone, notably its mood, and this element, in<br />

particular, reflects the way Bertolucci deploys music in his films.<br />

Gorbman's discussion <strong>of</strong> the specific case <strong>of</strong> songs with lyrics and their impact on<br />

cinematic narratives is especially interesting in the context <strong>of</strong> Bertolucci's films. When these<br />

songs are diegetic, being sung within the world <strong>of</strong> the film, Gorbman suggests that these<br />

songs 'require narrative to cede to spectacle' and that they seem to freeze the action for their<br />

duration (Gorbman, 1987: 20). However, if they are heard non-diegetically, 'over the film's<br />

images', they can function as a non-diegetic commentary <strong>of</strong> the images being viewed. An<br />

example <strong>of</strong> the first effect can be found in The Last Emperor, whereas the sequences within<br />

36


opera houses in Before the Revolution and The Spider's Stratagem reflect the second<br />

phenomenon (Gorbman, 1987: 20). Gorbman also discusses the ways in which background<br />

music can be an accessory to the 'subjective positioning" that a film viewer undergoes, and<br />

she identifies the different roles <strong>of</strong> 'intimate "identification" music 5 and 'epic "spectacle"<br />

music (Gorbman, 1987: 68). Identification music draws spectators into the narrative and its<br />

scenarios as experienced by characters, whereas spectacle music 'places us in contemplation'<br />

<strong>of</strong> the narrative, lending 'an epic quality to the diegetic events', precisely by making a<br />

spectacle <strong>of</strong> them as in Star Wars (1977) (Gorbman, 1987: 68). These two types <strong>of</strong> music, the<br />

first facilitating an intimate, emotional form <strong>of</strong> engagement from spectators, and the second<br />

privileging a more distanced, rational perspective on the cinematic spectacle, reflect the<br />

affective/cognitive theoretical approach <strong>of</strong> this study towards Bertolucci's films, as both<br />

types <strong>of</strong> music are used by him.<br />

Cognitive Theory<br />

David Bordwell's theory <strong>of</strong> film reception is based on 'a perceptual-cognitive approach' that<br />

'treats narration as a process' by which films are grasped by viewers 'as more or less<br />

coherent wholes' (Bordwell, 1995: 49). He identifies three schemata upon which the viewer<br />

reconstructs the fabula (story): 'prototype schemata' which are intended as the identification<br />

<strong>of</strong> characters, actions and locales; 'template schemata' consisting <strong>of</strong> 'principally the<br />

"canonic" story' which is intended as a chain <strong>of</strong> cause and effect; and 'procedural schemata'<br />

which are elaborated by 'a search for appropriate motivations and relations <strong>of</strong> causality, time,<br />

space' (Bordwell, 1995: 49). He dedicates particular attention to the procedural schemata for<br />

its importance in eliciting spectatorial analyses <strong>of</strong> films during the viewing experience; in<br />

films whose narratives are structured around processes <strong>of</strong> detection or variants <strong>of</strong> this, the<br />

'search' for motivations and causes naturally constitutes a primary mode <strong>of</strong> viewer<br />

engagement, and this volume will outline how a range <strong>of</strong> Bertolucci's films activate such<br />

37


processes, even those such as The Tragedy <strong>of</strong> a Ridiculous Man which are not ostensibly<br />

categorizable as detective fiction.<br />

With regard to causality, Bordwell notes that film-makers can condition the ability <strong>of</strong><br />

viewers to formulate hypotheses and narrative expectations by using a suppressive narrative,<br />

or by using stories characterized by a persistence <strong>of</strong> causal gaps. He terms 'retardation' the<br />

principle by which a narrative delays 'the revelation <strong>of</strong> some information', (Bordwell, 1995:<br />

54-56). Bordwell categorizes narrative expositions into different types: preliminary<br />

expositions can occur at the beginning <strong>of</strong> films, Bordwell citing Hitchcock's Rear Window<br />

(1954) as an example; delayed expositions, which occur later in films; or concentrated<br />

expositions may be deployed within a detailed self-contained summary at a certain point in<br />

the film, (Bordwell, 1995: 56). Each exposition triggers 'different inferential activities on the<br />

part <strong>of</strong> the spectator'; for example, a delayed exposition arouses curiosity about prior events<br />

and can lead spectators to suspend their hypotheses about the prior and future developments<br />

<strong>of</strong> events (Bordwell, 1995: 56). This occurs in The Spider's Stratagem and Last Tango in<br />

Paris, given the lack <strong>of</strong> biographical information about the protagonists for viewers to digest.<br />

Bordwell examines how suppressive narratives can be obtained by manipulating time,<br />

space, and narrative logic, and in particular how the manipulation <strong>of</strong> time plays a crucial role<br />

in this process, He indicates the use <strong>of</strong> flashback, flash-forward, dilatation and reduction -<br />

either via compression or ellipsis as devices that are used to manipulate and re-arrange the<br />

fabula (Bordwell, 1995: 77). In tandem with other cognitive film research, for example<br />

scholarship such as Grodal's which also considers the emotional implications <strong>of</strong> different<br />

narrative structures, further light can be shed on the viewing experience elicited by films such<br />

as Bertolucci's The Conformist with their proliferation <strong>of</strong> flashbacks, an effect which reduces<br />

the future goal-orientation <strong>of</strong> the narrative and also conditions the viewer's<br />

affective/cognitive engagement with the developing action. As an example <strong>of</strong> time<br />

38


manipulation, Bordwell analyses the peculiar temporal construction <strong>of</strong> Bertolucci's The<br />

Spider's Stratagem, illustrating how this is achieved by the aesthetic construction <strong>of</strong> its<br />

flashbacks, whereas the narrative structure <strong>of</strong> Stratagem is an example <strong>of</strong> a suppressive<br />

narrative with its foregrounding <strong>of</strong> a permanent causal gap within the events <strong>of</strong> the story.<br />

Having discussed different modes <strong>of</strong> cinematic narration and established a distinction<br />

between the classical narration typical <strong>of</strong> Hollywood films and that <strong>of</strong> art cinema, Bordwell<br />

assesses how art cinema deviates from canonical narrative conventions such as linear chains<br />

<strong>of</strong> cause and effect, noting that its narratives tend to be less plot-driven and goal-oriented than<br />

Hollywood releases, the art film protagonist being 'presented as sliding passively from one<br />

situation to another' and following 'an itinerary which surveys the film's social world'<br />

(Bordwell, 1995: 207). Art films 'sharpen character delineation by impelling us to compare<br />

agents, attitudes and situations' and consequently the art film s attempt 'to pronounce<br />

judgments upon modern life and la condition humaine, depends upon its formal organization'<br />

(Bordwell, 1995: 207). Contemporary Italian cinema provides numerous examples <strong>of</strong> this<br />

form <strong>of</strong> narrative organization; the existential perspective <strong>of</strong> Ernesto, the artist protagonist <strong>of</strong><br />

Marco Bellocchio's L 'ora di religione/T)ie Religion Hour (2002) is repeatedly juxtaposed<br />

and contrasted with his relations' cynical attempts to obtain the beatification <strong>of</strong> Ernesto's late<br />

mother; his resistance to the sanctification process remains inevitably passive given that the<br />

institutional weight <strong>of</strong> the Catholic Church is pitted against him, manipulating his life path<br />

and, indeed, the entire telos <strong>of</strong> the film, with only Ernesto's subjectivity occasionally shaping<br />

the film's aesthetics and structure such as in the slowed down sequences in which he<br />

witnesses examples <strong>of</strong> the Church's anachronistic influence in 21 st century Rome.<br />

This study will explore the position occupied by Bertolucci's work towards the<br />

boundary between Hollywood-influenced styles <strong>of</strong> film-making and art cinema, examining<br />

the structures and aesthetics <strong>of</strong> art cinema which shape the viewer's emotional and cognitive<br />

39


engagement with the director's work. What Bordwell describes as 'the marked self-<br />

consciousness <strong>of</strong> art cinema narration', featuring moments 'in which the narrational act<br />

interrupts the transmission <strong>of</strong> fabula information and highlights its own role', in other words,<br />

moments 'that announce the power <strong>of</strong> the author to control what we know" mirrors<br />

Bertolucci's mode <strong>of</strong> film-making and the way it creates shifts between affective forms <strong>of</strong><br />

viewer engagement and a more distanced, intellectual form <strong>of</strong> reception during the director's<br />

more stylized moments (Bordwell, 1995: 209). Bertolucci's familiarity with canonical<br />

cinematic conventions and his ability to manipulate and subvert them is typified in films such<br />

as Tlie Spider's Stratagem, and this is a quality which emerges in much <strong>of</strong> his work; the<br />

application <strong>of</strong> suppressive narratives, the retardation <strong>of</strong> the disclosure <strong>of</strong> narrative<br />

information, and a recurring self-consciousness recur from his earliest work up to Jlie<br />

Dreamers.<br />

This study also draws on Edward Branigan's theories <strong>of</strong> narrative comprehension and<br />

reception, work which is based on cognitive psychology, narratology and linguistics<br />

(Branigan, 1992: xiii). Branigan describes the way our mental processes register sensory<br />

information from the world around us, recognizing and classifying this information for future<br />

use by organizing it into patterns, or schema, based on what we already know. (Branigan,<br />

1992: 13) He notes that 'a schema assigns probabilities to events and to parts <strong>of</strong> events. It<br />

may be thought <strong>of</strong> as a graded set <strong>of</strong> expectations about experience in a given domain',<br />

(Branigan, 1992: 13) and he asserts that a schema is used in our mental processes in order to<br />

recognize narrative patterns, such as in films. Again, a fusion <strong>of</strong> the affective and the<br />

cognitive emerges in the format that Branigan envisages for a standard narrative schema, with<br />

features such as an 'explanation <strong>of</strong> a state <strong>of</strong> affairs' early on, followed by an 'emotional<br />

response or statement <strong>of</strong> a goal by the protagonist', and finally an outcome plus 'reactions to<br />

the outcome' (Branigan, 1992: 14). However, Branigan admits that while the notion <strong>of</strong> a<br />

40


narrative schema clarifies how we organize information, it 'does not directly address such<br />

problems as a perceiver's fascination, emotional reaction or participation in a story'<br />

(Branigan, 1992:16). One <strong>of</strong> the objectives <strong>of</strong> this study is to investigate how emotional<br />

responses are occasionally derived - indirectly - from the frustration <strong>of</strong> the viewers'<br />

attempted schematization <strong>of</strong> Bertolucci's narratives, and also from a systematic analysis <strong>of</strong><br />

the aesthetics and visual techniques used by the director to engender emotional responses.<br />

Branigan also links narrative causality to human mental schemata, individuals<br />

evaluating the causes behind sequences <strong>of</strong> events in real life and those in fictional narratives<br />

on the basis <strong>of</strong> the 'relative likelihood 7 <strong>of</strong> particular events appearing together (Branigan,<br />

1992: 26). He argues that viewers perceive narrative events not only 'as a chain <strong>of</strong> causes and<br />

effects' linked together and triggered by local determinants, but viewers also draw upon their<br />

cultural knowledge in evaluating which actions are plausibly compatible with each other,<br />

given 'our general knowledge <strong>of</strong> social interaction' (Branigan, 1992: 27). Branigan uses a<br />

cognitive psychological distinction to differentiate the way we perceive what occurs on<br />

screen; one process, functioning in a 'bottom-up s direction, is centred on the data seen on<br />

screen, whose features are perceived and organized in terms <strong>of</strong> colour, motion, aural pitch,<br />

and other qualities, with the viewer 'utilizing little or no associated memory' during this<br />

process (Branigan, 1992: 37). By contrast, what he terms 'top-down' perceptual processes are<br />

based on the spectators acquired knowledge and mental schemas, and these work 'top-down'<br />

upon the screen data, using the spectator's expectations and goals as a way <strong>of</strong> organizing and<br />

making sense <strong>of</strong> what is seen; this leads to the making <strong>of</strong> hypotheses and the creation <strong>of</strong><br />

narrative expectations (Branigan, 1992: 37). The top-down process is facilitated or hindered<br />

by the way the story is presented - its 'narration'; certain forms <strong>of</strong> narration can complicate<br />

the procedure <strong>of</strong> 'acquiring knowledge' about the story (Branigan, 1992: 65).<br />

41


Branigan identifies several elements that manipulate the viewer's access to<br />

knowledge, notably the position <strong>of</strong> the camera, (Branigan, 1992: 67) the presence <strong>of</strong> a<br />

narrator whose knowledge <strong>of</strong> story events conditions the viewer's own acquisition <strong>of</strong><br />

knowledge, or the presence <strong>of</strong> an implied narrator, 'such as the implied author', who<br />

regulates the disclosure <strong>of</strong> story information (Branigan, 1992: 75). The film's style can also<br />

be important: 'In what ways do the stylistic devices [...] open up or constrain our abilities to<br />

acquire knowledge?' (Branigan, 1992: 76). Bertolucci's films consistently place constraints<br />

on the viewer's ability to fully reconstruct the stories, and the elements listed above can be<br />

traced in most <strong>of</strong> their styles and structures, with the exception <strong>of</strong> Little Buddha and Besieged<br />

where the linearity and unrestricted quality <strong>of</strong> the narration is accompanied by the marked<br />

presence <strong>of</strong> the director as an implicit narrator.<br />

By drawing on narratological concepts, Branigan also distinguishes between 'non-<br />

focalization' when an event's narration is limited to depict the action itself, and<br />

'internal/external focalization' when the narration includes a character's experience or<br />

thoughts; internal focalization occurs when a scene unfolds through a character's subjectivity,<br />

thought processes, and perceptions (Branigan, 1992: 102). During external focalization,<br />

viewers may still see what a character looks at, for example, but from a spatial position away<br />

from the character and outside the character's consciousness. Essentially, the character's<br />

subjectivity is integrated by another subjectivity; for example, the camera follows the<br />

character or waits for him, or the presence <strong>of</strong> the implied author may be tangible when higher<br />

implied levels <strong>of</strong> narration are in place (Branigan, 1992: 102-104). Branigan analyses Tfie<br />

Wrong Man by Alfred Hitchcock to illustrate how images and even music can belong to<br />

different levels <strong>of</strong> narration, (Branigan, 1992: 102-104) and a film such as Bertolucci's Last<br />

Tango in Paris, also features a musical score - featuring effects such as discordant string-<br />

based 'stingers' that are characteristic <strong>of</strong> thrillers or horror films - that is <strong>of</strong>ten conspicuous<br />

42


to the point <strong>of</strong> drawing the spectator's attention out <strong>of</strong> the diegetic film world, and creating a<br />

distanced engagement with the film as a constructed art form. This project will consider the<br />

ways in which, through visual and aural means, the viewer's engagement with Bertolucci's<br />

films shifts from a predominantly intra-diegetic emotional focus, fuelled by elements such as<br />

colour schemes and mise-en-scem, to more intellectual forms <strong>of</strong> engagement caused by<br />

moments when the director's presence is almost palpable.<br />

Brecht<br />

Another theoretical source used in this study to illuminate the cognitive and intellectual<br />

thought processes that are prompted during the viewing experience <strong>of</strong> Bertolucci's films, is<br />

Bertolt Brecht. Brecht considered the dramaturgy that derived from the Aristotelian theory <strong>of</strong><br />

catharsis 'the purging <strong>of</strong> the emotions through identification with the destiny which rules<br />

the hero's life' - (Benjamin, 1973:18) as politically repressive, because the process clouded a<br />

viewer's critical faculties. To overcome this phenomenon, he developed a theory <strong>of</strong> theatre<br />

that centred on removing the audience's identification with the characters, changing the<br />

relationship between the audience and the stage. He aimed to give theatre a pedagogical<br />

function, that <strong>of</strong> provoking self-reflection, and this would lead to a desire for social<br />

improvement by the acquisition <strong>of</strong> political awareness. Brecht called this 'epic theatre", and<br />

its approach was to interrupt the on-stage action by laying bare theatrical techniques and<br />

devices, including slogans in the stage decor, and projecting films on to the stage backdrop,<br />

for example. These interventions disrupted the illusion <strong>of</strong> the theatrical spectacle, and obliged<br />

the audience to adopt critical attitudes (Benjamin, 1973: 38). Having observed elements <strong>of</strong><br />

Chinese theatre, Brecht developed a technique which came to be known as the<br />

Verfremdungseffekt, that <strong>of</strong> aiming 'to make the incidents represented appear strange to the<br />

public', particularly through modes <strong>of</strong> stage acting (Willett, 1992: 136-37). The<br />

Verfremdungseffekt - a term translated as alienation effect, distancing effect or<br />

43


defamiliarization effect - was achieved in different ways: viewers could be addressed directly<br />

by actors, the third person could be used in dialogue, and settings could be stylized to remind<br />

viewers <strong>of</strong> the constructed nature <strong>of</strong> theatre, so that their attention would repeatedly shift<br />

from the fictional world towards more critical analyses <strong>of</strong> what was occurring on stage.<br />

Nevertheless, Brecht noted how, in Piscator's production <strong>of</strong> The Good Soldier<br />

Schweik, 'the spectator's empathy was not entirely rejected. The audience identifies itself<br />

with the actor as being an observer and accordingly develops his attitude <strong>of</strong> observing or<br />

looking on' (Willett, 1992: 91-93). Emotions in general were not discarded from Brecht's<br />

work, and music sometimes introduced a controlled form <strong>of</strong> affect that might lead reflection<br />

on the viewer's part. In the essay On the Use <strong>of</strong> Music in an Epic Theatre Brecht asserts that<br />

music 'made possible [...] "poetic theatre" ', emphasizing how, in The Threepenny Opera,<br />

'the musical items, which had the immediacy <strong>of</strong> a ballad, were <strong>of</strong> a reflective and moralizing<br />

nature', the criminal characters showing 'sometimes through the music itself, that their<br />

sensations, feelings and prejudices were the same as those <strong>of</strong> the average citizen' (Willett,<br />

1992: 84-85). Brecht warned against the mistake <strong>of</strong> supposing that epic theatre was bereft <strong>of</strong><br />

emotions; he asserted that emotions can be clarified during the course <strong>of</strong> performances, as<br />

long as the elicited emotions are not the sort that carry spectators away (Willett, 1992: 88).<br />

Having always been suspicious <strong>of</strong> theatrical productions based on audiences passively<br />

empathizing with a character's emotions, an aversion that was heightened by the hypnotic<br />

forms <strong>of</strong> theatre prevalent during Nazism, towards the end <strong>of</strong> his career, in the appendices to<br />

the 'Short Organum' (1954), Brecht showed an awareness <strong>of</strong> the way his theatre had thrived<br />

on interplay between the eliciting <strong>of</strong> an empathic understanding <strong>of</strong> a character s socio-<br />

economic circumstances and his work's more didactic elements (Mumford, 2009: 63). In the<br />

appendices, he reflects on many elements <strong>of</strong> epic theatre, noting that it had been 'too<br />

inflexibly opposed to the concept <strong>of</strong> the dramatic', and that its proponents had always taken it<br />

44


for granted, in a 'slightly hazardous way' that it would not turn 'into a scientific<br />

demonstration' (Willett, 1992: 276).<br />

In her study on Brecht, Meg Mumford adopts 'defamiliarization' as her preferred<br />

translation <strong>of</strong> the term Verfremdung, in relation to Brecht using the effect as a form <strong>of</strong><br />

political intervention against 'the familiar', in order to free socially conditioned phenomena<br />

from 'that stamp <strong>of</strong> familiarity which protects them against our grasp' and to elicit a more<br />

questioning attitude from spectators towards these social, economic and political 'givens'<br />

(Mumford, 2009: 61). Although recognizing the appropriateness <strong>of</strong> this terminology, my<br />

study will use the term 'distanciation', since - in a cinematic context - it appears more<br />

suitable to express the effect created by the devices that can be adopted to break viewers'<br />

absorption in stories and reawaken their awareness <strong>of</strong> the cinematic medium. Bertolucci<br />

transposed into some <strong>of</strong> his films Godard's configuration <strong>of</strong> the distanciation effect, which<br />

consisted <strong>of</strong> strategies such as the use <strong>of</strong> unconventional editing and techniques through<br />

which the cinematic illusion was broken, hi Partner Bertolucci incorporated an overt form <strong>of</strong><br />

Brechtian didacticism, whereas with regard to the directors work as a whole, this study<br />

illustrates how other elements in his films also retain a Brechtian influence, such as the lack<br />

<strong>of</strong> viewer identification with characters, the paratelic forms <strong>of</strong> narration that rarely centre on<br />

the defining <strong>of</strong>, and achievement <strong>of</strong>, a character's goals, the conspicuous presence <strong>of</strong> the<br />

camera, and the way that empathic phenomena rarely possess a cathartic function. It might be<br />

suggested that by essentially positioning the viewer in the role <strong>of</strong> observer, Bertolucci fulfils<br />

- in his own way - Brecht's instruction that 'acceptance or rejection <strong>of</strong> their [the characters']<br />

actions and utterances was meant to take place on a conscious plane, instead <strong>of</strong>, as hitherto, in<br />

the audience's subconscious' (Willett, 1992: 91). Moreover, the paradox that some <strong>of</strong><br />

Bertolucci's distancing devices arguably generate emotion in terms <strong>of</strong> aesthetic fascination,<br />

or by intensifying a film's mood, will also be discussed.<br />

45


Godard<br />

A link connecting Bertolucci's early work to the particular aesthetic <strong>of</strong> the Nouvelle Vague in<br />

general, and to Godard's work in particular, has been firmly established. This volume will<br />

examine the way Bertolucci incorporates this aesthetic in constructing the cognitive<br />

structures <strong>of</strong> his films. It will also differentiate between the approaches <strong>of</strong> the two film-<br />

makers, paying attention to the cultural situation in Italy while evaluating the significance <strong>of</strong><br />

the shifts <strong>of</strong> orientation in Bertolucci's artistic trajectory. In addition, by exploring a number<br />

<strong>of</strong> references, both explicit and implicit, to Godard's work in Bertolucci's later films - such<br />

as The Dreamers - it will be suggested that Bertolucci's admiration for his French mentor<br />

never ended. A brief initial overview <strong>of</strong> Godard's cinematic career will serve to clarify later<br />

in the study the extent <strong>of</strong> his influence on Bertolucci. As recounted in the book Godard on<br />

Godard, (Tom Milne, 1986) in the late 1950s, Godard was part <strong>of</strong> a group <strong>of</strong> intellectuals<br />

writing for the journal Cahiers du cinema who asserted that a director's ability to embrace<br />

and exploit the increasing sophistication <strong>of</strong> film technique was as important as social and<br />

artistic realism within a narrative (Michelson, 1986: vii-ix). hi 1956 Godard published an<br />

article, 'Montage, mon beau souci/Montage My Fine Care', in which he declared his<br />

fascination with the art <strong>of</strong> editing, and later he decided to engage with actual film-making,<br />

which he considered to be a continuation <strong>of</strong> his critical work in a different form (Roud, 1986:<br />

7-9). This was a perspective shared by other critics within the group, who, in 1959, released<br />

films that marked the beginning <strong>of</strong> the Nouvelle Vague.(I)<br />

Regarding Godard's film techniques, David Sterritt asserts that one <strong>of</strong> his hallmarks is<br />

the strategy <strong>of</strong> combining 'real images with eccentric editing strategies', <strong>of</strong> which 'the most<br />

widely noted was his use <strong>of</strong> jump cuts that catapult the action from one image to another<br />

without the smooth transitions'; this technique was deployed to disturb viewers, as Godard<br />

sought 'to portray our world in unfamiliar ways that stimulate active thought rather than<br />

46


passive emotionalism' (Sterritt, 1999: 12). Godard's intention to subvert traditional cinema is<br />

generally believed to be the stylistic mode through which he articulated his political intention<br />

to criticize modern society and its mass media 7 (Sterritt, 1999: 20-21). For Douglas Morrey,<br />

the most important vehicle <strong>of</strong> Godard's criticism <strong>of</strong> society is represented by dialogue, the<br />

recurrent use <strong>of</strong> the interview format, and voiceover commentaries which <strong>of</strong>ten become meta-<br />

commentaries performed by Godard himself. (2) This verbal component can be read as the<br />

most prominent element <strong>of</strong> the Brechtian lesson that Godard transposes into cinema. Morrey<br />

argues that Brecht's distanciation techniques are deployed in Vivre sa vie (1962) in the format<br />

<strong>of</strong> twelve tableaux, an approach confirmed by Godard himself (Morrey, 2005: 39), and<br />

further examples <strong>of</strong> such techniques are found in 2 on 3 choses que je sais d'elle, (1967) for<br />

example, when characters directly address the camera, and when unusual frame compositions<br />

accompanied by commentaries draw attention to the artifice <strong>of</strong> the film-making process.<br />

The educational function that Godard wanted for his cinema reached its peak in the<br />

collective films in which he participated, films which also exemplified an orthodox Marxist-<br />

Leninist approach. Critical responses to Godard's voiceover commentaries were mixed,<br />

Morrey referencing and implicitly endorsing Sterritt's view regarding the scene in Week-end<br />

(1967) where 'the extraordinarily long and didactic political speeches delivered by two<br />

garbage men' arguably marks the point 'where the spectator's patience runs out' (Sterritt in<br />

Morrey, 2005: 76). As regards Godard's involvement in collective film-making with the<br />

Dziga Vertov Group, and the project's aims and implied audiences, Morrey asserts that while<br />

it is understandable that films like Pravda (1970) with their 'relentless onslaught <strong>of</strong> Marxist-<br />

Leninist analysis' were aimed 'at specific groups <strong>of</strong> committed militant activists', it is also<br />

true that they 'missed a crucial political opportunity' to address a wider audience in the<br />

vibrant political ambience <strong>of</strong> post-1968 France (Morrey, 2005: 94-95). The notion <strong>of</strong><br />

producing films for an extremely narrow implied audience - for an elite political vanguard in<br />

47


essence, and failing to sensitize larger cross-sections <strong>of</strong> the population - was a problem that<br />

eventually forced Godard to reconsider his position regarding emotions in cinema.<br />

In discussing the inclusion, for the first time in Godard's work, <strong>of</strong> extended depictions<br />

<strong>of</strong> landscapes - namely those <strong>of</strong> Switzerland - Morrey draws attention to Godard's own<br />

affirmations which suggest that 'his new appreciation for nature need by no means exclude<br />

analytical or political thinking', the director using landscapes in Sauve qui pent (le vie) to<br />

create stark contrasts and juxtapositions between Nature and the 'contaminating influence <strong>of</strong><br />

capital" (Morrey, 2005: 137). This mode <strong>of</strong> film-making, drawing on aesthetics, affect, and<br />

notions <strong>of</strong> the sensual as a means <strong>of</strong> sensitizing viewers to the socio-political questions<br />

underpinning a film, is an approach that Bertolucci had been using since TJie Spider's<br />

Strategem (and arguably earlier) and this particular use <strong>of</strong> landscapes re-emerges in other<br />

films such as The Tragedy <strong>of</strong> a Ridiculous Man and Stealing Beauty. My study will explore<br />

how landscapes and other facets <strong>of</strong> the mise-en-scene <strong>of</strong> Bertolucci's films are designed to<br />

elicit an affective engagement from spectators that almost always goes beyond the purely<br />

sensory in order to engage the intellect.<br />

Godard's ten year project, Histoire(s) du cinema (1988-1998). which 'seeks to tell the<br />

(hi)story <strong>of</strong> cinema by editing together hundred <strong>of</strong> images from film history' (Morrey, 2005:<br />

220) arguably constitutes another parallel with Bertolucci's own career trajectory, casting<br />

light on Bertolucci's incorporation <strong>of</strong> classic film clips in TJie Dreamers and this, it will be<br />

argued, is the basis <strong>of</strong> the sort <strong>of</strong> cognitive engagement that the film is designed to elicit from<br />

viewers. In conclusion, Godard's status <strong>of</strong> being highly regarded critically but remaining the<br />

preserve <strong>of</strong> relatively narrow cross-sections <strong>of</strong> cinephiles, is encapsulated in Morrey's final<br />

assertion that Godard's cinema 'is cinema as philosophy', and that he uses cinema as 'a<br />

machine for thinking, for propelling thought' (Morrey, 2005: 242). In my opinion, this<br />

definition serves to establish a distinction between Godard and Bertolucci, separating<br />

48


Godard's approach from Bertolucci's career trajectory not just in terms <strong>of</strong> Bertolucci's shift<br />

in cinematic orientation in the late 1960s which derived from his eagerness for broader<br />

pr<strong>of</strong>essional and artistic recognition, but also through the director's fascination with the<br />

notion <strong>of</strong> the cinematic "spectacle', particularly after the international success <strong>of</strong> Last Tango<br />

in Paris. This approach to cinema ensured that Bertolucci's films explored and exploited<br />

cinema's aesthetic and formal potential while never losing sight <strong>of</strong> the pressing social,<br />

political and personal issues affecting the Western world in the late 20th century.<br />

Affective Theory<br />

This volume will outline how Bertolucci's films possess a notable affective resonance, but<br />

that the kinds <strong>of</strong> emotions likely to be experienced by viewers are rarely elicited via<br />

traditional means such as close visual and psychological attachments to sympathetic<br />

protagonists or by the use <strong>of</strong> music to 'amplify' the emotions <strong>of</strong> characters. Grodal's<br />

reference to the importance <strong>of</strong> body posture, body language and the facial expressions <strong>of</strong><br />

characters as 'innate and therefore transcultural" means <strong>of</strong> cueing emotions from viewers,<br />

(Grodal, 1997: 90) is echoed in essays by Berys Gaut and Carl Plantinga. Gaut outlines two<br />

modes <strong>of</strong> viewer attachment to screen characters:<br />

Imaginative identification (imaginarily putting oneself in another's position), which is in turn<br />

subdivided into perceptual, affective, motivational, epistemic, and perhaps other forms <strong>of</strong><br />

identification; and on the other hand, empathic identification, which requires one actually to share the<br />

character's (fictional) emotions because <strong>of</strong> one's imaginarily projecting oneself into the character's<br />

situation (Gaut, 1999:208).<br />

Gaut's discussion <strong>of</strong> techniques such as the use <strong>of</strong> POV shots to facilitate perceptual and<br />

epistemic (an awareness/knowledge <strong>of</strong> the extent <strong>of</strong> events in the world <strong>of</strong> the film)<br />

identification sheds light, for example, on the nature <strong>of</strong> the viewing experience generated by<br />

the voyeuristic POV sequence towards the beginning <strong>of</strong> Bertolucci's Stealing Beauty (Gaut,<br />

49


1999: 208-209). The critic's analyses <strong>of</strong> the impact <strong>of</strong> facial reaction shots in terms <strong>of</strong><br />

triggering empathic identification in The Silence <strong>of</strong> the Lambs are also a valid starting point<br />

for this study's examination <strong>of</strong> the uncomfortable emotional engagement induced by reaction<br />

shots in films such as The Conformist and 1900.<br />

Carl Plantinga argues that facial expressions 'not only communicate emotion, but also<br />

elicit, clarify, and strengthen affective response - especially empathetic response' because<br />

viewing human faces can 'elicit response through the processes <strong>of</strong> affective mimicry, facial<br />

feedback and emotional contagion' (Plantinga, 1999: 240). Emotional contagion might be<br />

found in Giuseppe Tornatore's Cinema Paradiso (1988) in the scenes set in a cinema in the<br />

1940s; it occurs both intra-diegetically as the spectators weep with the protagonists <strong>of</strong> the<br />

melodramas they watch, and also possibly - extra-diegetically, as viewers will find it<br />

difficult not to respond to the close-ups <strong>of</strong> the screen protagonists in the melodrama and <strong>of</strong><br />

the tearful cinema audience.(3) Plantinga also observes that 'many films feature a kind <strong>of</strong><br />

scene in which the pace <strong>of</strong> the narrative momentarily slows and the interior emotional<br />

experience <strong>of</strong> a favoured character becomes the locus <strong>of</strong> attention'; he terms this 'the scene <strong>of</strong><br />

empathy' which, unlike simple reaction shots, can feature the character's face in close-up<br />

'either for a single shot <strong>of</strong> long duration or as an element <strong>of</strong> a point-<strong>of</strong>-view structure<br />

alternating between shots <strong>of</strong> the character's face and shots <strong>of</strong> what she or he sees' (Plantinga,<br />

1999: 239). Such longer, nuanced sequences clearly condition the emotional ambience <strong>of</strong> a<br />

film, as can be discerned in the sequence <strong>of</strong> Pr<strong>of</strong>essor Quadri's murder in Tlie Confonnist.<br />

Greg M. Smith has also examined the nature <strong>of</strong> film emotions, and he accepts the<br />

cognitivist approach that emotions are a 'structured complement to cognitive processes', and<br />

that emotions motivate people to realize their objectives, providing individuals with an<br />

impetus to act that rational reflection also does not generate (Smith G., 1999: 103). However,<br />

he indicates limits in the way cognitive theories - with their mechanisms that centre on<br />

50


characters being stimulated into taking action to achieve goals - overlook subtle yet<br />

important elements <strong>of</strong> the emotion system such as moods: 'These less intense states are as<br />

vital to understanding filmic emotion as are more prototypical emotions' (Smith G., 1999:<br />

104). He proposes a theory that takes into account the function <strong>of</strong> film style and aesthetics in<br />

generating filmic emotion, an approach that differs from that <strong>of</strong> Grodal and Carroll who<br />

imply 1 that filmic emotions are principally based around characters establishing goals and<br />

trying to achieve them. Smith asserts that filmic emotion is not necessarily goal/action<br />

oriented:<br />

Emotion states can have nondirected expression (like depression) and can be elicited by extremely<br />

diffUse stimuli (like a sunny day). If I feel happy because it is a sunny day, my emotion has a cause, but<br />

the 'object' (everything surrounding me) is too diffuse to be an object in any strongly meaningful sense<br />

(Smith G., 1999: 106).<br />

It follows that a cognitivist approach to the generation <strong>of</strong> emotion in real life and on screen is<br />

less convincing in explaining states <strong>of</strong> melancholy and depression; 'If I am so depressed that<br />

I am immobile, it is difficult to view such an emotional, self-perpetuating state as being an<br />

"action tendency" toward a goal' (Smith G., 1999: 106). Because moods are 'a longer-lasting<br />

but less forceful emotion' within a film, their 'longevity helps make them a crucial part <strong>of</strong> the<br />

emotion system' (Smith G., 1999: 113) as they 'prepare us to express and experience<br />

emotion' (Smith G., 1999: 115).<br />

Smith adds that once a mood has been developed it is <strong>of</strong>ten 'bolstered by occasional<br />

bursts <strong>of</strong> emotion' that he labels 'emotion markers', the critic illustrating his theory by<br />

discussing sequences from Raiders <strong>of</strong> the Lost Ark where a mood <strong>of</strong> apprehensive suspense is<br />

periodically reinforced by visual and aural cues such as facial close-ups <strong>of</strong> fearful expressions<br />

and musical 'stingers' (Smith G., 1999: 117-118). The notion is also relevant to the more<br />

nuanced approaches <strong>of</strong> art cinema, examples <strong>of</strong> which can be seen within contemporary<br />

Italian film-making. Cipri and Maresco's Toto che visse due voltelToto Who Lived Twice<br />

51


(1998) articulates its discourse <strong>of</strong> the Italian state's socio-economic abandonment <strong>of</strong> Sicily's<br />

most deprived areas by developing a mood <strong>of</strong> desolation that emanates from the directors'<br />

decision to film in black and white, from their extended duration extreme long shots <strong>of</strong><br />

isolated, ragged individuals standing in wasteland, and from an absence <strong>of</strong> soundtrack music.<br />

Cipri and Maresco's 'emotion markers' are <strong>of</strong>ten predicated on the comic grotesque, in<br />

particular on the cruelty inflicted on vulnerable individuals, and this reinforces the film's<br />

mood <strong>of</strong> wretched hopelessness.<br />

Smith's view that film style is fundamental for creating mood is significant for my<br />

study, since it will identify how elements <strong>of</strong> Bertolucci's mises-en-scene, particularly his<br />

colour schemes and lighting, are designed to engender moods reflecting either a character's<br />

predominant emotion or the director's implied perspective. This aesthetic approach to<br />

producing a somewhat distanced form <strong>of</strong> emotion, rather than using mechanisms to elicit<br />

strong attachments from viewers towards characters, is the key to understanding the peculiar<br />

nature <strong>of</strong> the affective charge to be found in Bertolucci's films. Often, the 'emotion markers'<br />

that sustain and intensify the moods <strong>of</strong> his films do not engender increased concern from<br />

viewers for the protagonist's welfare. This is because the sense <strong>of</strong> 'subjectivity' that emerges<br />

in Bertolucci's work is <strong>of</strong>ten that <strong>of</strong> Bertolucci himself as the implied author - a constant<br />

presence towards which the viewer's own subjectivity and self-awareness as an individual<br />

engaging with pieces <strong>of</strong> cinematic artifice, gravitates.<br />

Notes<br />

1. On p. 106 <strong>of</strong> his book Godard on Godard, Tom Milne lists the films released - or still being worked on<br />

- in 1959 by the Cahiers group: Godard's A bout de souffle: Truffaut's Les quatre cents coups;<br />

Rohmer s Le sign du lion; Rivette's Paris nous apartient; Chabrol's A double tour; Franju's La tete<br />

contre les murs; Resnais's Hiroshima man amour.<br />

2. Morrey discusses Godard's use <strong>of</strong> this element in exploring questions such as reality and language in<br />

Le petit soldat (p. 33); words and their meanings in Vivre sa vie (p .44); 'the conditions <strong>of</strong> possibility <strong>of</strong><br />

52


apolitical art' in La Chinoise (p. 56); consumer capitalism in 2 on 3 chases gueje sais d'elle (pp. 69-<br />

70); the 'disgust at industrial Capitalism' in Weekend (p. 76). In the collective film Pravda, made<br />

under the name <strong>of</strong> the Dziga Vertov Group, the voiceover commentaries, both by characters and<br />

Godard himself, are one <strong>of</strong> the main devices to elicit reflection on socio-political issues (pp. 91-95).<br />

3. See the analysis in William Hope, Giuseppe Tornatore: Emotion, Cognition, Cinema (2006),<br />

Newcastle: Cambridge Scholars Press, p. 53.<br />

References<br />

Benjamin, W. (1966) Understanding Brecht, translated from German by Bostock, A., (ed.<br />

1973), London: NLB<br />

Bordwell, D. (1995) Narration in the Fiction Film, London: Routledge<br />

Branigan, E. (1992) Narrative Comprehension and Film, London and New York: Routledge<br />

Carroll, N. (1999) 'Film, Emotion and Genre', in Plantinga, C. and Smith, G. (ed.)<br />

Passionate Views, Baltimore: The John Hopkins <strong>University</strong> Press<br />

Gaut, B. (1999) 'Identification and Emotion in Narrative Film 7 , in Plantinga, C. and Smith,<br />

G. (ed.) Passionate Views, Baltimore: The John Hopkins <strong>University</strong> Press<br />

Gorbman, C. (1987) Unheard Melodies, London: BFI Publishing<br />

Grodal, T. (1997) Moving Pictures, Oxford: Oxford <strong>University</strong> Press<br />

Grodal, T. (1999) 'Emotions, Cognitions, and Narrative Patterns in Film', in Plantinga, C.<br />

and Smith, G. (ed.) Passionate Views, Baltimore: The John Hopkins <strong>University</strong> Press<br />

Michelson, A. (1986) 'Foreword', in Tom Milne, Godard on Godard, New York: Da Capo<br />

Press<br />

Milne, T. (ed.) (1986) Godard on Godard, translation from French by Milne, T., New York:<br />

Da Capo Press<br />

Morrey, D. (2005) Jean-Luc Godard, Manchester: Manchester <strong>University</strong> Press<br />

Mumford, M. (2009) Bertolt Brecht, London and New York: Routledge<br />

Plantinga, C. (1999) 'The Scene <strong>of</strong> Empathy and the Human Face on Film", in Plantinga, C.<br />

and Smith, G. (ed.) Passionate Views, Baltimore: The John Hopkins <strong>University</strong> Press<br />

Roud, R. (1986) 'Introduction', in Tom Milne Godard on Godard, New York: Da Capo Press<br />

Smith, G. M. (1999) 'Local Emotions, Global Mood, and Film Structure', in Plantinga, C.<br />

and Smith, G. (ed.) Passionate Views, Baltimore: The John Hopkins <strong>University</strong> Press<br />

Smith, M. (1995) Engaging Characters, Oxford: Oxford <strong>University</strong> Press<br />

Sterritt, D. (1999) The Films <strong>of</strong> Jean-Luc Godard: Seeing the Invisible, Cambridge:<br />

Cambridge <strong>University</strong> Press<br />

53


Willett, J. (ed.) Brecht on Theatre, translation from German by Willett, J., (ed. 1992) London:<br />

Methuen Drama<br />

54


SECTION 1; Pessimism and Melancholia<br />

The Grim Reaper (1962), Before the Revolution (1964), Tlw Spider's Stratagem (1970), The<br />

Tragedy <strong>of</strong> a Ridiculous Man (1981).<br />

These four films are linked by their cognitive and affective structures and by a similar socio­<br />

political remit. With their fragmented - and sometimes cryptic - narratives, startling visuals,<br />

and socio-political sensitivity, the films were intentionally addressed to an implied audience<br />

who were arguably well versed in the aesthetics <strong>of</strong> cinema and in leftist political ideology.<br />

The films' cognitive structures are based on paratelic narrations, including Stratagem, whose<br />

initial telic strand focusing on the quest to identify Athos Senior's murderer, is soon<br />

overtaken by the more paratelic, process-oriented facets <strong>of</strong> the narration. All the films draw<br />

on detective movie conventions, in particular by featuring suppressive and distributed<br />

narrations which obstruct the viewers' activities <strong>of</strong> hypothesis making and <strong>of</strong> creating<br />

expectations, hi this context, the use <strong>of</strong> noir conventions, such as starting a film from a point<br />

close to its narrative conclusion, or with a past tense narration, serves to establish a<br />

deterministic narrative quality and imply a descriptive mode <strong>of</strong> representation. The<br />

flashbacks in The Grim Reaper and in Stratagem <strong>of</strong>ten have the function <strong>of</strong> manipulating the<br />

reality status <strong>of</strong> the sequences by blurring the contours between subjectivity and objectivity,<br />

thus giving the narratives an oneiric quality, hi addition, Tlte Grim Reaper and Before the<br />

Revolution are characterized by elements <strong>of</strong> the Nouvelle Vague style, which expose elements<br />

<strong>of</strong> the cinematic process. All the films feature techniques, such as Bertolucci's conspicuous<br />

use <strong>of</strong> the camera as an extra-diegetic narrator, unnatural lighting, calculatedly stylized<br />

sequences, and non-mimetic editing, which aim to create an ongoing awareness on the<br />

spectator's part <strong>of</strong> the cinematic medium and <strong>of</strong> the author's presence, thereby privileging<br />

cognitive and intellectual modes <strong>of</strong> viewer engagement.<br />

55


In terms <strong>of</strong> the affective engagement that is elicited from spectators, the films are<br />

notable for a probable lack <strong>of</strong> viewer allegiance towards characters, with only occasional and<br />

transient empathic phenomena occurring towards protagonists. By contrast, the films' mises-<br />

en-scene create a mood <strong>of</strong> melancholia connected to the pessimistic worldview underpinning<br />

their narratives. The films express a sense <strong>of</strong> disillusionment towards the state <strong>of</strong> Italy's<br />

political left, whose leaders were guilty <strong>of</strong> a reformism that had sidetracked people's<br />

aspirations for a different social order. In this context, a number <strong>of</strong> stylistic and thematic<br />

analogies between The Grim Reaper and Salvatore Giuliano by Francesco Rosi, and between<br />

Before the Revolution and the films Red Desert by Michelangelo Antonioni, and Fists in the<br />

Pockets/Ipugni in tasca by Marco Bellocchio, will be discussed.<br />

56


La commare secca/The Grim Reaper: An Exercise in Style<br />

During a period <strong>of</strong> their lives, the families <strong>of</strong> Bernardo Bertolucci and Pier Paolo Pasolini<br />

lived in the same building in Rome and established a friendship that extended to pr<strong>of</strong>essional<br />

collaborations. Pasolini invited Bertolucci to participate in his first cinematic work Accattone<br />

(1961) as assistant director (Gili, 1978: 109) and in 1962, Bertolucci released his debut film<br />

La commare secca/The Grim Reaper, it was based on a story by Pasolini, and Bertolucci and<br />

Pasolini wrote the screenplay with Sergio Citti who had been Pasolini's main collaborator for<br />

Accattone. These elements, combined with the fact that Pasolini was such an acclaimed<br />

intellectual, led to The Grim Reaper being categorized as a variation <strong>of</strong> Accattone with little<br />

distinctive input from Bertolucci. Francesco Casetti's review represents an exception to this<br />

dismissive response, as he recognizes differences in both the film's social approach and style<br />

(Casetti, 1978: 35). His evaluation is shared by this chapter which outlines the way in which<br />

Tlie Grim Reaper, although overlapping with Pasolini's work, presents a different socio­<br />

political perspective within a style blending neorealist aesthetics, Nouvelle Vague<br />

conventions, and structures and visual traits from detective movies and film noir. These<br />

influences are framed within the director's idiosyncratic use <strong>of</strong> the camera and editing, all <strong>of</strong><br />

which make the film a stylistic exercise which has maintained an aura <strong>of</strong> originality.<br />

The elements <strong>of</strong> Accattone that emerge in The Grim Reaper range from the<br />

underlying question <strong>of</strong> the struggle <strong>of</strong> marginalized individuals to survive, to three narrative<br />

details depicting violence towards a prostitute, the organization <strong>of</strong> a group meal, and a thief s<br />

death during an attempted escape. By contrast, Tlie Grim Reaper is not centred on a specific<br />

character, and does not have a linear narrative. Additionally, it cannot convincingly be<br />

categorized as a choral film in the sense <strong>of</strong> a substantial number <strong>of</strong> characters interacting<br />

within the same environment, their interaction generating narrative momentum. The<br />

57


connection between the characters in The Grim Reaper is limited to their presence in a park<br />

around the time <strong>of</strong> a prostitute's murder, the narrative returning to square one each time a<br />

new character is introduced. In addition, the depiction <strong>of</strong> each character's life (apart from<br />

Francolicchio) is so transitory that they resemble fragments <strong>of</strong> humanity who are sporadically<br />

highlighted before sinking back into social oblivion. Hence the film's difference from<br />

Accattone lies in its implied socio-political orientation, a perspective that dispassionately<br />

depicts the socio-culrural alienation caused by the Italian post-war economic boom, and<br />

which distances The Grim Reaper from Pasolini's compassion towards the 'sub-proletariat'.<br />

In The Grim Reaper, the landscape also seems bereft <strong>of</strong> any synergy with the characters who<br />

inhabit it, Bertolucci preferring a more distant and stylized representation that directs the<br />

visual experience towards a more descriptive mode.<br />

Plot summary<br />

From The Grim Reaper onwards, Bertolucci established the custom <strong>of</strong> giving viewers clues<br />

about a film's topics - and thereby setting in motion cognitive forms <strong>of</strong> viewer engagement -<br />

by presenting key information within its opening credits. In Tlte Grim Reaper this consists <strong>of</strong><br />

images <strong>of</strong> a distant, unwelcoming city situated beyond a huge bridge at the forefront <strong>of</strong> the<br />

frame, filmed from a low angle. Torn newspaper pages float down towards an eroded river<br />

bank, where a woman's corpse - identifiable as a prostitute by a 1960s audience - lies. The<br />

film starts with the interrogation <strong>of</strong> the first <strong>of</strong> five suspects, whose explanations about their<br />

circumstances differ from the visual re-enactment <strong>of</strong> them, constructed through flashbacks.<br />

The detective is heard in voiceover and never shown. Each re-enactment is introduced by<br />

repeated images <strong>of</strong> the prostitute's daily routine as she gets ready for work. Within this<br />

framework, the murder merely functions as a mechanism to depict the lives <strong>of</strong> marginalized<br />

people living in Rome's anonymous outskirts, so that the re-enactments form the real body <strong>of</strong><br />

58


the film. Several <strong>of</strong> the suspects are youngsters: Canticchia is part <strong>of</strong> a gang <strong>of</strong> thieves;<br />

Cosentino is a simple southerner, doing his military service in Rome where he naively tries to<br />

approach local girls, before being overwhelmed by Rome's architecture. There are Pipito and<br />

Francolicchio, who steal from a homosexual man whom they encounter in a park to buy food<br />

for a meal that they have organized with two girls. But in attempting to escape the police<br />

Francolicchio dives into a stretch <strong>of</strong> water and drowns. Two older men are also questioned.<br />

Bustelli is a known thief-turned-gigolo, and is currently 'kept' by Esperia, an aggressive loan<br />

shark. The other man comes from Friuli (Pasolinrs native region <strong>of</strong> north-east Italy) and the<br />

noise <strong>of</strong> his wooden clogs had caught Cosentino's attention, the youngster recalling the way<br />

he ran suspiciously out <strong>of</strong> the park; the noise is also recalled by the homosexual man who<br />

happened to witness the murder. The film ends with the man helping the police to arrest the<br />

murderer, the Friulian betrayed again by the sound <strong>of</strong> his clogs.<br />

Adherence to and divergence from Neorealism<br />

Mark Shiel's study <strong>of</strong> Italian Neorealism shed lights on its legacy in The Grim Reaper and<br />

also on how the film moves away from this influence. He discusses Neorealism's stylistic<br />

elements like location filming, 'where the camera could fully engage with physical and social<br />

reality', and its 'documentary-like objectivity which derived mainly from an adherence to<br />

the real-time duration <strong>of</strong> actions (Shiel, 2006: 1-10). These hallmarks generally characterize<br />

Bertolucci's film, although there are exceptions. One regards the location filming used in the<br />

sequence <strong>of</strong> Cosentino roaming the streets <strong>of</strong> Rome, as the scene takes on Nouvelle Vague<br />

characteristics such as jolting the narrative's realism by accentuating the camera's presence,<br />

and featuring unusual editing patterns. In particular, the sequence's combination <strong>of</strong> speeded-<br />

up images, silent, and linked by rapid, repeated cuts, recalls the visuals <strong>of</strong> Godard's A bout de<br />

souffle (1959).(1) Another exception regards temporal realism, this undergoing an alteration<br />

through frequent flashbacks which condition the narrative structure after each suspect's<br />

59


statement and its visual re-enactment. This sends the viewer's attention back to the start <strong>of</strong><br />

the main sequence <strong>of</strong> narrative events which is represented by images depicting the rain seen<br />

from inside the prostitute's room as she goes about her daily routine. As a consequence,<br />

while viewers are cognitively stimulated by the film's ongoing cinematic techniques, their<br />

impression <strong>of</strong> the real-time duration <strong>of</strong> the film is disrupted and a dreamlike sensation is<br />

cued, an effect resembling the strategy adopted by Akira Kurosawa for Rashomon (1951).(2)<br />

However, this cinematic device is inserted within a broader form <strong>of</strong> cognitive<br />

engagement elicited from viewers towards the film, this being achieved through the noir<br />

strategies <strong>of</strong> creating a strong deterministic narration by showing the prostitute's corpse at the<br />

beginning <strong>of</strong> the film, by using flashbacks that mainly evoke particular environments rather<br />

than being purpose-oriented towards the identification <strong>of</strong> the murderer, and by using the<br />

detective's voiceover to link the sequences. All these elements in The Grim Reaper reflect the<br />

classic noir narrative structure <strong>of</strong> retracing the events leading up to a protagonist's undoing,<br />

and they replicate the emotional sense <strong>of</strong> doomed inevitability that permeates such narratives.<br />

Consequently, the viewers' mental formulation <strong>of</strong> narrative hypotheses concerning the story's<br />

development and outcome are significantly curtailed. A similar strategy characterizes<br />

Francesco Rosi's Salvatore Giuliano from the same year. The first sequence also shows a<br />

corpse, that <strong>of</strong> the bandit; the narration follows a non-linear structure with long evocative<br />

flashbacks, and the narrative links are similarly assigned to a narrator's voiceover, in this case<br />

Rosi himself. In Rosi's film, after Giuliano's body is featured at the outset, the film is then<br />

structured around Rosi's firm, guiding voiceover; the story's key elements are well known to<br />

Italian audiences, and the use <strong>of</strong> a realist style and documentary images add a concrete<br />

factuality to the film that leaves viewers little freedom to mentally reconstruct the story on<br />

their own terms.<br />

By contrast, the style used in The Grim Reaper makes greater use <strong>of</strong> noir conventions<br />

60


to reduce realism in favour <strong>of</strong> an ambiguous, dreamlike atmosphere. These characteristics are<br />

visible in the mise-en-scene <strong>of</strong> the police interrogation, for which the set is reduced to two<br />

bare walls, only partially framed, to indicate an unadorned room. The decor is limited to a<br />

single chair which is filmed with the suspects already seated; the back wall is behind them,<br />

which, being at a short distance from the camera, cues a sense <strong>of</strong> constriction. The suspects<br />

occasionally look towards the wall on the left side <strong>of</strong> the screen, inducing viewers to locate<br />

the detective's presence within this <strong>of</strong>fscreen space; his voice represents the only link<br />

between the different stories, thus functioning as a voiceover commentary. The suspects are<br />

illuminated by low key lighting that makes<br />

them emerge from the room's semi-darkness,<br />

and emphasizes their uneasy isolation (see<br />

image).(3) These visual restrictions cast a<br />

notably subjective quality onto the images<br />

(Branigan, 1992: 76). At the same time the mise-en-scene''s incomplete frame composition<br />

(concerning where and how the detective is positioned) immediately sensitizes viewers to the<br />

visual selection process in Bertolucci's film-making. The repetitive frontal framing scheme<br />

for each passive suspect cancels any expectation <strong>of</strong> diegetic action, and reinforces the role <strong>of</strong><br />

viewers as observers; the overall effect is one <strong>of</strong> stylization, <strong>of</strong> cinema articulated through a<br />

conspicuous directorial presence, an approach which establishes a tendency in Bertolucci's<br />

films to distance viewers emotionally from diegetic events.<br />

Another <strong>of</strong> the devices designed to reduce the quotient <strong>of</strong> realism in Tlie Grim Reaper<br />

and elicit a more distanced engagement with the onscreen events is the ingenious exploitation<br />

<strong>of</strong> natural light which is visible in the depictions <strong>of</strong> the city's built-up areas. This is achieved<br />

by filming buildings while they are frontally illuminated, with the result that shadows are<br />

eliminated; <strong>of</strong>ten, the light's intensity is such that it blurs the edges <strong>of</strong> the buildings, making<br />

61


them seem weightless. This technique is applied whenever the urban landscape is framed in<br />

the background, at a distance from the diegetic action. In these sequences the frame<br />

composition has three horizontal planes: the blurred skyline <strong>of</strong> the urban landscape in the<br />

background, the river in the middle ground, and, in focus in the foreground, the urban<br />

neighbourhood near the river bank where the socially excluded try to make ends meet.<br />

Therefore, the lighting not only marks a physical distance between the city, with its potential<br />

for individuals to improve their lives, and the peripheries with their hopeless decay and<br />

neglect, but it also endows the images with symbolic meaning, implying that the illuminated<br />

city is an unreachable mirage for the sub-proletariat. With regard to Rome's historical<br />

landscape, intense natural light is featured during the Cosentino episode, during which<br />

buildings, walls, and fields emerge as fragmented impressions that evoke Cosentino's<br />

unfamiliarity with the environment, as well as reinforcing a sense <strong>of</strong> loneliness. In both<br />

situations the use <strong>of</strong> light cues a form <strong>of</strong> intellectual compassion towards the characters<br />

because it emphasizes their fragility in the midst <strong>of</strong> an indifferent society; however, a more<br />

intimate emotional attachment from viewers to characters is not elicited.<br />

The plight <strong>of</strong> such individuals, although represented by Bertolucci more subtly than<br />

by his predecessors, links Tlie Grim Reaper to what might be termed the second stream <strong>of</strong><br />

neorealist cinema, which - as Shiel explains - saw a 'shift <strong>of</strong> emphasis from solidarity to<br />

disconnection in the relationship between the protagonist <strong>of</strong> the neorealist film and his urban<br />

milieu' due to changes in the economic climate which transformed Italian society from one<br />

'in which austerity breeds community' into one in which 'increased affluence breaks it down*<br />

(Shiel, 2006: 78). The symbolism inherent in two other scenes reinforces this impression; an<br />

argument breaks out between the gigolo, Bustelli, and his partner about her financial<br />

difficulties, a sequence that is endowed with visual irony on account <strong>of</strong> its background - a<br />

wall plastered with magazine covers celebrating the lives <strong>of</strong> the nouveaux riches. Similarly, a<br />

62


giant publicity poster for the aperitif Cinzano, another symbol <strong>of</strong> this new lifestyle, is<br />

conspicuous at the roadside where the prostitute works. These self-conscious directorial<br />

insertions underline the characters' total non-involvement in the country's new economic<br />

wealth and urban lifestyle, in which consumerism was becoming prevalent.<br />

The insertion <strong>of</strong> cinematic innovation<br />

Bertolucci's divergence from other stylistic elements <strong>of</strong> neorealism, such as its 'free moving<br />

documentary style <strong>of</strong> photography', its 'non-interventionist approach to film directing' and an<br />

'avoiding <strong>of</strong> complex editing', (Shiel, 2006: 1-2) reflects the director's eagerness to<br />

experiment with the modes <strong>of</strong> film-making emerging from France, techniques that privileged<br />

the visibility <strong>of</strong> cinematic devices. This tendency emerges from Bertolucci's idiosyncratic<br />

camera use and from forms <strong>of</strong> editing based on space-time ellipses, which, besides sustaining<br />

a predominantly descriptive aesthetic, ensure that viewers are constantly aware <strong>of</strong> the artifice<br />

<strong>of</strong> the cinematic medium. This process is exemplified in several sequences; unconventional<br />

camera movement and editing occur in the scene where Francolicchio gives his comb to the<br />

homosexual park visitor. The camera position is frontal and the action <strong>of</strong> the movement is<br />

from right to the left, so when the man returns the comb, a reverse movement would be<br />

expected; instead, the movement is again from right to left. The aim <strong>of</strong> this technique is<br />

clearly to startle viewers and disrupt the staged fiction.<br />

There are frequent graphic clashes as cuts alternate landscapes and interiors, and<br />

heads and bodies (such as the cut replacing the horizontal line <strong>of</strong> the close-up <strong>of</strong> Canticchia's<br />

head with the vertical lines <strong>of</strong> the close-up <strong>of</strong> Bustelli's crossed legs). In other cases, the<br />

montage produces moments <strong>of</strong> time-space discontinuity, by skipping entire stages <strong>of</strong> Bustelli<br />

and Esperia's journey around the city outskirts to collect money; this is typified by a sudden<br />

jarring cut from a close-up <strong>of</strong> Bustelli and Esperia in a car to a longer shot <strong>of</strong> him pursuing<br />

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Esperia on foot <strong>of</strong>f screen. But a more radical ellipsis is deployed in scenes in which self-<br />

contained, dramatic episodes are hinted at but never developed. An example <strong>of</strong> this is the<br />

outcome <strong>of</strong> Canticchia's encounter with a group <strong>of</strong> skinheads, whose threatening faces are<br />

abruptly replaced by a diagonal tracking shot towards a basilica. Eventually Canticchia does<br />

enter the frame, his dejected appearance implying an unpleasant outcome. Again, without<br />

ever activating genuine emotional concern or tension from viewers towards Canticchia, the<br />

sequence's elliptical editing elicits a cognitive response from spectators since it fosters an<br />

active evaluation <strong>of</strong> the filmic content. The episode involving Canticchia is one <strong>of</strong> several<br />

instances in the film when the narrative alludes to the strain <strong>of</strong> daily existence for the sub-<br />

proletariat but without articulating it explicitly and without exploiting the dramatic, affective<br />

potential <strong>of</strong> such situations.<br />

Bertoluccrs use <strong>of</strong> stylized camera angles also exemplifies how foregrounded visual<br />

devices contribute to the viewers' acquisition <strong>of</strong> socio-environmental narrative knowledge.<br />

For instance, the striking diagonal low angle used for the images <strong>of</strong> the bridge at the start <strong>of</strong><br />

the film is a perspective which stops short <strong>of</strong> portraying what is happening on the structure<br />

and in the urban areas beyond. It is a shot which, by lingering under the arches <strong>of</strong> the bridge -<br />

the habitat <strong>of</strong> vagrants and prostitutes - represents the physical displacement <strong>of</strong> the<br />

marginalized, and the composition is re-used in the initial images <strong>of</strong> Last Tango in Paris to<br />

evoke the alienation <strong>of</strong> the protagonist Paul. In a later scene, stylization is also instantiated by<br />

the high angle used to film the youngsters preparing a shopping list for their meal. The<br />

camera perspective originates from near the ceiling light in an empty room with a circular<br />

table at its centre. Then Mariella, one <strong>of</strong> the girls, enters the frame and sits at the table<br />

followed by other characters - one at a time and in silence - until there is a cut to a view <strong>of</strong><br />

their heads above the shopping list (see image on following page). Again, in this case, the<br />

stylized visuals are not used to add dramatic emphasis to an evolving narrative situation or to<br />

64


mark out the sequence as significant within the<br />

film's overall scheme, but they imply the<br />

exceptional experience <strong>of</strong> planning - let alone<br />

consuming - an elaborate meal for people<br />

from the youngsters' social class in the early<br />

1960s.<br />

The implied author as the film's narrator<br />

The film's format appears characterized by what William Rothman has termed the<br />

'relationship between the camera and the author, the "I" <strong>of</strong> the camera', (Rothman, 1988: x) a<br />

close rapport that would emerge again in Stealing Beauty. Indeed, the lack <strong>of</strong> a protagonist in<br />

The Grim Reaper to propel the story forward, together with the disconnected nature <strong>of</strong> the<br />

characters' lives, gives a greater emphasis to the fact that it is the camera, and the director's<br />

presence behind it, that controls the narrative temporally and spatially. This is confirmed by<br />

the extent <strong>of</strong> the use <strong>of</strong> the camera as an external narrator, through positioning that is<br />

predominantly unattached to any <strong>of</strong> the characters' visual fields. This makes it evident that<br />

the perspective guiding the film's scenes is that <strong>of</strong> an omniscient observer, the implied<br />

author. This strategy distances viewers from the limitations <strong>of</strong> character subjectivity to<br />

encourage reflection on the film's portrayal <strong>of</strong> Italian society, adds intellectual fascination<br />

through the deployment <strong>of</strong> sophisticated cinematic techniques, and occasionally reinforces<br />

the film's emotional charge when necessary,<br />

for example by using brief viewer-character<br />

alignment to elicit compassion as characters<br />

are humiliated or abused, the nadir <strong>of</strong> this<br />

being the murder <strong>of</strong> the terrified prostitute (see<br />

image). Hence, Bertolucci's pervasive presence, combined with the film's fragmentary<br />

65


epresentation <strong>of</strong> its characters, implies the avoidance <strong>of</strong> mechanisms that could cue strong<br />

identification, or allegiance in Murray Smith's terms (Smith, 1995: 84-85), between viewers<br />

and characters; in affective terms, the techniques used by Bertolucci appear designed to elicit<br />

only transitory responses from viewers ranging from sympathy to estrangement.<br />

The cognitive and affective function <strong>of</strong> the music<br />

Instrumental in eliciting this measured reaction from viewers is the non-diegetic music<br />

accompanying each character. At times it is expressive to give viewers a momentary<br />

awareness <strong>of</strong> the characters' state <strong>of</strong> mind, by reflecting their mood; at other times the music<br />

takes on a more metadiegetic function, aiming to distance viewers from the narrative events.<br />

Similarly, music is also used simply as a 'denotative tag' (Gorbman, 1987: 28) to create<br />

associational recognition on the viewer's part. The music from the four sequences set in the<br />

narrative nucleus <strong>of</strong> the prostitute's room covers all three functions. It is a medieval theme<br />

which, at a surface level, blends with the rain outside and the woman's solitude to cue<br />

melancholy, but the refrain also evokes a sense <strong>of</strong> the ancient, emphasizing elements such as<br />

the outdated decor <strong>of</strong> her home (another instance <strong>of</strong> Italy's economic miracle bypassing the<br />

sub-proletariat), and the sense <strong>of</strong> drudgery emanated by the prostitute herself, who has none<br />

<strong>of</strong> the post-war vitality with which certain films (including Fellini's Le notti di CabirialTlie<br />

Nights <strong>of</strong>Cabiria, 1957) depicted such characters, and who seems trapped within the eternal<br />

subjugation <strong>of</strong> her 'pr<strong>of</strong>ession'. The refrain, when heard, also creates an immediate diegetic<br />

association in the viewers' mind, therefore it can be said to fulfil functions that are primarily<br />

intellectual and structural, rather than emotional.<br />

The episode featuring Canticchia is complemented by two motifs, the first punctuating<br />

the beginning and end <strong>of</strong> the episode as he leaves and later returns to his house, and it is<br />

designed to emphasize narrative mood. It is a lyrical melody using a flute, which initially<br />

66


emphasizes his youth and simple nature, while at the end, used in the context <strong>of</strong> the dramatic<br />

events <strong>of</strong> the day, and <strong>of</strong> the character's sombre expression and bodily movement, it assumes<br />

a bleak quality to cue compassion. The second motif accompanies Canticchia and his<br />

acquaintances as they seek objects to steal; in this case the music transcends the story world<br />

to alert viewers to the images' real meaning. A rapid drumbeat reflects the kind <strong>of</strong> music<br />

heard in documentaries about hunter-gatherer societies or jungle adventures, thereby<br />

conveying the implied author's enunciation that the thieves' predatory movements within the<br />

greenery <strong>of</strong> the park, searching for prey - the valuables <strong>of</strong> courting couples in the bushes -<br />

reflect the fight for survival within both the natural world and the periphery <strong>of</strong> industrialized<br />

society.<br />

In the episode featuring Cosentino, three motifs differentiate his state <strong>of</strong> mind: a<br />

drumbeat emerges again, this time resembling a beating heart as he pursues the local girls. As<br />

he walks around Rome's historical sites, the music evolves into a flute refrain conveying his<br />

enchantment; his wanderings around the city's outskirts and towards the park are<br />

accompanied by more modern, less harmonious music that represents his troubled,<br />

disoriented state <strong>of</strong> mind, another form <strong>of</strong> 'identification' music (Gorbman, 1987: 68). In<br />

these situations the music contributes with the camerawork to create a transient alignment<br />

with the character, but this is not sustained and a sense <strong>of</strong> wry detachment ultimately prevails,<br />

an approach which also characterizes the depictions <strong>of</strong> Bustelli and Esperia who are<br />

frequently accompanied by a vibrant, latino cumparsita piece which creates an ironic contrast<br />

with their mercenary ruthlessness.<br />

Pasolini and Bertolucci: different social perspectives<br />

When the musical score <strong>of</strong> The Grim Reaper is compared with the solemnity conferred upon<br />

Accattone by the Bach repertoire, the presence in The Grim Reaper <strong>of</strong> music based around<br />

67


drums, the cumparsita, popular songs such as Come nasce un amore, Addio Addio and the<br />

fragment <strong>of</strong> the Fascist song Faccetta Nera,(4) exemplifies the conceptual differences<br />

between the two films. These centre on the directors' attitudes towards the characters, whose<br />

social marginalization and lack <strong>of</strong> self-awareness are explored with differing forms <strong>of</strong><br />

directorial engagement. In this regard, Adams Sitney observes that Pasolini's fascination for<br />

filmic elaborations <strong>of</strong> the via crucis led him to adapt the genre <strong>of</strong> spiritual biography. He<br />

attempted to fuse it with the 'ethos <strong>of</strong> the criminal sub-proletariat' <strong>of</strong> the 1960s, managing<br />

this by placing 'more emphasis on the moment <strong>of</strong> death than on the concept <strong>of</strong> sin.' (Adams<br />

Sitney, 1994: 171-173). Hence, Pasolini tended to justify a character's criminal actions from<br />

a film's outset, and to elicit a sense <strong>of</strong> pity towards the hopeless destiny <strong>of</strong> his protagonists.<br />

By contrast, Bertolucci's portrayals <strong>of</strong> the marginalized have no sense <strong>of</strong> the sacred, and are<br />

based on a secular desire to awaken within viewers an awareness <strong>of</strong> Italy's social situation.<br />

One sequence typifies this position, the scene following Francolicchio's drowning. It might<br />

be expected that this dramatic episode would close with a close-up <strong>of</strong> Pipito's bewildered<br />

face to create strong emotional empathy with the youngster, but instead the take continues<br />

with a full-length shot <strong>of</strong> his silent, motionless figure followed by a backward tracking shot<br />

and a diagonal pan that extend the visual field<br />

to take in the background where several<br />

recently constructed apartment blocks are<br />

visible (see image). Bertolucci's 2003<br />

interview for a DVD extra to The Grim Reaper<br />

explains the use <strong>of</strong> camera movement in the<br />

film.<br />

I had a very clear idea <strong>of</strong> how to shoot the film. [For Accattone] Pier Paolo had made great use <strong>of</strong><br />

close-ups and frontal framing, following the pattern <strong>of</strong> Tuscan paintings on religious themes. Well, my<br />

cinema would be in full movement, all the time [...] The camera moved continuously [...] also in<br />

reaction to the immobility <strong>of</strong> what should have been the blueprint. (Bertolucci, 2003)<br />

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The camera movement and the frame composition in the above sequence have a tw<strong>of</strong>old<br />

effect: they allow time for viewers to realize the absurdity <strong>of</strong> Francolicchio's death and they<br />

imply social indifference towards the marginalized. This indifference is also portrayed in the<br />

scene <strong>of</strong> the murderer's eventual arrest which takes place during a social dancing event, with<br />

the new middle class eager to resume the party as soon as the 'disruption' is over. Also<br />

significant in this respect is the closing sequence <strong>of</strong> the film, in which the murderer shouts in<br />

self-justification: 'She was only a whore'. With these devices, Bertolucci indirectly indicates<br />

that by the early 1960s and the advent <strong>of</strong> materialism, times had dramatically changed in<br />

Italy, but his approach is not one <strong>of</strong> overt political didacticism or <strong>of</strong> strong emotional<br />

manipulation <strong>of</strong> the viewer despite the screenplay's potential for this.<br />

Conclusion<br />

The film's denouement confirms the pessimism <strong>of</strong> a narrative that envisages little change in<br />

the socio-economic position <strong>of</strong> those sections <strong>of</strong> society left behind by the political and<br />

economic order <strong>of</strong> post-war Italy. The perception <strong>of</strong> this lack <strong>of</strong> future prospects enhances the<br />

film's wistful, lyrical moments, and gives rise to the compassion that is occasionally elicited<br />

from viewers by the vicissitudes <strong>of</strong> certain characters. These factors, in tandem with technical<br />

elements such as the film's music, mise-en-scene, and other subtle 'emotion markers' (Smith<br />

G., 1999: 117-118) create a pervading mood <strong>of</strong> melancholy, without, however, there being<br />

any sustained bursts <strong>of</strong> emotion. The embryonic, self-conscious experimentations with film<br />

style that emerge in The Grim Reaper gained momentum in Bertolucci"s later projects,<br />

notably noir aesthetics in Tlie Conformist, detective movie conventions in Tlie Spider's<br />

Stratagem, and Nouvelle Vague visuals in Before the Revolution, Partner, and Last Tango in<br />

Paris. His sophisticated film technique came to characterize many <strong>of</strong> his films, generating a<br />

viewing experience which, while not entirely lacking devices to elicit emotional forms <strong>of</strong><br />

engagement between viewers and characters and to engender a sense <strong>of</strong> aesthetic<br />

69


sensuousness (a trait that characterizes Bertolucci's work from the mid-1980s onwards), was<br />

more visibly based on the viewer's cognitive and intellectual interest towards his refined<br />

mode <strong>of</strong> film-making.<br />

Notes<br />

1. Godard's influence on Bertolucci's work will be discussed in the chapters related to Before the<br />

Revolution and Partner.<br />

2. Inspired by Luigi Pirandello's concept <strong>of</strong> the impossibility <strong>of</strong> having definitive truths, Kurosawa<br />

elaborates a plot <strong>of</strong> rape and murder recounted in flashback by the protagonists and witnesses, who<br />

give different versions <strong>of</strong> the events. The narrative link is constituted by two witnesses who tell the<br />

story to a third character as they shelter under the ro<strong>of</strong> <strong>of</strong> a ruined temple and wait for rain to stop. In<br />

visual terms the narrative sends viewers back to this set <strong>of</strong> images every time a different character starts<br />

recollecting events. The narrative is complemented by overexposed lighting that casts a dreamlike<br />

atmosphere over the story.<br />

3. The legacy <strong>of</strong> Hollywood noir style in Bertolucci's work is explored in the chapter covering The<br />

Conformist.<br />

4. In the context <strong>of</strong> the film's music, the fact that the homosexual park visitor whistles the Fascist tune<br />

Faccetta Nera is intriguing, especially since he bears a physical resemblance to Pasolini and uses<br />

Pasolini's renowned pick-up techniques in public parks. The choice <strong>of</strong> music doubtless constitutes an<br />

in-joke whose significance is difficult to ascertain.<br />

References<br />

Adams Sitney, P. (1994) 'Accattone and Mamma Roma', in Rumble, P. and Testa, B. Pier<br />

Paolo Pasolini: Contemporary Perspectives, Toronto: <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Toronto Press.<br />

Branigan, E. (1992) Narrative Comprehension and Film, London and New York: Routledge<br />

Casetti, F. (1978) Bemardo Bertolucci, Firenze: 'LaNuova Italia' Editrice.<br />

Gili, J.A. (1978) 'Bernardo Bertolucci', in Gerard, F.S., Kline, T.J. and Sklarew, B. (ed.)<br />

(2000) Bernardo Bertolucci Inteniews, Jackson: <strong>University</strong> Press <strong>of</strong> Mississippi.<br />

Gorbman, C. (1987) Unheard Melodies, London: BFI Publishing<br />

Rothman, W. (1988) Tlie "I" <strong>of</strong> the Camera, Cambridge: Cambridge <strong>University</strong> Press.<br />

Shiel, M. (2006) Italian Neorealism: Rebuilding the Cinematic City, London: Wallflower<br />

Press.<br />

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Smith, G. M. (1999) 'Local Emotions, Global Mood, and Film Structure', in Plantinga, C.<br />

and Smith, G. (ed.) Passionate Views, Baltimore: The John Hopkins <strong>University</strong> Press<br />

Smith, M. (1995) Engaging Characters, Oxford: Oxford <strong>University</strong> Press<br />

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Prima delta Rivoluuone/Before the Revolution: Aesthetics, Politics, and the Nouvelle<br />

Vasue<br />

In 1964, Bertolucci released Before the Revolution, which - despite being preceded by The<br />

Grim Reaper - is generally considered the director's true opera prima. The script - entirely<br />

credited to Bertolucci - articulates his disillusionment over Italy's socio-political situation in<br />

the 1960s. The autobiographical nature <strong>of</strong> the film was implied by Bertolucci in describing<br />

the protagonist, Fabrizio, as a bourgeois youth who is critical <strong>of</strong> the Communist Party during<br />

the Sixties, which was guilty <strong>of</strong> being 'dozy 7 and 'reformist 7 ; in pointing out that Fabrizio's<br />

criticisms were voiced in real life by the students during the 1968 riots, Bertolucci remarks<br />

how he had felt that unease five years earlier. (Leoni, 1995) (1) The film condemns the hold<br />

that the Catholic Church and capitalist values had on society, despite the hopes for a new<br />

social order that had emerged at the end <strong>of</strong> World War Two. In comparing, later in the<br />

chapter, Before the Revolution with Antonioni's // deserto rosso I TJie Red Desert (1964)<br />

from the same year, and with Bellocchio's Ipugni in tasca I Fists in the Pocket (1965) from a<br />

year later, the extent to which this socio-political unease was shared by other film-makers and<br />

intellectuals <strong>of</strong> that time becomes clear. The other autobiographical aspect that emerges from<br />

the film regards Bertolucci "s delineation <strong>of</strong> his artistic orientation through a discourse about<br />

cinematic form and style within the film's dialogue which privileges the innovations <strong>of</strong> Jean-<br />

Luc Godard. In artistic terms, Before the Revolution is essentially a visual document <strong>of</strong> the<br />

way Bertolucci freely experimented with the sort <strong>of</strong> cinematic innovation that had been less<br />

authoritatively deployed in The Grim Reaper.<br />

Plot summary<br />

The film portrays a period in the life <strong>of</strong> Fabrizio, a young intellectual living in Parma and<br />

engaged to Clelia, who conies from the same bourgeois milieu and has a strict Catholic sense<br />

72


<strong>of</strong> respectability. Inspired by Cesare, who acts as his political mentor, Fabrizio embraces<br />

leftist politics, and breaks up with Clelia in his desire to reject the social status quo.<br />

Fascinated by Gina - his mothers emancipated younger sister who lives in Milan - the two<br />

become intimate, but the rapport is conditioned by Gina's awareness that it has no future.<br />

Fabrizio shows insensitivity towards his best friend Agostino, who is uncomfortable with the<br />

materialism <strong>of</strong> his parents, and has difficulty in adjusting to a lifestyle split between the<br />

modem cosmopolitanism <strong>of</strong> Switzerland and Parma's provincialism. The news that Agostino<br />

has drowned hits Fabrizio, because it is suspected to be suicide, and also Gina, as it<br />

exacerbates her neurosis and solitude. The poetic goodbye that Gina's friend Puck addresses<br />

to the family estate he can no longer afford comes to represent a metaphorical form <strong>of</strong> closure<br />

for Gina who returns to Milan, and for Fabrizio who realizes that his bourgeois destiny is<br />

inescapable. During a Communist Party festival, Fabrizio declares his disillusionment and<br />

sense <strong>of</strong> failure to Cesare, who instead reaffirms his political credo. The film's ending shows<br />

how all three main characters settle for unfulfilling existential compromises. Cesare takes the<br />

s<strong>of</strong>t option <strong>of</strong> teaching in a school, since he thinks that revolutionary ideals are likelier to<br />

germinate within children. Fabrizio marries Clelia as an act <strong>of</strong> individual resignation and<br />

failure, whereas Gina's tears during the wedding reveal her unhappiness.<br />

Political disillusionment, pessimism and melancholy<br />

The film s first images are accompanied by Fabrizio reciting in voiceover Pasolini's poem La<br />

religione del mio tempo, which immediately establishes the intellectual remit <strong>of</strong> Before the<br />

Revolution and its pessimistic mood, the poem criticizing Italian society and accusing<br />

Catholicism <strong>of</strong> accepting and perpetuating socio-economic injustice, and <strong>of</strong> being the<br />

merciless heart <strong>of</strong> the State itself.(2) By the early 1960s, the hopes <strong>of</strong> Italy's progressive<br />

political parties, such as the Partito Comunista Italiano (PCI), for a better and fairer world<br />

had receded, having been dashed by defeat in the 1948 general election which saw the<br />

73


Catholic Christian Democrats establish their grip on political power while promoting the<br />

advance <strong>of</strong> neo-capitalism. In this ideological context, the film narrative indicates how -<br />

through the characters <strong>of</strong> Fabrizio, Agostino and Cesare - the director aims to portray the<br />

atmosphere <strong>of</strong> pessimism and unease within the contemporary Italian Left. Agostino, with his<br />

sense <strong>of</strong> maladjustment, embodies the extreme consequences <strong>of</strong> social disorientation upon the<br />

individual. Cesare personifies both Pasolini's idea <strong>of</strong> changing the Communist Parry's<br />

theoretical agenda from the inside, remaining faithful to Marxist ideology, and Pasolini's<br />

sense <strong>of</strong> the intellectual's pedagogical role. Fabrizio reflects the pessimism and frustration <strong>of</strong><br />

the younger generations within Italy's established class system, symbolically represented by<br />

two annual events that had become rituals through which two social strata, the workers and<br />

the bourgeoisie, reconfirmed the durability and distinctiveness <strong>of</strong> their own demarcated<br />

sections <strong>of</strong> society.<br />

In fact, Fabrizio airs his criticisms during the festival <strong>of</strong> the Communist Party (La<br />

festa dell'Unita), an event characterized by an empty rituality as the participants' main topic<br />

<strong>of</strong> conversation seems to be the death <strong>of</strong> Marilyn Monroe rather than the planned debate on<br />

Fidel Castro. Subsequently. Fabrizio's return to his bourgeois milieu is marked by attending -<br />

with his fiancee - the bourgeoisie's ritual <strong>of</strong> the opening night at the Opera; the importance <strong>of</strong><br />

this symbolism was confirmed by Bertolucci himself, when in an interview he declared The<br />

long scene in the Parma Opera House [...] is really there to display this grandiose and<br />

ridiculous bourgeois temple' (Fieschi, 1968: 36). Historically, the emblematic importance <strong>of</strong><br />

opera was subsequently confirmed years later when it became a target <strong>of</strong> the 1968 students'<br />

revolt.(3) Therefore, the existences <strong>of</strong> Fabrizio and Agostino are pervaded by a sense <strong>of</strong><br />

alienation and gloom which permeates the filrrfs intellectual and emotional resonances,<br />

affecting the viewing experience. This also extends to the cognitive engagement that the film<br />

elicits; regardless <strong>of</strong> the political orientation and age <strong>of</strong> viewers and <strong>of</strong> the period when the<br />

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film is/was viewed, the goal orientation or telos <strong>of</strong> the narrative in terms <strong>of</strong> Fabrizio's and<br />

Agostino's aspirations, and also those <strong>of</strong> Cesare and Gina, is frustrated or at least<br />

compromised. As Grodal argues, humans recognize and engage with well defined, goal-<br />

oriented actions whether activated in screen fiction or enacted in real life (Grodal, 1997: 118).<br />

hi Before the Revolution, the socio-political structure <strong>of</strong> Italian society as described in the<br />

film thwarts the hopes and desires <strong>of</strong> both male and female characters.<br />

Cognitive and affective functions <strong>of</strong> literary references<br />

The pessimism pervading the film is also elegiac and poetic; there are conspicuous references<br />

to literary works and these engage the viewer's cognitive faculties in deciphering their<br />

significance in the film text. Emotionally, these references enhance the sense <strong>of</strong> melancholy<br />

and nostalgia that the film is constructed to elicit; but intellectually they also bring<br />

gratification through the identification <strong>of</strong> the sources by viewers with such expertise. The<br />

recital <strong>of</strong> La religione del mio tempo implies the emergence <strong>of</strong> Fabrizio's social conscience<br />

and his desire to change the socio-political situation, whereas Gina's disenchantment over the<br />

possibility <strong>of</strong> creating a better future through politics is articulated as she mocks Cesare and<br />

Fabrizio's projects for a new social order by reading aloud Oscar Wilde's famous aphorism,<br />

'The only person who has more illusions than a dreamer is a man <strong>of</strong> action', and by narrating<br />

an apologue in the style <strong>of</strong> Hesse's Siddhartha. Puck's poignant farewell to his estate<br />

symbolizes the sombre return to a reality in which all higher hopes have vanished.<br />

Stylistically it echoes the lyricism <strong>of</strong> Lucia's forced farewell to Lake Como - her native<br />

region - in Manzoni's / promessi sposi. The fact that the character's name references<br />

Shakespeare's A Midsummer Night's Dream is arguably motivated by an intention to evoke<br />

the spirit's idyllic forest life and create a stark contrast with the socio-economic constraints<br />

faced by his namesake in the film. The stylization and multi-faceted significance <strong>of</strong> Puck's<br />

address (both to the land and to the essence <strong>of</strong> his life as it ebbs away) possess an affective<br />

75


charge, as do the other literary allusions in the film, creating a sense <strong>of</strong> melancholy which is<br />

intensified by the awareness that life will never be the same again.<br />

This bleak impression is cued by the film even before the opening credits, with<br />

Fabrizio referring in voiceover - on a darkened screen - to his current dismal state <strong>of</strong> mind,<br />

before reciting Talleyrand's aphorism 'Those who did not live through the period before the<br />

revolution cannot understand what the sweetness <strong>of</strong> life is' which appears at the end <strong>of</strong> the<br />

opening credits. In 1965 Bertolucci clarified that he used it as an 'epigraph to the film'; by<br />

articulating it at the beginning and not at the end <strong>of</strong> the film, he wanted to give the aphorism a<br />

more complex, different meaning: 'He who lives before the revolution doesn't feel, in my<br />

view, the sweetness, but the anguish <strong>of</strong> life' (Marcorelle and Bontemps, 1965: 16). However,<br />

this technique evokes an observation by Morrey about the self-conscious opening line <strong>of</strong><br />

Godard's Le petit soldat (1960) (4) whose positioning he finds to be incongruous as 'it would<br />

seem more appropriate at the end'. In Before the Revolution it could also be said, as Morrey<br />

indicates, that this incongruity emphasizes the film's reflexivity (Morrey 2005: 31). While<br />

this analogy implies that the device might have derived from the Godardian ideas inspiring<br />

Bertolucci, the significance <strong>of</strong> the technique for this study, with its affective/cognitive<br />

framework, resides in the way that the sense <strong>of</strong> emotion generated by the enunciation is<br />

mediated by the device's self-conscious, declamatory essence. The possible affective<br />

resonance within Fabrizio's words is muted by the cerebral and self-aware manner in which<br />

the words are said, an effect that reflects the way emotion is expressed in Bertolucci's early<br />

work, its spontaneity frequently attenuated by its stylized, self-conscious articulation.<br />

What links the film s literary references is that the emotions, such as melancholy, that<br />

may be experienced by viewers are filtered through an initial, intellectual awareness <strong>of</strong> their<br />

origins in other art forms. This phenomenon is explained by Grodal through the concept <strong>of</strong> a<br />

motivational link between cognition and emotion; he argues that, in counter-cinema, when<br />

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viewers identify complicated intertextual references, this 'is felt to be an active, voluntary<br />

activity' on the viewer's part; this 'overwhelming richness is positively experienced as a<br />

response to one's own associations, albeit cued by the film' (Grodal, 1997: 213). Grodal<br />

asserts that the cognitive activity which derives from a viewer's awareness <strong>of</strong> a film's<br />

'complex web <strong>of</strong> associations' creates emotional pleasure because 'the text is experienced as<br />

the addressee's own work' (Grodal, 1997: 213). This exemplies the distanced, attenuated<br />

emotional resonances elicited in Bertolucci's work.<br />

Lighting and focus as structural elements<br />

In the emotion structure <strong>of</strong> Before the Revolution, the technical quality <strong>of</strong> the images<br />

intensifies the ambience <strong>of</strong> melancholy, as well as conditioning the film's overall aesthetic. In<br />

the monochrome scheme, pale, luminous tones are predominant, with many frame<br />

compositions featuring only one or two dark elements<br />

such as Gina's hair, Fabrizio's trousers and tie, or the<br />

structure that emerges from the river where Agostino<br />

drowns (see image). The tonal whiteness is<br />

accentuated by lighting that reduces the contrast<br />

between light and shade by creating more diffusion. This effect also characterizes the<br />

depiction <strong>of</strong> the liaison between Fabrizio and Gina, as its incestuous nature is represented in a<br />

s<strong>of</strong>t and subtle way, with no intention <strong>of</strong> shocking viewers, to ensure that the scene blends<br />

with the film's general mood. This interpretation is confirmed by Bertolucci who affirmed<br />

that for him, the scene 'was just a way, not too unusual but instead a fairly classic way, to<br />

present a relationship where the man is younger, less experienced than the woman, [...] a<br />

neutral convention, full <strong>of</strong> literary precedents' (Ungari, 1982: 35). The result is a sense <strong>of</strong> the<br />

unreal that enhances the film's mood and also conditions the viewer's affective participation<br />

within it.<br />

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The overexposed quality <strong>of</strong> film images can be obtained by manipulating film stock,<br />

either before or after shooting sequences, and examples <strong>of</strong> this can be seen in the dream<br />

sequence at the beginning <strong>of</strong> Bergman's Wild Strawberries and in the effect <strong>of</strong> old war<br />

footage in Godard's Les Carabiniers (Bordwell and Thompson, 1997: 211-212). hi Before<br />

the Revolution, the image manipulation bears a closer resemblance to that carried out by<br />

Bergman as it creates a haziness rather than tonal contrasts and it endows the film's sense <strong>of</strong><br />

temporal remoteness with a lyrical quality rather than with a dramatic effect. This peculiar<br />

lighting is used to depict bleak, misty landscapes which are <strong>of</strong>ten populated only by one or<br />

two characters; therefore, the impression <strong>of</strong> solitude is reinforced, as is the film's melancholy<br />

mood. This interpretation reflects Grodal's assertion that these types <strong>of</strong> photographic<br />

manipulation, by diminishing the presence <strong>of</strong>'enactive agents and defined objects', produce a<br />

lyrical form that engenders a feeling <strong>of</strong> melancholy, and that the lyrical form is 'mostly used<br />

as a device embedded as a mood in narrative fiction' (Grodal, 1997: 166). In a 1968<br />

interview, Bertolucci seemed satisfied with these lighting effects, which he associated with<br />

film history's most innovative examples, such as Renoir's La regie du jeu / The Rules <strong>of</strong> the<br />

Game, Rossellini's Viaggio in Italia I The Lonely Woman, and Godard's A bout de souffle I<br />

Breathless. 'Now', Bertolucci said, 'maybe there is a Before the Revolution lighting' (Fieschi,<br />

1968: 36).<br />

Moreover, Bertolucci sometimes combines this<br />

technique with framings where the character/object is<br />

sharply defined in the forefront <strong>of</strong> the frame while the<br />

background is out <strong>of</strong> focus (see image). This evokes a<br />

dreamlike sensation and creates a disjunction between<br />

individuals and environments; the sense <strong>of</strong> a<br />

'connection' between characters and settings is further weakened by a substantial erasing <strong>of</strong><br />

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diegetic sound, since, except for the occasional sound <strong>of</strong> bicycle bells, no urban or<br />

environmental noise is discernible on the soundtrack. Grodal maintains that out-<strong>of</strong>-focus<br />

visual representations constitute an early but important stage in the viewer's processing and<br />

recognition <strong>of</strong> an image; the use <strong>of</strong> out-<strong>of</strong>-focus visuals that 'blur the delimitation <strong>of</strong> objects<br />

and put emphasis on fluctuations <strong>of</strong> intensities', serves to 'short-circuit' the process <strong>of</strong> visual<br />

input (Grodal, 1997: 54). In Before the Revolution, the technique achieves an aesthetic effect,<br />

in terms <strong>of</strong> casting a subjective, artistic quality over the visual input, and also a concrete<br />

meaning by symbolizing the protagonists' existential morass and lack <strong>of</strong> confidence in their<br />

future.<br />

It is worth noting that Antonioni's // deserto rosso I Red Desert, released in the same<br />

year, presents similar elements - blurred images, misty atmospheres, characters swallowed up<br />

by overexposed lighting - which cue a similar affective impact, as the existential<br />

disorientation depicted by Antonioni is also marked by perspectives <strong>of</strong> pessimism and<br />

renunciation. Antonioni also portrays a bourgeoisie unable to react, turning in on itself rather<br />

than engaging constructively with the outside world, trapped in its own unhappiness. In both<br />

films the female protagonists" neuroticism is exacerbated by encounters with sensitive<br />

partners whose disillusionment regarding the ideal <strong>of</strong> a better world is also similar. In Red<br />

Desert, after Giuliana's straight question 'But are you right-wing or left-wing?', Corrado<br />

gives an impersonal, poignant answer: 'It is like asking what one believes in. One believes in<br />

humanity, less injustice, a bit more in progress. One believes in Socialism... perhaps". Like<br />

Fabrizio and Gina in Before the Revolution, Corrado and Giulia also opt for an unfulfilling<br />

final life choice: Corrado moves to Patagonia to bring technological progress there, and<br />

Giulia accepts existential dissatisfaction as part <strong>of</strong> her life.<br />

A year after Before the Revolution, Marco Bellocchio released Ipugni in tasca I Fists<br />

in the Pocket, and there are further analogies between this film and Before the Revolution.<br />

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Emphasis is placed on Catholicism's responsibility in oppressing the existences <strong>of</strong> the<br />

individual and <strong>of</strong> society; a young provincial intellectual, Alessandro, voices his existential<br />

reflections by reciting poetry; an incestuous relationship is implied between him and his sister<br />

Giulia; and the completion <strong>of</strong> Alessandro's destiny - his death - is marked aurally by the<br />

playing <strong>of</strong> a recording <strong>of</strong> an opera, La Traviata, and visually by out-<strong>of</strong>-focus images.<br />

Stylistically, the film is shot in black and white, and the tonal qualities <strong>of</strong> certain sequences<br />

evoke the aesthetic and metaphorical impact <strong>of</strong> Before the Revolution. Luminous tones are<br />

used in the bathroom where Alessandro murders his brother and in the bedroom where he<br />

attempts to murder Giulia, with its white walls, bed linen and the pillow with which he tries<br />

to suffocate her. The intensity <strong>of</strong> the whiteness absorbs everything in it, and metaphorically<br />

conveys the protagonist's distorted perception <strong>of</strong> an undesired reality. Given the similarities<br />

in the three films, the pessimism and melancholy pervading Before the Revolution clearly<br />

expressing the unease and alienation affecting sections <strong>of</strong> leftist intellectuals in Italy at that<br />

time.<br />

Temporal distance created by aural and visual effects<br />

Cognitively, Before the Revolution is characterized by subjective representations, these<br />

originating from the strongly biographical quality <strong>of</strong> the narrative that makes both its internal<br />

focalization and external focalization (Branigan, 1992: 102) referable to the film's author,<br />

Bertolucci. Nevertheless, although the film's internal focalization is attached to the thoughts<br />

and actions <strong>of</strong> both Fabrizio and Gina, a process supported by the recurrent use <strong>of</strong> their<br />

voiceovers, this becomes a mediated effect that divests the action <strong>of</strong> much <strong>of</strong> its spontaneity,<br />

even when it gives insights into their intimacy. The voiceover conditions the viewing<br />

experience from the beginning <strong>of</strong> the film by establishing a perception <strong>of</strong> time on the part <strong>of</strong><br />

viewers which inhibits their hypotheses about the development <strong>of</strong> narrative events, hi fact the<br />

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audiovisual construction <strong>of</strong> the opening sequence - as already mentioned - consists <strong>of</strong> a<br />

darkened screen accompanied by Fabrizio's voiceover: 'Now that I lead a quiet life, I feel I<br />

do not exist any longer, which appears designed to create a perception among viewers that<br />

the following narrative is a series <strong>of</strong> recollections, in effect an extended flashback that<br />

positions the film's events even further back within the time/space continuum and drains<br />

them <strong>of</strong> goal-oriented impetus. Commenting on this sort <strong>of</strong> narrative voiceover at the<br />

beginning <strong>of</strong> films, Grodal suggests that the subsequent images appear 'dead' and 'saturated',<br />

and that viewers 'can no longer mobilize a simulation <strong>of</strong> voluntary possibilities <strong>of</strong><br />

interference, change, and undecidedness'; therefore such films elicit 'the same saturated,<br />

fatalistic feeling that we experience when we look at old news or at homemade videos <strong>of</strong> our<br />

private lives' (Grodal, 1997: 120-121). The film's images also evoke the effect <strong>of</strong> old,<br />

overexposed photographs, an impression which induces viewers - regardless <strong>of</strong> when the<br />

film is/was viewed - to perceive its events as occurring at a distant point in time and space,<br />

thereby reducing its already limited narrative momentum and creating a sense <strong>of</strong> stasis. These<br />

techniques, together with the film's slow pace, cue a perception <strong>of</strong> the diegesis as an<br />

environment in which any change or evolution is unlikely.<br />

The Nouvelle Vague influence in cognitive and intellectual terms<br />

While Bertolucci had political reservations about the present, he embraced it stylistically by<br />

drawing on the innovations <strong>of</strong> the Nouvelle Vague; he was particularly enthusiastic about<br />

Godard's work, from which the Italian director drew inspiration. Godard's conceptual<br />

influence on Before the Revolution is instantiated by the use <strong>of</strong> voiceover commentaries and<br />

dialogue containing philosophical reflections on the human condition in contemporary<br />

society; stylistically, his influence emerges in conspicuous visual constructions that<br />

foreground the viewer's awareness <strong>of</strong> the camera and the act <strong>of</strong> film-making. These include<br />

Godardian devices ranging from jump cuts to location filming via a hand-held camera; the<br />

81


self-conscious, studied, left to right camera pans framing one character at a time; the frequent<br />

removal <strong>of</strong> sound from the soundtrack; the technique <strong>of</strong> editing together several identical<br />

takes which are then screened in a consecutive sequence. One innovative scene breaks the<br />

film's black and white scheme by depicting Gina inside the chamber <strong>of</strong> an old monastery<br />

where, by means <strong>of</strong> mirrors, it is possible to see what is happening outside in the street; the<br />

images <strong>of</strong> Fabrizio that she sees are in colour. The images evoke Godard's tendency to<br />

increase the viewer's awareness <strong>of</strong> the process <strong>of</strong> watching a film, almost a film within a film<br />

in this case, privileging a distanced, somewhat cerebral mode <strong>of</strong> engagement with Before the<br />

Revolution.<br />

Direct references to Godard's work are also conspicuous: Fabrizio's idiosyncratic,<br />

clownish performance outside the monastery evokes the antics <strong>of</strong> Michel Poiccard, the<br />

protagonist <strong>of</strong> A bout de souffle; Fabrizio and Gina s walk around Parma^s city centre evokes<br />

that <strong>of</strong> Poiccard and Patricia, again in A bout de souffle, and also that <strong>of</strong> Angela and Emile in<br />

Une femme est line femme; Gina's metaphysical monologues and her conversations with<br />

Fabrizio and Cesare echo those <strong>of</strong> Nana, the protagonist <strong>of</strong> Vivre sa vie. The references in<br />

Before the Revolution both to Godard and to the process <strong>of</strong> creating and consuming movies<br />

has a central role in eliciting a intellectual form <strong>of</strong> engagement with the film by establishing a<br />

tacit, cinephile complicity between director and viewer. However, some elements distinguish<br />

Before the Revolution from Godard's work, notably certain differences in directorial<br />

perspective and also the affective responses occasionally elicited by Bertolucci. While<br />

Godard had a coherent and rigorous politico-cultural standpoint, Bertolucci's world view<br />

appears more uncertain and permeated by tones <strong>of</strong> romanticism; Godard's characters are<br />

<strong>of</strong>ten subversive in terms <strong>of</strong> their disposition or narrative function, while Bertolucci's<br />

characters personify an inner fragility deriving from a sense <strong>of</strong> disorientation. This engages<br />

viewers affectively, as does the aesthetic <strong>of</strong> films like Before the Revolution, mainly through<br />

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evocative representations <strong>of</strong> landscapes. However, in Before the Revolution, viewers are<br />

never induced to feel allegiance towards any <strong>of</strong> the characters, despite the alignment that the<br />

narration creates with Fabrizio.<br />

The double function <strong>of</strong> distanciation effects<br />

With regard to distanciation effects in cinema, Grodal suggests that self-consciousness in<br />

films - usually by foregrounding the director's presence - may produce a lyrical effect.<br />

Through analysing Godard's Pierrot le Fou (1965), Grodal recognizes that it foregrounds<br />

cultural and cinematic schemata linked to romantic love stories in an arch, self-conscious<br />

way, but he argues that the rupturing <strong>of</strong> the narrative illusion does not necessarily deconstruct<br />

viewer emotions; the narrative <strong>of</strong> Pierrot le Fou is canonical, and emotions are certainly cued<br />

at a microlevel as viewers respond to character's facial expressions, and they also absorb the<br />

lush extra-diegetic music and the visual descriptions <strong>of</strong> nature (Grodal, 1997: 216-217).<br />

Although the film's emotions are 'moulded by popular genres, such as crime fiction, the<br />

romantic chanson, slapstick and film noir [...] the sheer presence <strong>of</strong> humans in basic<br />

situations (such as love, loss <strong>of</strong> beloved, jealousy, and fear <strong>of</strong> opponent) activates basic<br />

affective reactions in the viewer' (Grodal, 1997: 217-218). Although there is little tension<br />

connected to the achievement <strong>of</strong> narrative goals in Godard's film, there will still be affective<br />

reactions from viewers in the form <strong>of</strong> 'intensity, saturation and autonomic response', these<br />

supporting lyrical and passive romantic effects; these effects are experienced when viewers<br />

watch an opera aria or ballet, which, although not a direct mimesis <strong>of</strong> everyday life, contain<br />

expressive mimesis, evoking psychologically motivated emotions such as passion at key<br />

moments in the performance, sentiments that are recognized and experienced as such by<br />

viewers (Grodal, 1997: 218). These emotions are in effect reconstructed by the viewer,<br />

subjectively, existing in her consciousness but not necessarily in the diegetic world <strong>of</strong> the art<br />

form, whether ballet or film. Films may break their own semblance <strong>of</strong> reality, but every<br />

83


distanciation effect or conspicuous instance <strong>of</strong> intertextuality activates the viewer's<br />

subjectivity and personal networks <strong>of</strong> associations. Consequently, the world <strong>of</strong> a film like<br />

Pierrot lefou 'is not primarily represented as a source <strong>of</strong> perceptions and a goal for acts, but<br />

as "a state <strong>of</strong> consciousness" and should therefore be approached in a lyrical-associative way.<br />

It further activates the viewer's proximal or proprioceptive "feeling <strong>of</strong> himself during<br />

viewing' (Grodal 1997: 219).<br />

This different application <strong>of</strong> Brecht's established notion <strong>of</strong> Verfremdung may appear<br />

problematic by adding emotion into the equation, but my study will suggest that Bertolucci's<br />

use <strong>of</strong> the camera and editing sometimes produces the interruption <strong>of</strong> the illusion prefigured<br />

by Brecht, while also triggering emotion within viewers. In this volume it will sometimes be<br />

observed how, in Bertolucci's films - even in Partner, his most 'Brechtian' film, where the<br />

viewer's emotional engagement with the film is limited - specific sequences that increase the<br />

viewer's awareness <strong>of</strong> the cinematic medium coincide<br />

with the activation <strong>of</strong> affective responses. In Before the<br />

Revolution one example <strong>of</strong> this is the jagged editing<br />

that characterizes the sequence <strong>of</strong> Agostino's bizarre<br />

performance on a bicycle in front <strong>of</strong> Fabrizio;<br />

Fabrizio's POV is slowly replaced by a neutral camera<br />

perspective which highlights how Agostino's antics<br />

escalate from showing <strong>of</strong>f into a disturbing episode <strong>of</strong><br />

self-harm, caused by the youth repeatedly falling <strong>of</strong>f<br />

the bicycle (see images). The technique gradually<br />

raises viewers" awareness <strong>of</strong> the camera's presence and<br />

<strong>of</strong> the editing pattern that has been adopted, reducing the film's reality status while cueing an<br />

increasing sense <strong>of</strong> discomfort - within the viewer's own consciousness - at what is seen.<br />

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Another example <strong>of</strong> this phenomenon occurs when the same shots are screened several times<br />

in sequence. Bertolucci uses the technique during the Fabrizio/Gina liaison; the pair exchange<br />

amorous glances as they approach each other (a sequence screened three times), and a young<br />

woman scrutinizes Fabrizio as he wanders the streets (screened twice). The repeated<br />

screening serves to jolt viewers, but at the same time, the slow pace and the mute soundtrack<br />

that characterize both sequences divert part <strong>of</strong> the viewer's attention to the characters'<br />

glances and body language, thereby inviting viewers to interpret and respond to this subtle<br />

non-verbal emotional communication.<br />

Conclusion<br />

hi 1964, it was the French public and critics who acknowledged the innovative way in which<br />

Before the Revolution explored the nature <strong>of</strong> individual and social discontent by awarding<br />

Bertolucci the 'Prix Max Ophuls' and the 'Prix de la Jeune Critique'. Years later, Bertolucci<br />

still proudly recalls how, at the end <strong>of</strong> the Cannes screening, Godard had publically praised<br />

the film (Bertolucci, 2001:147). With regard to its political theme, according to Bertolucci,<br />

the film was praised 'precisely because it was seen as a criticism <strong>of</strong> the PCI from the Left";<br />

(Maraini, 1973: 86). But in Italy the film was not well received (Casetti 1978: 39-40),(5)<br />

despite Bertolucci explaining that Fabrizio^s cowardice was a way to exorcise his own fear<br />

about being sucked back into his bourgeois milieu, (Marcorelles and Bontemps, 1965: 15)<br />

and he defended the film by saying that it referred to 'a generational question' in the sense<br />

that his generation 'discovered politics at the end <strong>of</strong> the period <strong>of</strong> commitment. It was an<br />

empty, really hollow moment and that explains the ambiguity <strong>of</strong> my film' (Fieschi, 1968: 34).<br />

The contrasting reactions from foreign critics and those from Italy established a pattern for<br />

the reception <strong>of</strong> Bertolucci's work for the rest <strong>of</strong> his career.<br />

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Notes<br />

1. D. Leoni, Parlcmdo di cinema e altro con Bernardo Bertolucci, 12/01/95:<br />

hnp://web.tiscali.it/donatellaleoni/cinema.htm See also Ungari, 1982: 35; Fantoni Minnella, 2004: 229.<br />

2. P. P. Pasolini, La religione del mio tempo Milan: Aldo Garzanti Editore, 1961. 1961 was also the year<br />

<strong>of</strong> his directorial debut with Accattone.<br />

3. As a sign <strong>of</strong> rebellion against the Establishment, on the 7 th <strong>of</strong> December 1968 Mario Capanna, a student<br />

leader, organized an assault on La Scala opera theatre in Milan by bombarding the participants with<br />

eggs. As the opening night used to be broadcast live on television, the gesture's rebelliousness had an<br />

immediate, national resonance.<br />

4. 'For me the time <strong>of</strong> action is over, I have grown up; the time <strong>of</strong> reflection is beginning'<br />

5. The contrasting reactions are reported by Casetti, who asserts that while the film received awards at<br />

Cannes, Italian journalists either gave it bad reviews or ignored it. Later, on its release in Italy, it was a<br />

box <strong>of</strong>fice flop, whereas in France, in Cahiers du cinema, Bertolucci was honoured with an entretien<br />

(1965).<br />

References<br />

Bertolucci, B. (2001) 'Mi sarei fatto uccidere per una inquadratura di Godard', in Francione,<br />

F. and Spila, P. (ed) (2010) Bernardo Bertolucci La mia magnifica ossessione,<br />

Milan: Garzanti.<br />

Bordwell, D. and Thompson, K. (1997) Film Art, An Introduction, 5th ed., <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong><br />

Wisconsin: The McGraw-Hill Companies.<br />

Fieschi, J. A. (1968) 'Bernardo Bertolucci: Before the Revolution, Parma, Poetry and<br />

Ideology', in Gerard, F.S., Kline, T.J. and Sklarew, B. (ed.) (2000) Bemardo<br />

Bertolucci Interviews, Jackson: <strong>University</strong> Press <strong>of</strong> Mississippi.<br />

Fantoni Minnella, M. (2004) Non riconciliati, Turin: UTET Diffusione S.r.l.<br />

Grodal, T. (1997) Moving Pictures, Oxford: Oxford <strong>University</strong> Press.<br />

Leoni, D. (1995) Parlando di cinema e altro con Bemardo Bertolucci, [Online] Available at<br />

http://web.tiscali.it/donatellaleoni/cinema.htm (2004).<br />

Morrey, D. (2005) Jean-Luc Godard, Manchester: Manchester <strong>University</strong> Press.<br />

Pasolini, P.P. (1961) La religione del mio tempo, Milan: Garzanti Editore.<br />

Socci, S. (1996) Bemardo Bertolucci, Milan: II Castoro Cinema.<br />

Ungari, E. (1982) Scene Madri di Bernardo Bertolucci (2nd Ed. 1987), Milan: Ubulibri.<br />

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La stratesia del raeno/The Spider's Stratagem: Political and Cinematic Liberation<br />

The release in 1970 <strong>of</strong> La strategia del ragno/Tlie Spider's Stratagem and // conformista/The<br />

Conformist constitutes a significant example <strong>of</strong> cinematic experimentation in Bertolucci's<br />

career. These films - partially financed by Bertolucci's cousin Giovanni - came after the<br />

failure <strong>of</strong> Partner (entirely financed by Giovanni Bertolucci) two years earlier, which in turn<br />

had been shot after four years <strong>of</strong> inactivity following the failure <strong>of</strong> Before the Revolution. As<br />

a consequence <strong>of</strong> this difficult situation Bertolucci began psychoanalysis a few weeks after he<br />

started filming Stratagem (Socci, 1996: 7): 'At a certain point I needed to understand better,<br />

and to try to see inside myself better' (Chaluja, Chadhauser and Mingrone, 1970: 58). This<br />

circumstance, together with his declaration that he stopped writing poetry to differentiate<br />

himself from his father (Fieschi, 1968: 37; Ungari, 1982: 12) paved the way for many<br />

psychoanalytical readings <strong>of</strong> his works, <strong>of</strong>ten under the Freudian lens <strong>of</strong> the Oedipus<br />

complex. Kline has tried to link the father figures in Bertolucci's films with the director's<br />

biological father and with Pasolini, (Kline, 1987: 6-7) while other scholars have extended<br />

father figure status to Godard.<br />

On Bertolucci's cessation <strong>of</strong> writing poetry, it is significant that he gave other<br />

plausible motivations which do not relate to father-son rivalry. One concerns his lack <strong>of</strong> time:<br />

'Unfortunately, making films completely takes over my life. It's something so invasive that it<br />

makes it difficult to succeed at two occupations at once.' (Marcorelles and Bontemps, 1965:<br />

12). Elsewhere he asserts that he had stopped writing poetry because he would have said 'the<br />

same things in poetry and in films' and therefore 'it would have been a repetition' (Bragin,<br />

1966: 23). On re-examining the films and also Bertolucci's statements regarding the negative<br />

response to his earlier work,(l) my study suggests that more prominence should be given to<br />

the impact <strong>of</strong> the rejection <strong>of</strong> his first three films on the director's self-confidence, which had<br />

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een boosted during his formative years by supportive family circumstances which emerge in<br />

several interviews with him. For instance, Bertolucci's father Artilio appears as a caring<br />

father and the person who introduced Bernardo to cinema, (Fieschi, 1968: 37) sharing with<br />

him his passion and expertise. (Ungari, 1982: 11) He was the person who - through his<br />

friendship with Pasolini - had given young Bernardo a foothold in the film-making world<br />

since The Grim Reaper was aired at the Venice Film Festival. Coupling these positive<br />

formative events with Bertolucci's affirmations that his childhood was so happy that he<br />

prolonged it as long as possible, and that he had paid and suffered for it, (Maraini, 1973: 88)<br />

it might be argued more plausibly that psychoanalysis helped him to deal with the aftermath<br />

<strong>of</strong> repeated pr<strong>of</strong>essional failure,(2) as well as with the issue <strong>of</strong> what kind <strong>of</strong> film-maker he<br />

wanted to be. This need for personal re-assessment is clearly implied in the above quotation<br />

about the need to understand himself better, to see inside himself, and it is no coincidence<br />

that, towards the end <strong>of</strong> the same decade, he distanced himself from the Nouvelle Vague:<br />

In the 60s, filmmaking focused on expressivity and on language; however at a certain point I<br />

discovered that I needed to communicate, to privilege communication. In fact with Stratagem and<br />

Conformist I started making films which had a wider circulation (Ungari, 1982: 230).<br />

Within this sequence <strong>of</strong> events, if Tlie Confonnist represents the first pro<strong>of</strong> <strong>of</strong><br />

Bertolucci's stylistic change, Tlie Spider's Stratagem occupies the position <strong>of</strong> Janus, the<br />

Roman god whose two faces traditionally presided over the end <strong>of</strong> old events and beginning<br />

<strong>of</strong> new ones. The film constitutes a final link with Bertolucci's earlier mode <strong>of</strong> film-making<br />

and the beginning <strong>of</strong> his establishing <strong>of</strong> a cinematic 'third way' that might combine auteurist<br />

art cinema with films that would facilitate a broader understanding <strong>of</strong> his work. On the<br />

position occupied by Stratagem in his career, Bertolucci unequivocally said to Mark Cousins<br />

in a BBC interview: 'Stratagem marked the end <strong>of</strong> an era, the end <strong>of</strong> a phase for me.'<br />

(Cousins, 1999). Regarding the problematic father/son relationship in the film, this chapter<br />

will trace a political configuration through what can be seen as another example <strong>of</strong> the<br />

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director launching 'a critique from the Left' towards the Italian Communist Party; but the<br />

focus is not so much 'the theme <strong>of</strong> the Resistance and its legacy', (Casetti, 1978: 62) but the<br />

issue <strong>of</strong> the Italian Communist Party's immobility and reticence about the dark side <strong>of</strong> its<br />

history, namely phenomena like the Kremlin's repression <strong>of</strong> any dissent inside or outside the<br />

Soviet Union. On this subject there is an explanation by Bertolucci himself:<br />

The relationship between Athos the son and Athos the father is similar to the one I imagined between<br />

Berlinguer and Togliatti [the two most admired secretaries <strong>of</strong> the ICP]: the son discovering the betrayal<br />

<strong>of</strong> the heroic father is Berlinguer who discovers Togliatti's Stalinism. But both betrayal and Stalinism<br />

were historically necessary (but is this nevertheless true?) (Ungari, 1982: 63).<br />

Therefore a theme from Jorge Luis Borges' story Tema del traidor y del heroe is used to<br />

explore the individual and political stagnation that develops when truth is repressed and it<br />

becomes impossible to interpret objectively the actions <strong>of</strong> individuals and historical events.<br />

This political cognizance is one <strong>of</strong> the elements that elicit a form <strong>of</strong> viewer engagement with<br />

the film that is, again in Bertolucci's output, predominantly intellectual and cognitive, the<br />

other elements being the film's complex narration and its stylized visuals.<br />

Plot summary<br />

The opening credits roll over Antonio Ligabue's vibrant paintings <strong>of</strong> a bestiary whose<br />

contents range from farm animals to predators such as tigers. They function as a metaphor <strong>of</strong><br />

the menacing ambience and <strong>of</strong> the role <strong>of</strong> victim that will be assigned to the protagonists.<br />

Athos, named after his father Athos Magnani - a local antifascist hero - is called to Tara, his<br />

birthplace, by Draifa, his father's mistress, to investigate the murder <strong>of</strong> Athos senior decades<br />

earlier. His arrival at a deserted train station establishes the sense <strong>of</strong> isolation and diffidence<br />

that characterizes his return. As implied by the bestiary images, he finds himself in a climate<br />

<strong>of</strong> deviousness and hostility, despite the civic symbols <strong>of</strong> respect towards his father such as a<br />

commemorative bust in the main square. His father's friends Costa, Gaibazzi and Rasori tell<br />

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him about the tentative plan Athos senior had made to assassinate Mussolini with their help,<br />

and <strong>of</strong> his betrayal - without providing any reasons - <strong>of</strong> the conspiracy to the police. Athos<br />

senior then organized his own murder to create the impression that it was perpetrated by the<br />

Fascists, so that it might be useful to the Communist cause. However, suspicion is created<br />

about the three friends' sincerity, and this is deepened by Draifa's undiminished resentment<br />

against Athos senior for choosing his family over her. After Athos jr. secretly vandalizes his<br />

fathers tomb, in public he delivers a speech befitting the umpteenth memorial dedicated to<br />

Athos sr. These different attitudes are arguably depicted to question the importance <strong>of</strong><br />

perpetuating a positive collective memory if it is detrimental to the truth. The film's<br />

denouement leaves the riddle <strong>of</strong> Athos sr.'s behaviour unsolved, although a closing shot <strong>of</strong> a<br />

subtle smile on the face <strong>of</strong> his son implies that he - at least - has understood the truth.<br />

Cognitive, affective, and intellectual functions <strong>of</strong> the theatrical mise-en-scene<br />

While the film privileges socio-political reflection on the part <strong>of</strong> viewers as well as drawing<br />

them cognitively into its detective narrative structure, the film's mood - emanating from its<br />

disquieting visuals rather than from emotional resonances or alignment between viewers and<br />

characters - underpins its intellectual implications. The early images <strong>of</strong> the deserted Tara are<br />

<strong>of</strong> a place where time has been suspended, bringing life to a standstill. This emerges in the<br />

long takes whose duration intensifies Tara's lifelessness, an effect reinforced by Bertolucci's<br />

mise-en-scene, one feature <strong>of</strong> which is that every building's window shutters are permanently<br />

closed. Tara is a setting designed to function as part <strong>of</strong> the unfolding drama that engulfs<br />

Athos jr., and critical scholarship on theatrical drama shed lights, in the following sequence<br />

<strong>of</strong> this chapter, on the affective resonances that Bertolucci creates with his theatrical staging<br />

<strong>of</strong> the film's action and settings. The way Athos jr. enters the diegesis either facing empty<br />

spaces or silently passing groups <strong>of</strong> anonymous, immobile elderly people, exemplifies Gay<br />

McAuley's theory that by observing the interaction between the stage and the actors, it is<br />

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possible to understand 'how the modalities <strong>of</strong> entering [...] the presentational space can be<br />

used to make meaning', (McAuley, 1999: 103) in the sense that it is through the grouping and<br />

movement <strong>of</strong> actors 'that the fictional world is mapped'. This is a process - termed<br />

'blocking' - during which 'the absence <strong>of</strong> movement is as important as movement and the<br />

utterly immobile body exerts its own fascination' (McAuley, 1999: 106).<br />

Athos jr.'s repeated, solitary explorations <strong>of</strong> Tara, advancing into its empty spaces,<br />

reflect the isolation <strong>of</strong> an individual floundering in an unfamiliar environment. Tara's silent<br />

stillness emblemizes a taciturn diffidence and hostility towards its visitor, while<br />

simultaneously emanating an air <strong>of</strong> intrigue surrounding its hidden truths. In this respect, the<br />

significance <strong>of</strong> Athos jr. being recurrently filmed from the back is that it removes the<br />

specificity <strong>of</strong> his identity, universalizing his role into that <strong>of</strong> a lone individual confronting an<br />

unfathomable enigma. The shots also activate a tw<strong>of</strong>old plane as forward perspectives,<br />

symbolizing his obligation to confront the mystery, are reversed either by montage or by 180°<br />

camera panning or tracking, techniques that transform Athos into an object encircled by the<br />

mystery itself. This dual effect is exemplified by the sequence <strong>of</strong> the 'confrontation' between<br />

Athos jr. and his father's bust in the town square, in which circular tracking shots represent<br />

Athos" POV as he walks around the bust, staring at it, while identical reverse shots create the<br />

impression <strong>of</strong> Athos being scrutinized by the bust itself. This sequence reflects the concept <strong>of</strong><br />

the stage and its objects being able 'to express emotion and convey complex interpersonal<br />

relationships in ways that dialogue alone' could not (McAuley, 1999: 170).<br />

This use <strong>of</strong> space and the lack <strong>of</strong> movement within the diegesis can be categorized as<br />

'iconic', in accordance with Bernard Beckerman's distinction between iconic and dynamic<br />

theatrical presentations. The iconic type privileges a demonstrative form in which events<br />

transcend time and where the main purpose is to confirm established states, not challenge<br />

them, so that the representation creates an illusion <strong>of</strong> stasis, <strong>of</strong> endless continuity<br />

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(Beckerman, 1990: 50-61). Tara's stasis, the characters' unchanged lifestyles, and the<br />

categorically conclusive language used in the epitaphs commemorating Athos Magnani sr.,<br />

create a continuity that seals the past and present together in the same continuum. Therefore it<br />

can be said that the mise-en-scene displays the story <strong>of</strong> Athos sr. rather than unfolding it,<br />

since the tension characterizing Athos jr.'s visit is not alleviated, and the ambiguity<br />

surrounding the events <strong>of</strong> thirty years before remains unresolved. This leads to the<br />

consideration that the director aimed to elicit reflection on the timeless issue <strong>of</strong> the hidden<br />

truths within politics and ideology, rather than directing the attention <strong>of</strong> viewers along<br />

emotional lines, via a telic narrative. The preservation <strong>of</strong> the characters' modern day physical<br />

appearance during the flashbacks <strong>of</strong> their past is another device that blends the present with<br />

the past.<br />

Cognitive and affective disorientation<br />

These temporal and aesthetic effects also draw attention to Bertolucci's manipulation <strong>of</strong> the<br />

conventions <strong>of</strong> Hollywood detective movies, and in this context, Bordwell's seminal analyses<br />

<strong>of</strong> film narration work which continues to be cited and incorporated in more modern<br />

research - shed light on the director's techniques. Besides identifying the implications <strong>of</strong> the<br />

causal gaps in the narration <strong>of</strong> Strategem, which inhibit any hypothesis and expectation <strong>of</strong><br />

resolution on the viewer's part, Bordwell describes how the film's temporal structure is<br />

achieved by the aesthetic construction <strong>of</strong> its flashbacks. They are characterized not only by<br />

characters being portrayed as physically identical both in the flashbacks and in the sequences<br />

set nearly three decades later, but also by the lack <strong>of</strong> a 'proper signalling <strong>of</strong> the transition into<br />

or out <strong>of</strong> the flashback' (Bordwell, 1995: 90). hi this context, Bertolucci's decision to have<br />

the same actor, Giulio Brogi, play the roles <strong>of</strong> Athos Magnani senior and junior, further<br />

complicates the situation, because it serves to amalgamate subjectivity (from characters such<br />

as Draifa) and objectivity to a point where a full integration <strong>of</strong> the two roles is implied.<br />

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The peak <strong>of</strong> this integration is reached in two sequences, one being a flashback<br />

portraying Draifa in a fit <strong>of</strong> jealousy. The scene takes place in her house with Athos jr.<br />

deciding to quit the investigation and leave. The camera turns to frame Draifa's face as she<br />

rebukes him, then - by taking her POV - it frames Athos who unexpectedly has become his<br />

father, recognizable by his Saharan jacket and red scarf; the dialogue shifts from the present<br />

day back to Draifa's resentment at Athos sr.'s intention to stop their relationship and return to<br />

his family. The other sequence depicts a frightened Athos jr. as he runs across a crop field. It<br />

features cross-cutting which alternates between Athos jr. and identical images <strong>of</strong> his father<br />

running across the field thirty years earlier, father and son having both been intimidated by<br />

the behaviour <strong>of</strong> Costa, Gaibazzi and Rasori. The montage erases the temporal distance<br />

between the two scenes, cueing a sensation that Athos jr. has taken his father's place. These<br />

chronological shifts render problematic the viewer's attempts to engage cognitively with, and<br />

anticipate, the progression <strong>of</strong> the narration. Instead, the film's structure arguably lends itself<br />

to forms <strong>of</strong> engagement based on the recognition, by perceptive viewers, <strong>of</strong> intellectual<br />

parallels and associations.<br />

The film's flashbacks or fantasies are formed when an absence <strong>of</strong> realism is combined<br />

with a narrative perspective that is not attributable to any diegetic character (Bordwell, 1995:<br />

92). Sequences such as the mocking funeral procession for a lion that had escaped from a<br />

circus and which was subsequently killed, and the dinner that takes place at Draifa's home<br />

with an ex-fascist as one <strong>of</strong> the guests, typify this ambience, as objective and subjective<br />

perspectives are blurred. In this context, Bordwell estimates that there are 138 'elliptical and<br />

ambiguous shot changes' as opposed to 137 continuity shots, (Bordwell, 1995: 95) and notes<br />

how Bertolucci's considerable manipulation <strong>of</strong> the duration <strong>of</strong> the final scene at Tara's train<br />

station emphasizes the film's inconclusive ending (Bordwell, 1995:97). Equally, the film s<br />

mise-en-scem continues to mislead viewers' aesthetic expectations by alternating stylization<br />

93


and realism, without providing criteria to enable viewers to understand why specific scenes<br />

are presented in certain forms; consequently, viewers can only evaluate the stylistic quality <strong>of</strong><br />

each take and try to ascertain the degree <strong>of</strong> subjectivity or objectivity that conditions it.<br />

Such ambiguities indicate how the viewer's bottom-up and top-down processes <strong>of</strong><br />

narrative organization and interpretation on the basis <strong>of</strong> on-screen information (Branigan,<br />

1992: 37) are continuously obstructed, blocking the solution <strong>of</strong> the riddle concerning whether<br />

the 'betrayal' by Athos sr. was an altruistic act <strong>of</strong> self-sacrifice - aware that his three friends<br />

were too naive for the assassination task - an act <strong>of</strong> duplicity, or an act to fulfil the need to<br />

create a hero figure. On this issue, Bertolucci admitted: 'I don't give any explanation, but I<br />

am always thinking within the film about the reason for the treason' (Georgakas and<br />

Rubenstein, 1984: 39). The film's ambiguity concerning subjectivity and objectivity, and also<br />

narrative chronology, prevent the traditional clarification <strong>of</strong> events via cognitive processes<br />

that viewers would expect within detective movies, a process normally centred on the gradual<br />

disclosure <strong>of</strong> information that is made sense <strong>of</strong> by the detective's thought processes and by<br />

the viewer. But besides this cognitive obstruction, this approach also elicits an affective<br />

response, generating a pervasive sense <strong>of</strong> disorientation punctuated by moments <strong>of</strong> tension<br />

and suspense.<br />

The sense <strong>of</strong> disorientation is intensified by the obsessive tone that the fragmented<br />

narration assumes, as it transpires that Draifa is driven by a bitter vindictiveness about past<br />

events. Also the fact that the actress playing Draifa - Alida Valli - was the memorable<br />

protagonist <strong>of</strong> Visconti's Senso, may have been, and may continue to be, instrumental in<br />

transfusing an obsessive ambience from one film to the other in the minds <strong>of</strong> Italian viewers.<br />

Draifa 's state <strong>of</strong> mind drives her to try to reactivate her relationship with Athos sr. through<br />

his son, and this is illustrated by her attempts to erase Athos jr.'s identity by pressuring him<br />

to wear his father's safari jacket. Similarly, Athos jr.'s initial objectivity during the early<br />

94


phase <strong>of</strong> his inquiries becomes clouded as his detachment evolves into an unhealthy fixation<br />

regarding his father's true nature. The consequence <strong>of</strong> these obsessive, morbid perspectives is<br />

that the impetus to piece together rationally the events leading to the death <strong>of</strong> Athos sr.<br />

recedes. The disturbing scene in which Athos destroys in desperation a plaque<br />

commemorating his father, typifies the way in which obsessive variants <strong>of</strong> crime fiction, as<br />

discussed by Grodal, lead to a predominance <strong>of</strong> symbolism within the narrative, diverting the<br />

viewers' focus <strong>of</strong> attention from establishing concrete facts to deciphering emblematic<br />

meanings. This narrative strategy reflects Grodal's view that obsessive crime fiction, by<br />

manipulating the reality status <strong>of</strong> what is seen, transforms narratives into 'proto-lyrical,<br />

symbolic and allegorical patterns' (Grodal, 1997: 168-169).<br />

Webs <strong>of</strong> symbolism and metaphor<br />

In The Spider's Stratagem, elements <strong>of</strong> the proto-lyrical, the symbolic, and the allegorical<br />

mentioned by Grodal are easily identifiable; the proto-lyrical emerges when the landscape is<br />

either shot in dazzling sunlight or in the bluish dusk <strong>of</strong> the summer evenings, the silence<br />

broken only by the sound <strong>of</strong> crickets, and these sequences appear designed to mark moments<br />

<strong>of</strong> natural harmony as opposed to the dissonant human relationships in the film. Taking<br />

inspiration from Magritte's work, Bertolucci wanted to reproduce the painter's famous shade<br />

<strong>of</strong> blue (Ungari, 1982:63). hi this context, the film represents the first collaboration between<br />

Bertolucci and Vittorio Storaro, and appropriate consideration must be given to the effect <strong>of</strong><br />

Storaro's input in terms <strong>of</strong> shaping the film's aesthetics and consequently modifying its<br />

affective impact. Tlie Spider's Stratagem marked the beginning <strong>of</strong> a visual approach that<br />

might be best described as 'painterly', a perspective that arguably characterized all<br />

subsequent films by Bertolucci which featured Storaro's involvement; significantly, this is an<br />

aesthetic that does not emerge in the films made by Bertolucci without Storaro's input. While<br />

it is difficult to establish the impact <strong>of</strong> specific collaborators on a director's work, particularly<br />

95


when directors learn from (and evolve through) working with individuals who bring new<br />

expertise to given projects, the case <strong>of</strong> Storaro does shed light on Bertolucci's evaluations <strong>of</strong><br />

his own films and <strong>of</strong> the contributions made by others. In this context, a brief overview <strong>of</strong> the<br />

aesthetic differences between films made by Bertolucci with and without Storaro, together<br />

with reference to Storaro's own description <strong>of</strong> his working methods, is informative.<br />

Storaro recounts how he applied himself 'to studying the works <strong>of</strong> great masters <strong>of</strong><br />

art' and asserts: 'For cinematographers like me painters are my direct inspiration' (Fisher,<br />

2008). Asked about the painters who had influenced him most, Storaro mentioned<br />

Caravaggio, whom, for the way he used light and dark, Storaro considered to be 'the only one<br />

who had really visualized the journey <strong>of</strong> light' (Simon, 2008). I would suggest that this<br />

declaration is helpful in terms <strong>of</strong> identifying the painterly origins behind the striking contrast<br />

between light and shade that emerges in Stratagem, an aesthetic approach that manifests itself<br />

in an arguably more refined form in Last Tango, In Stratagem, besides Magritte and<br />

Caravaggio, other painterly aesthetics can be traced in the depiction <strong>of</strong> gardens and<br />

woodland, as in the sequence depicting the meal that Athos jr. has in Draifa's house where<br />

the table is framed within an open patio door overlooking a garden, and in the scene in which<br />

Costa, Gaibazzi and Rasori are framed frontally as they sit on a low wall running along a<br />

stretch <strong>of</strong> woodland. The natural features are beautifully illuminated with a technique that<br />

evokes Impressionist paintings, the sunlight creating a vibrant surface within which different<br />

shades <strong>of</strong> greenery blend together. Throughout the film the quality <strong>of</strong> the light, and the<br />

artistic effect created, enchants the viewer s gaze and contributes in no small measure to the<br />

film's affective impact.<br />

In Scene Madri, there is a section dedicated to Storaro in which Bertolucci describes<br />

how they met (Storaro was the assistant <strong>of</strong> Aldo Scavarda, the director <strong>of</strong> photography in<br />

Before the Revolution} and their working methods, which involved studying paintings.<br />

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Bertolucci praises Storaro's sensitive refinement, and this is discernible from the subheading:<br />

'Un grande cacciatore di luce a cavallo' (A Great Hunter <strong>of</strong> Light on Horseback). Bertolucci<br />

recalls how Storaro always found a format for his creativity within the requests outlined by<br />

the director, and how this arrangement formed the basis for the photography <strong>of</strong> the films they<br />

did together. To achieve the Magritte blue in Stratagem, several sequences were shot at<br />

twilight, with Storaro finding appropriate lighting and colour schemes to reflect the outline<br />

that had been agreed with Bertolucci. Nevertheless, Bertolucci specified that Storaro was<br />

only responsible for lighting and colour, whereas camera movement and framing remained<br />

his own prerogative (Ungari, 1982: 177). It is possible that this assertion was made not<br />

necessarily to underplay Storaro's input within the film - given also their long-term<br />

collaboration - but out <strong>of</strong> Bertolucci's desire to define their respective roles more precisely.<br />

But it is generally accepted that a cinematographer's input involves more than the limited<br />

functions that Bertolucci ascribed to Storaro's role in Stratagem, as Storaro himself indicates<br />

in asserting that 'the cinematographer uses light, colour, composition and movement to<br />

determine how the story will be visualized' (Fisher, 2008). Nevertheless, if one chooses to<br />

analyse the aesthetic evolution <strong>of</strong> Bertolucci's films according to the limited criteria <strong>of</strong><br />

lighting and colour, the distinctiveness <strong>of</strong> Storaro's input remains conspicuous; light and<br />

colour are deployed to create visual motifs and artistic continuity from scene to scene,<br />

sometimes overwhelming the viewer's senses in films like Tlie Last Emperor and Tlie<br />

Sheltering Sky. This effect is significantly absent in films such as Partner, Besieged, and TJie<br />

Dreamers where the director <strong>of</strong> photography was not Storaro, films whose artistic<br />

construction is based on a less subtle (in tonal terms), stylized and self-conscious cinematic<br />

aesthetic, foregrounding the visual artifice <strong>of</strong> the films and the cinematic styles that they<br />

overtly and playfully evoke.<br />

Furthermore, Storaro"s photography undoubtedly reinforced the metaphorical<br />

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significance <strong>of</strong> the films that he was involved with. Storaro affirms: 'I try to have a parallel<br />

story to the actual one so that, through light and colour, you can feel and understand,<br />

consciously or unconsciously, much more clearly what the story is about' (Schaefer and<br />

Salvato, 1984: 220-221). The chapters related to films such as 1900, The Last Emperor and<br />

The Sheltering Sky contain further explanations by Storaro about the way he conceived such<br />

correlations between aesthetics and narrative content; in the particular context <strong>of</strong> The Spider's<br />

Stratagem, the evocative, hazy luminosity created by Storaro to depict the town <strong>of</strong> Tara in<br />

summer reinforces the sense <strong>of</strong> mental torpor in which the characters seem to be stuck, while<br />

the protracted nocturnal sequences, <strong>of</strong>ten featuring Athos jr. battling to make sense <strong>of</strong> the<br />

environment in which he finds himself, strengthen the perception <strong>of</strong> the reticence <strong>of</strong> the<br />

inhabitants <strong>of</strong> Tara, and ultimately that <strong>of</strong> hidden truths. It is therefore fair to say that this<br />

academic study, with its particular emphasis on how film aesthetics condition the viewing<br />

experience in emotional and intellectual terms, ascribes a greater and a more precise<br />

significance to the artistic input <strong>of</strong> Storaro than Bertolucci, although effusive in his general<br />

praise <strong>of</strong> his collaborator, has tended to acknowledge in interview situations.<br />

With regard to the symbolic and the allegorical, the film symbolism emerges in several<br />

sequences: the red scarf placed around the bust <strong>of</strong> Athos sr. to signify the vivification <strong>of</strong> his<br />

father's presence in the mind <strong>of</strong> Athos jr.; Athos sr. gazing sadly as the escaped lion is<br />

encircled by circus workers, this functioning as a metaphor for his awareness <strong>of</strong> his own<br />

helpless entrapment. Draifa's costumes - and parasols - recall the female protagonists <strong>of</strong><br />

Chekhovian drama who hold on to the memories <strong>of</strong> happy times that have passed, and their<br />

evocation in the film symbolizes her obstinacy in clinging to a past that she will not discard.<br />

Two sequences in the film function as allegory, implying both a transfiguration <strong>of</strong> the images<br />

and the possibility that Athos sr. has been the sacrificial victim <strong>of</strong> personal and historical<br />

circumstances. The first sequence depicts Gaibazzi, Costa and Rasori triumphantly carrying<br />

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on their shoulders the head <strong>of</strong> the lion on a platter which they place ceremoniously in front <strong>of</strong><br />

Athos sr. The latter sits silently and pensively at the head <strong>of</strong> a table; like a premonition, this<br />

scene reinforces the parallel between the destiny <strong>of</strong> the lion and that <strong>of</strong> Athos, implying a<br />

tragic conclusion for his personal drama. Affectively, the scene is designed to elicit a general<br />

sense <strong>of</strong> unease by contrasting the friends' boisterousness with Athos's melancholy.<br />

Moreover, the fact that the event occurs in Draifa's house reinforces suspicions <strong>of</strong> her<br />

complicity in a possible plot against Athos sr. A later sequence depicts Athos sr. in the centre<br />

<strong>of</strong> a courtyard as he is beaten by his three acquaintances, whose lack <strong>of</strong> mercy is rendered<br />

more unpleasant by Athos's silent submission. Here the allegory is laden with religious<br />

influences, since the framing and the characters' behaviour evoke iconography representing<br />

Christ being flogged by Roman soldiers. Despite the scene's insertion in a sequence implying<br />

that Athos sr. has 'betrayed' his colleagues, the sequence cues compassion towards him, an<br />

effect which also triggers a cognitive evaluation from viewers regarding the extent to which<br />

the narrative has suppressed information relating to this dramatic sequence <strong>of</strong> events, and it<br />

fosters doubts about possible distortions in the recounting <strong>of</strong> the episode.<br />

Obstructing the identification process<br />

A consequence <strong>of</strong> the film's fragmented narration is that viewer engagement with the film's<br />

characters even at the basic level <strong>of</strong> the 'recognition' criterion (M. Smith, 1995: 75) is<br />

uncertain since although the narrative features characters from identifiable socioeconomic<br />

backgrounds and with distinctive regional accents and idiosyncratic behaviour, the lack <strong>of</strong><br />

individual information about them and their past makes it difficult for viewers to conceive <strong>of</strong><br />

them as fully rounded characters. Nevertheless, narrative access to the actions and feelings <strong>of</strong><br />

Athos jr. is sustained so that despite similar lacunae in his characterization, a degree <strong>of</strong><br />

viewer alignment is likely to occur; Athos jr. is the locus <strong>of</strong> diegetic action, and the<br />

confrontation with the mystifying and threatening behaviour <strong>of</strong> Tara's inhabitants increases<br />

99


the viewer's psychological proximity to him. Yet the possibility <strong>of</strong> allegiance with Athos jr.<br />

or other characters is arguably compromised by the obstacles preventing their complete<br />

recognition as rounded, coherent characters, and by the fact that no character is central to the<br />

mediation <strong>of</strong> the narrative, which remains ambiguous and partially unintelligible. In<br />

particular, Athos jr.'s unresolved ambiguity prevents viewers from formulating a moral<br />

evaluation <strong>of</strong> his behaviour, distancing them from the diegetic world.<br />

Creating intense empathic phenomena<br />

However, the proximity to Athos that the alignment allows is fostered by several scenes <strong>of</strong><br />

empathy, whose positions in the film reflect Plantinga's observation about powerful<br />

emotional effects being achieved 'after a protagonist has undergone some kind <strong>of</strong> trial or<br />

sacrifice', and by connecting such scenes with the 'moral and ideological project <strong>of</strong> the film'<br />

(Plantinga, 1999: 253). In Stratagem the empathy scenes are linked to an awareness <strong>of</strong> Athos<br />

jr.'s realization that his life will always be conditioned by a past that does not belong to him -<br />

a melancholic state <strong>of</strong> mind whose exacerbation is displayed in the sequence that depicts him<br />

in tears as he vandalizes his father's plaque. The viewer's affective closeness to Athos jr. is<br />

enhanced by the way scenes <strong>of</strong> empathy are linked with those <strong>of</strong> compassion for his father, so<br />

that their melancholy is juxtaposed. Consequently, the identification <strong>of</strong> Athos sr. with the<br />

lion's destiny is emphasized by a combination <strong>of</strong> facial close-ups and POV structures, while<br />

his passive submission to his colleagues' violence is highlighted by the repeated close-ups <strong>of</strong><br />

his bloody, grieving face. Similarly, Athos jr/s experiences in Tara are marked by countless<br />

close-ups and POV shots that consolidate a sense <strong>of</strong> vulnerability up to the moment when his<br />

emotion replicate his father's terror decades earlier, depicted in the sequence where<br />

Bertolucci cross-cuts between images <strong>of</strong> father and son as they run across a crop field, thirty<br />

years apart.<br />

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The emotional quality <strong>of</strong> the musical score<br />

Music is another element which provides an affective undercurrent and mood to a film whose<br />

resonances are predominantly intellectual. Plantinga argues that music is fundamental in<br />

creating 'affective congruence' between sound and image, and in encouraging 'emotional<br />

contagion' between the viewer and screen characters when expressive soundtrack music is<br />

allied with facial close-ups (Plantinga, 1999: 254). The film's orchestral soundtrack is<br />

effective in cueing disquiet during the symbolic confrontation between Athos jr. and his<br />

father's bust; similarly, the opera arias from Verdi's Rigoletto which resound from<br />

loudspeakers in the streets <strong>of</strong> Tara and which emanate with live opera performances at the<br />

local theatre, all characters listening motionless, evokes - as Gorbman notes - the effect <strong>of</strong> 'a<br />

Greek chorus commenting on a narrative temporarily frozen into spectacle' (Gorbman, 1987:<br />

20). The use <strong>of</strong> opera has elicited symbolic parallels and critical interpretation (Kolker, 1985:<br />

123) yet Bertolucci has denied that there is any thematic relevance between the arias and the<br />

film's plot, affirming that Verdi's music was an element that he wanted to use to create 'a<br />

regional, artisan film', and that since Verdi's music possesses a mythical dimension, it would<br />

correlate with the 'mythic stature <strong>of</strong> the father' (Goldin, 1972: 64). These two effects - the<br />

mythical dimension and the narrative temporarily frozen into spectacle - are instrumental in<br />

creating a sense <strong>of</strong> the unreal as Athos jr. is attracted back towards Tara from the station after<br />

having told Draifa that he was leaving.<br />

Conclusion<br />

As previously stated, since the film s emotional resonance remains muted, and since<br />

cognitive engagement with, and resolution <strong>of</strong>, the enigmas in its narrative is problematic, the<br />

significance <strong>of</strong> the film lies in its intellectual, real world implications. Stratagem may be read<br />

as a sign <strong>of</strong> a more mature relationship between the director and the Italian Communist Party.<br />

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Unlike Before the Revolution in which Fabrizio's criticisms are followed by a form <strong>of</strong><br />

individual political withdrawal, here Bertolucci stimulates reflection on the political<br />

perspectives implied in the film, that <strong>of</strong> Italy's political Left being trapped by its past, without<br />

any fissure being created, this being signified by Athos jr. s participation in the umpteenth<br />

memorial ceremony for his father. The film's viewpoint still resonates in Bertolucci's recent<br />

affirmation about the necessity <strong>of</strong> superseding the word 'communism' because 'it has kept<br />

the political movement at a standstill for many years' and also because it 'made many people<br />

suffer and perhaps we didn't want to see what was happening on the other side' (Fantoni<br />

Minnella, 2004: 233).<br />

With regard to the film's style, Stratagem maintains the essence <strong>of</strong> Bertolucci's<br />

earlier work, through the cryptic, symbolic form <strong>of</strong> the narration; but it also opens up a<br />

strategy aiming for a slightly increased degree <strong>of</strong> affective engagement and greater thematic<br />

intelligibility. On this point, Bertolucci's revelation that he felt the need to return to the film<br />

after six months, (in the meantime he had finished Tlie Conformist, the making <strong>of</strong> which - as<br />

is discussed in a later chapter - had been marked by changes in the director's editing<br />

techniques under Franco Arcalli's influence) because he was dissatisfied "with the initial<br />

montage' (Chalujia, Schadhauser and Mingrone, 1970: 59) is significant. Bertolucci recalls<br />

how, although he sensed the risk <strong>of</strong> didacticism, he considered the insertion <strong>of</strong> images <strong>of</strong> key<br />

earlier scenes from the film in the sequence <strong>of</strong> the memorial speech, as 'a generous gesture to<br />

the TV audience, which wasn't used to seeing a film as elliptical as this one' (Chalujia,<br />

Schadhauser and Mingrone, 1970: 59). This broadening <strong>of</strong> his audience was something that<br />

Bertolucci developed further with the release <strong>of</strong> The Confonnist; but in 1981 he returned to<br />

the moods and resonances evoked in Stratagem with T)je Tragedy <strong>of</strong> a Ridiculous Man,<br />

which again features sombre, pessimistic perspectives on the Italian Communist Party's<br />

politics during the period <strong>of</strong> Red Brigade terrorism.<br />

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Notes<br />

References<br />

Regarding the failure <strong>of</strong> Partner Bertolucci said 'It is a film in which you see above all this desire to be<br />

[...] "revolutionary" at a cinematic level. And just for this reason, it is a film that had no distribution at<br />

all, because nobody wanted to see it, it interested nobody' (Fantoni Minnella, 2004: 230). As regards<br />

his subsequent period <strong>of</strong> forced inactivity he recalls: 'It was difficult for me, if not impossible, to find<br />

financing', and about his unrealized projects he states: 'it has always caused me pain and frustration'<br />

(Ungari, 1982: 43).<br />

The impact <strong>of</strong> this pr<strong>of</strong>essional disappointment was still dramatically visible in 1973, as, in comparing<br />

Bertolucci's appearance with that <strong>of</strong> their first meeting ten years earlier, Gideon Bachmann couldn't<br />

help remarking: 'The changes in the man are notable. The few years <strong>of</strong> inactivity and analysis seem to<br />

have left a mark' (Bachmann, 1973: 92).<br />

Bachmann, G. (1973) "Every Sexual Relationship Is Condemned: An Interview with<br />

Bernardo Bertolucci', in Gerard, F.S., Kline, T.J., and Sklarew, B. (ed.) (2000)<br />

Bernardo Bertolucci Interviews, Jackson: <strong>University</strong> Press <strong>of</strong> Mississippi.<br />

Beckerman, B. (1990) Tlie Tlieatrical Presentation, Performer, Audience and Act, ed. by<br />

Beckerman G.B., and Coco W., New York and London: Routledge.<br />

Bordwell, D. (1995) Narration in the Fiction Film, London: Routledge.<br />

Bragin, J. (1966) 'A Conversation with Bernardo Bertolucci", in Gerard, F.S., Kline, T.J., and<br />

Sklarew, B. (ed.) (2000) Beniardo Bertolucci Interviews, Jackson: <strong>University</strong> Press <strong>of</strong><br />

Mississippi.<br />

Casetti, F. (1978) Bernardo Bertolucci, Florence: "La Nuova Italia" Editrice.<br />

Chaluiaja, E., Schadhauser, S. and Mingrone, G. (1970) 'A Conversation with Bertolucci'. in<br />

Gerard, F.S., Kline, T.J., and Sklarew, B. (ed.) (2000) Bernardo Bertolucci<br />

Interviews, Jackson: <strong>University</strong> Press <strong>of</strong> Mississippi.<br />

Cousins, M. (1999) Scene by Scene with Bemardo Bertolucci, BBC Scotland.<br />

Fisher, B. 'Vittorio Storaro Maestro <strong>of</strong> Light' in Scribd., September 26th 2008, [Online]<br />

available: http://www.scribd.corn/doc/6233739/Maestro-<strong>of</strong>-Light-Vittorio-Storaro<br />

[July 2011].<br />

Georgakas, D. and Rubenstein, L. (ed.) (1985) Art Politics Cinema: Tlie Cineaste Interviews,<br />

London and Sydney: Pluto Press.<br />

Goldin, M (1972) 'Bertolucci on The Conformist', in Gerard, F.S., Kline, T.J., and Sklarew,<br />

B. (ed.) (2000) Bemardo Bertolucci Interviews, Jackson: <strong>University</strong> Press <strong>of</strong><br />

Mississippi.<br />

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Gorbman, C. (1987) Unheard Melodies, London: BFI Publishing.<br />

Grodal, T. (1997) Moving Pictures, Oxford: Oxford <strong>University</strong> Press.<br />

Kline, T.J. (1987) Bertolucci's Dream Loom: A Psychoanalytic Study <strong>of</strong> Cinema, Amherst:<br />

The <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Massachusetts Press.<br />

Maraini, D. (1973) 'Who were you?', in Gerard, F.S., Kline, T.J., and Sklarew B., (ed.)<br />

(2000) Bernardo Bertolucci Interviews, Jackson: <strong>University</strong> Press <strong>of</strong> Mississippi.<br />

Marcorelles, L. and Bontemps J., (1965) 'Interview with Bernardo Bertolucci', in Gerard,<br />

F.S., Kline, T.J., and Sklarew, B. (ed.) (2000) Bernardo Bertolucci Interviews,<br />

Jackson: <strong>University</strong> Press <strong>of</strong> Mississippi.<br />

McAuley, G. (1999) Space in Performance: Making Meaning in Theatre, Michigan: The<br />

<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Michigan Press.<br />

Plantinga, C. (1999) 'The Scene <strong>of</strong> Empathy and the Human Face on Film 7 , in Plantinga, C.<br />

and Smith, G. (ed.) Passionate Views, Baltimore: The John Hopkins <strong>University</strong> Press.<br />

Schaefer, D. and Salvato, L. (1984) Masters <strong>of</strong> Light, London: <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> California<br />

Press.<br />

Simon, A. 'Vittorio Storaro: Writing with light' in The Hollywood Inten'iew, February 9<br />

2008,[Online] available: http://thehollvwoodinterview.blogspot.com/2008/02/vittorio-<br />

storaro-hollvwood-interview.html [July 2011]. This internet reference specifies, in an<br />

editor's note, that this article originally appeared in the February 1999 issue <strong>of</strong> Venice<br />

Magazine.<br />

Smith, M. (1995) Engaging Characters, Oxford: Oxford <strong>University</strong> Press.<br />

Socci, S. (1996) Bemardo Bertolucci, Milan: II Castoro Cinema.<br />

Ungari, E. (1982) Scene Madri di Bernardo Bertolucci (2nd Ed. 1987), Milan: Ubulibri.<br />

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La trasedia di un uomo ridicolo / The Tragedy <strong>of</strong> a Ridiculous Mam A Requiem for the<br />

Left<br />

In 1981, La tragedia di un uomo ridicolo / The Tragedy <strong>of</strong> a Ridiculous Man explored the<br />

implosion <strong>of</strong> the Italian Left under the impact <strong>of</strong> Red Brigade terrorism. The film marked the<br />

final breakdown in relations between Bertolucci and Italian film critics, and was instrumental<br />

in the director's decision to leave his native country. Those critics who were leftist<br />

intellectuals accused Bertolucci <strong>of</strong> indifference towards the problem <strong>of</strong> terrorism; (Socci<br />

1996: 70) by contrast, he once again felt misunderstood. The following analysis <strong>of</strong> the film<br />

will suggest that the film-maker, far from being indifferent to this complex situation, posited<br />

two issues; that the birth <strong>of</strong> terrorism was a consequence <strong>of</strong> political disillusionment towards<br />

the Communist Party and its politics; and that the terrorists' political praxis, once separated<br />

from the <strong>of</strong>ficial workers' movements, would lead to a fragmentation and dispersion <strong>of</strong> leftist<br />

ideology in Italy. Hence the following analysis will explore how these two concepts are<br />

embedded in a narrative based on the unconventional decision - given the film's theme - <strong>of</strong><br />

placing a capitalist entrepreneur, Primo Spaggiari (Ugo Tognazzi), in the role <strong>of</strong> a victim. It<br />

will also highlight how The Tragedy <strong>of</strong> a Ridiculous Man, filmed after the stylistic allure <strong>of</strong><br />

1900 and La luna, represented a return to Bertolucci's earlier style <strong>of</strong> film-making, in its<br />

evocation <strong>of</strong> the pensive, sombre atmospheres developed in Before the Revolution and Tlie<br />

Spider's Stratagem. Beyond its politico-intellectual resonances, the film is also demanding<br />

cognitively, requiring considerable engagement from the viewer to link the actions <strong>of</strong> its<br />

enigmatic characters to its unfolding, cryptic narrative. The film also possesses a strong<br />

emotional charge, and this chapter will outline how a pr<strong>of</strong>ound sense <strong>of</strong> melancholy is<br />

generated through the director's use <strong>of</strong> landscapes, music, and unusually for Bertolucci's<br />

films, a process <strong>of</strong> close viewer alignment and allegiance with the character <strong>of</strong> Primo<br />

Spaggiari.<br />

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Plot summary<br />

The opening credits roll over images - shot in a realist style - that set the story in hard­<br />

working, rural Italy. Primo Spaggiari, the owner <strong>of</strong> a factory-farm, has just celebrated his<br />

birthday when his son Giovanni is kidnapped. This crisis gradually unveils the contempt that<br />

his wife Barbara, a well educated French woman, and Giovanni - studying at university -<br />

have for Primo's humble origins and lack <strong>of</strong> formal education. His strong bond with the<br />

factory makes Primo reluctant to sell it to raise the necessary ransom money; his standpoint is<br />

reinforced by his suspicions that the kidnapping has been organized by Giovanni himself to<br />

raise funds for the terrorists with whom he associates. Two terrorist sympathizers enter the<br />

scene: Giovanni's girlfriend Laura and his best friend Adelfo who are both part-time students<br />

(Adelfo is also a prete operaio I priest-labourer) and work at the factory-farm. Primo's<br />

unawareness <strong>of</strong> their existence reveals the superficiality <strong>of</strong> his declarations that he considers<br />

his workforce to be a family, and his ignorance about his son's life. When it is feared that<br />

Giovanni is dead, Primo's despair is brief, as he decides to keep the news secret and continue<br />

collecting money to alleviate temporarily the factory's debts. He justifies this disquieting<br />

response with a biblical notion, that <strong>of</strong> his son's blood fertilizing the field. Two sensual<br />

moments occur between Primo and Laura, whom he involves with Adelfo in an illicit plan;<br />

they will collect the ransom money from an arranged place and return it to him. But,<br />

unexpectedly, Giovanni returns safely, and his accusing gaze betrays his knowledge <strong>of</strong><br />

Primo's deception, while implying that he and the terrorists have got the money. Primo~s<br />

bewilderment rums into a resolution not to ascertain the facts and to leave it to the viewers to<br />

solve the riddle if they wish to.<br />

The characters' intellectual and political significance<br />

To understand the film's intellectual and political implications, it is important to break down<br />

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the socio-political composition <strong>of</strong> the Spaggiari family, since it is not the Marxist terrorist<br />

Giovanni who is posited as being closest to the working classes, but his father, the supposed<br />

capitalist. Primo is a self-made man proud <strong>of</strong> his working-class origins and hard work; he<br />

expresses this to Laura ('I used to stand proudly among the milk tubs like a socialist hero'),<br />

and considers his employees his companions. By contrast, the portrayal <strong>of</strong> Barbara -<br />

rational and intellectual - is more typical <strong>of</strong> the ruling class, and her distance from the plight<br />

<strong>of</strong> the labouring classes is underlined by her sangfroid in blandly announcing the sale <strong>of</strong> the<br />

factory. Giovanni's insensitivity towards the consequences <strong>of</strong> this on the workers' fate also<br />

makes him appear disconnected from the real world. This unconventional delineation <strong>of</strong> the<br />

characters, in the delicate political context <strong>of</strong> terrorism connected with Marxist ideology, is<br />

deliberately provocative. The film is a non-conformist challenge to the Communist Party<br />

regarding the situation created by the terrorists, individuals that the Party used to call<br />

'misguided brothers', and this approach is reminiscent <strong>of</strong> the position that Pasolini took with<br />

regard to the student riots <strong>of</strong> the 1 st <strong>of</strong> March 1968 at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Rome, in which he<br />

supported the proletariat who unwittingly found themselves in the firing line the police. On<br />

that occasion, Pasolini wrote a poem, // PCI ai giovani, (Pasolini 1968) in which he stated his<br />

sympathy for the police, who - he emphasized - were the real proletariat, financially unable<br />

to enrol at university, hi the poem the students were referred to as 'daddy's boys\ rebelling<br />

against their fathers, a bourgeois gesture from a new bourgeoisie. This unorthodox analysis<br />

drew controversy, since the Left generally praised the younger generation for fighting for<br />

new rights. Nonetheless, the implications <strong>of</strong> Pasolini's comments were clear, namely that the<br />

event's novelty lay in the fact that for the first time, extreme left-wing activism appeared to<br />

be the preserve <strong>of</strong> the privileged classes.(l) Bertolucci adopts a similar line <strong>of</strong> reasoning in<br />

his disquieting portrayal <strong>of</strong> the younger generation - embodied by Giovanni - who despite<br />

having never participated in the concrete, daily lives <strong>of</strong> the working classes, is willing to<br />

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destroy the structures <strong>of</strong> production out <strong>of</strong> contempt at the older generation whom he believes<br />

is guilty <strong>of</strong> amalgamating itself with the bourgeois system. By making a capitalist<br />

entrepreneur like Primo Spaggiari, and particularly his factory, the victims <strong>of</strong> terrorism,<br />

Bertolucci emulates Pasolini in highlighting the paradox characterizing extreme left-wing<br />

activism in the 1970s - an elite incapable <strong>of</strong> linking their abstract ideology with the real<br />

needs <strong>of</strong> the working classes.<br />

However, Bertolucci implies that the social unrest <strong>of</strong> the 1970s is generated by a<br />

widespread, growing disappointment at the post-war political orientation <strong>of</strong> the Communist<br />

Party, which had gradually sidelined the priority <strong>of</strong> changing society's power base in favour<br />

<strong>of</strong> attaining the limited goal <strong>of</strong> securing power at local government level, while, however,<br />

continuing to campaign for social justice. Tragedy foregrounds these issues by questioning<br />

the social state <strong>of</strong> affairs in the Emilia Romagna region which had been governed by a<br />

Communist administration since 1945. Three elements serve to illustrate the socio-political<br />

situation at a microcosmic level: the entrepreneur Primo Spaggiari, with his ambiguous mix<br />

<strong>of</strong> idealism and self-centredness; the working class with its eternal troubles, and still some<br />

distance from improving its social status (symbolized by the student workers Laura and<br />

Adelfo); and the misplaced far-left idealism <strong>of</strong> the younger generation, with its devastating<br />

effect on all society. To complete the gloomy picture, the film portrays groups <strong>of</strong> local<br />

dignitaries whose hypocritical and unethical behaviour during the critical period after<br />

Giovanni's kidnapping implies that there is little difference between their values and those <strong>of</strong><br />

the more unrestrained forms <strong>of</strong> capitalism that were thriving in other Italian regions.<br />

Theoretical origins <strong>of</strong> the film's political resonances<br />

This interpretation <strong>of</strong> the film is echoed by elements in Giorgio Bocca's 1978 analysis <strong>of</strong><br />

Italian terrorism. Above all, the Communist Party's deficiencies, denounced by the film,<br />

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emerge in Bocca's reconstruction <strong>of</strong> the foundation <strong>of</strong> the Red Brigade. Bocca traces this<br />

moment back to 1970, through the merging <strong>of</strong> a Catholic section set up by the social studies<br />

students Renato Curcio and Mara Cagol, and a Communist section set up by Alberto<br />

Franceschini around whom many students at Reggio Emilia <strong>University</strong> gathered, students<br />

disillusioned with the Communist Party. The Catholic component, aiming to realize the New<br />

Testament concepts <strong>of</strong> pure brotherhood, joined the Italian Marxist Leninist Party based in<br />

Milan, which seemed to espouse genuine human egalitarianism (in this regard, the character<br />

<strong>of</strong> Adelfo, a priest-labourer who supports the terrorists, arguably refers to this Catholic<br />

grouping) (Bocca, 1978: 10-11). In Bocca's view, the Communist Party was to blame for the<br />

political deviation <strong>of</strong> the young, because it had changed from being a vehicle for ideological<br />

innovation to one <strong>of</strong> administration (Bocca, 1978: 13). Bocca also uses the kidnapping <strong>of</strong> the<br />

entrepreneur Angelo Costa in Genoa for a huge ransom (Bocca, 1978: 100) to illustrate how<br />

the Red Brigade's ideology was unrealistic and how outdated their conception <strong>of</strong> society was.<br />

By identifying the manager/owner as a physical target, the group seemed unaware that where<br />

large companies were concerned, any ransom would be recovered either from a company<br />

shake-up to the detriment <strong>of</strong> workers - or from government credit, which, in Italy, would<br />

mean taxpayers (Bocca, 1978: 114-115).<br />

If Bocca was a committed, free-speaking intellectual from the Resistance generation,<br />

Antonio Negri was a young philosopher and the leader <strong>of</strong> two radical movements: Workers'<br />

Power, and upon its dissolution, Workers' Autonomy. Yet their analysis <strong>of</strong> the issues<br />

affecting Italian society is similar. In the period 1971-1977 Negri wrote five pamphlets which<br />

analysed Italy's socio-political situation and European capitalism; he outlined a hypothesis<br />

and a political project for a movement which disavowed the reformist politics <strong>of</strong> the Official<br />

Labour Movement (to be intended as both the PCI and the Communist trade union). These<br />

writings caused Negri to be accused <strong>of</strong> being the clandestine leader <strong>of</strong> the Red Brigade, 'a<br />

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group whose elitist, ahistorical Leninism' he had 'thoroughly criticized from the standpoint<br />

<strong>of</strong> the mass organizations' new class composition' (Murphy, 2005: xii). (2) Negri sees<br />

Communist reformism, in its 1970s embodiment <strong>of</strong> the Historic Compromise (a term coined<br />

to represent the imminent coalition between the Christian Democrat Party and the Communist<br />

Party) as capitalism's attempt to dismember the class movement by absorbing workers and<br />

their movements into the capitalist process via the incorporation <strong>of</strong> the PCI into government.<br />

Negri envisaged in the Historic Compromise 'a purely reactionary essence' (Negri, 1975:<br />

147).<br />

To oppose this scenario, Negri elaborated a strategy to subvert the social order by<br />

creating the theory <strong>of</strong> worker self-valorization (Negri, 1977: 236) with the aim <strong>of</strong> opposing<br />

the mainstays <strong>of</strong> capitalism, such as the ideology <strong>of</strong> work and consumerism, and paying<br />

greater heed to the real needs and desires <strong>of</strong> the workers (Negri, 1977: 282-285). He is aware<br />

that violence may be unavoidable in the process, and justifies it by reminding everyone <strong>of</strong> the<br />

violence inherent in capitalism's exploitative nature. But he draws a line between violence<br />

within a dialectic determination, and terrorism. Negri views the terrorist groups as dissipating<br />

'the function <strong>of</strong> power, the mass character <strong>of</strong> the vanguard or the working-class specificity <strong>of</strong><br />

its political need'; he accuses them <strong>of</strong> being 'unable to grasp an organic relation between the<br />

subjectivity <strong>of</strong> workers" power and the subjectivism <strong>of</strong> the use <strong>of</strong> violence' (Negri, 1973: 91).<br />

With regard to isolated terrorist actions, he is explicit: 'It is obvious that proletarian violence<br />

has no need to exhibit itself in an exemplary manner, nor to choose [...] exemplary<br />

objectives' (Negri, 1977: 282). On the contrary, for his political project to succeed, Negri<br />

considered it 'fundamental' to draw the support <strong>of</strong> factory workers to the cause (Negri, 1977:<br />

251).<br />

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Elitism, ascetism and emotional repression<br />

hi The Tragedy <strong>of</strong> a Ridiculous Man, the political distance between the terrorists and the<br />

working classes emerges in the sequence depicting the workers commenting indignantly<br />

about the ransom that will cause the factory's sale, and they angrily conclude that they are<br />

always the ones having to pay. The film's depiction <strong>of</strong> the terrorists as a self-referential group<br />

proud to be on their own, perceiving themselves as underground heroes, reflects Bocca's<br />

assertion that the terrorists viewed the proletariat as a spiritual category, a sublimation <strong>of</strong><br />

humanity rather than a complex reality in constant evolution (Bocca, 1978: 11-12). At one<br />

point in the film, Laura expresses this concept when, answering Primo's terse question 'Who<br />

are you?' she declares, entirely straight-faced, 'We are proletarians, holding our breath, and<br />

diving beneath the liquid surface <strong>of</strong> History". Similarly, the ambivalence and secrecy <strong>of</strong> the<br />

terrorists' lifestyle in the film reflects Bocca's view that the Red Brigade's strategy<br />

resembled that <strong>of</strong> a secret society rather than that <strong>of</strong> a revolutionary group who needed the<br />

people in order to succeed. He adds that the terrorists were unaware <strong>of</strong> the elitism <strong>of</strong> this<br />

attitude, and this ultimately evolved into contempt for the entire nation (Bocca, 1978: 11-12).<br />

This last statement is particularly relevant because Giovanni's attitude towards Primo,<br />

depicted through his letters, is exactly that <strong>of</strong> contempt, hi the first letter accompanying a<br />

birthday present to his father. Giovanni scorns Primo's lifetime achievements, whereas in the<br />

two letters written during his real or supposed captivity, he ignores his father. To emphasize<br />

this detail, one sequence features Primo reading Giovanni's second letter aloud; he ends by<br />

saying 'Give Dad a big hug", but as Barbara takes the letter to read it, he adds wistfully: 'I<br />

made up the last line'.<br />

The terrorists' detachment from people's daily lives is articulated in two sensual<br />

sequences that need to be contexrualized within contemporary history and politics to be<br />

understood. While the scenes have an emotional resonance, this is muted by Bertolucci's<br />

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propensity towards a calculated, visual self-consciousness in the framing and mise-en-scene<br />

<strong>of</strong> sexual situations in his films, a tendency recurring in work such as The Sheltering Sky and<br />

The Dreamers. Central to the first sequence is an intense kiss between Laura and Primo,<br />

followed by a tender moment during which Laura confesses that she rarely has sexual<br />

intimacy with Giovanni because they attach little importance to it; besides, they are always<br />

busy and together with fellow terrorists. In the second sequence, Laura's restlessness and<br />

sexual disquiet at spending long periods <strong>of</strong> time with Primo eventually culminates in her<br />

removing her jumper to expose her breasts and release her tension, Laura confessing that with<br />

Giovanni she never expresses her femininity. Her words reflect the concept that an ascetic<br />

lifestyle is necessary in order to dedicate oneself to a 'superior' mission.<br />

This theme emerges in Alberto Moravia's 1971 novel lo e lui/Him and me, which,<br />

although full <strong>of</strong> sarcastic wit, warns against the terrorists' abstract intellectualization,<br />

implying that at its end there can be only death (Moravia, 1990: 387). The novel recounts the<br />

experiences <strong>of</strong> Riccardo, a screenwriter who frequents a terrorist couple, Maurizio and<br />

Flavia, planning to make a film about their group, and it features similarities with Tlie<br />

Tragedy <strong>of</strong> a Ridiculous Man. First, there is a strong attitudinal contrast between the<br />

characters; like Primo, Riccardo is attracted to life's pleasures such as food and sex, whereas<br />

Maurizio and Flavia mirror Giovanni and Laura in being always in control because they are<br />

detached from worldly indulgences. Another similarity consists in the use <strong>of</strong> almost identical<br />

phrasing to describe the terrorists' sex life or lack <strong>of</strong> it. Maurizio declares that the couple<br />

attach little importance to sex, but Flavia responds to Riccardo's sexual approaches with an<br />

attitude that reveals her curiosity and repressed excitement (Moravia, 1990: 306-307). The<br />

two sequences, in the film and in Moravia's novel, question the supposed higher morality and<br />

asceticism <strong>of</strong> the terrorists by presenting their behaviour as a form <strong>of</strong> rational denial<br />

(Giovanni/Maurizio) and a repression (Laura/Flavia) <strong>of</strong> human impulses which leads to a<br />

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dangerous estrangement from the real world.<br />

Political and generational contrasts<br />

However, the question <strong>of</strong> sexual expression has a further significance as it is another example<br />

<strong>of</strong> Primo's total ignorance about his son's personality and the aspirations he harbours. This<br />

lack <strong>of</strong> knowledge is systematically revealed by the narrative, and as the scale <strong>of</strong> his<br />

ignorance is exposed, Primo becomes aware <strong>of</strong> the estrangement that has developed between<br />

Giovanni and himself, which, in conceptual terms, he extends to their respective<br />

generations.(3) In this light, Bertolucci's decision to create clashes between the categories <strong>of</strong><br />

'the idealistic capitalist' and 'the terrorist', and between father and son is significant, for it<br />

indicates the younger generation's resolve to disown both their individual and political<br />

fathers. The film's juxtaposition <strong>of</strong> the figures <strong>of</strong> 'the idealistic capitalist' and 'the father'<br />

embodies Bertolucci's political pessimism, emphasizing that the political rupture affecting<br />

Italian society was also generational, a phenomenon leaving little hope for the future since<br />

neither generational grouping intended to clarify their political ambiguities. This detection <strong>of</strong><br />

a serious generational fissure turned out to be a prescient interpretation <strong>of</strong> the tumultuous<br />

events <strong>of</strong> those years, since it is confirmed by an autobiographical book written many years<br />

after The Tragedy <strong>of</strong> a Ridiculous Man by a young protagonist at that time. Lucia<br />

Annunziata, today an influential journalist, was active in the mass political movement which<br />

rebelled against the PCI, although she never supported terrorism.<br />

The first chapter <strong>of</strong> her book is in fact entitled 'Parricide' and it begins with a stark<br />

declaration: 'In 1977 the Left family murdered their own father, the Communist Party. A<br />

murder that had been on the cards for some time', (Annunziata, 2007: 3) especially after the<br />

Communist Party's decision to join the Christian Democrats in government. Annunziata has<br />

collected testimonies posted on the internet by participants in the radical movements, and<br />

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they confirm how the prevalent memory <strong>of</strong> that period emerges as 'a generational revolution<br />

against fathers who do not understand'; one statement was particularly explicit: '...with the<br />

PCI it was the same sort <strong>of</strong> confrontation you were having with your own father. In short,<br />

finally the time had arrived when you could slap each other's faces' (Annunziata, 2007: 9-<br />

10). In the film, the depiction <strong>of</strong> Primo's humiliation as a result <strong>of</strong> Giovanni's decision to<br />

deprive him <strong>of</strong> his socioeconomic authority can be considered a metaphorical representation<br />

<strong>of</strong> the new relationship between the PCI and the radical political movement. The motivation<br />

provided by Annunziata for the rebellion against patriarchy within the family, mirrors the<br />

perspective outlined in the film: 'We hated the communists [...] for having taken up the<br />

values <strong>of</strong> the bourgeoisie and redeemed them through a sort <strong>of</strong> new, communist, intellectual<br />

crossbreeding' (Annunziata, 2007: 15). This fusion <strong>of</strong> values within the film can be identified<br />

in Primo's lifestyle - his human attachment to his work, but also the way he embraces a<br />

bourgeois mentality and habits.<br />

Annunziata's perspective that the parricide was a destructive act whose reverberations<br />

are still being felt within leftist politics and culture (Annunziata, 2007: 4) corroborates this<br />

chapter's view that Bertolucci's film depicted leftist politics as having reached the point <strong>of</strong> no<br />

return. Since the terrorist period, in fact, the Communist Party has declined to the point where<br />

its reformist wing has merged into the centre-left Partito Democratico, and the radical wing<br />

has split into numerous, tiny Marxist-Leninist parties without parliamentary representation.<br />

The impression <strong>of</strong> a 'requiem' for Italian leftist politics that the film develops and eventually<br />

ratifies in the last sequence, featuring the entire family lined up on opposite sides <strong>of</strong> the<br />

frame, with Primo left on his own, reflects another <strong>of</strong> Annunziata's assertions; '30 years later,<br />

1977 can be taken as the death <strong>of</strong> politics. As the last time that the whole <strong>of</strong> the Left, from the<br />

PCI to the radical movement, were together as if in a final family portrait, before imploding<br />

before the power <strong>of</strong> the gun' (Annunziata, 2007: 53). Finally, the way in which Primo<br />

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abandons any attempt to understand the true course <strong>of</strong> events, arguably to avoid assuming his<br />

share <strong>of</strong> responsibility, conveniently leaving the viewers to ascertain the truth, points<br />

symbolically to the PCI's similar attitude, since it was left to the courts and the media to trace<br />

the causes <strong>of</strong> the political protest that resulted in the birth <strong>of</strong> the Red Brigade.<br />

Suppressive narration combined with protagonist alignment<br />

The preceding section <strong>of</strong> this chapter, outlining the significance <strong>of</strong> the film's intellectual<br />

resonances, is necessary in order to clarify the particular climate pervading sections <strong>of</strong> Italian<br />

society and also the world <strong>of</strong> the film. The nature <strong>of</strong> the political problems discussed earlier<br />

remains a constant undercurrent during a politically aware spectator's viewing experience,<br />

regardless <strong>of</strong> the era in which the film is viewed; it also conditions the reception <strong>of</strong> the film's<br />

cognitive and affective components. The viewer's cognitive skills are activated from the<br />

film's earliest sequences, as fragments <strong>of</strong> visual and aural information emerge that have to be<br />

pieced together in order to clarify the implicit meaning <strong>of</strong> scenes, and the same process is<br />

used as a means <strong>of</strong> constructing future events. For instance, the first sequence showing the<br />

aftermath <strong>of</strong> a birthday celebration at the factory, together with the unpleasant content <strong>of</strong><br />

Giovanni's birthday card, are narrative fragments, which, although indicating a high degree<br />

<strong>of</strong> story omission, are designed to bring an understanding <strong>of</strong> the contrasting nature <strong>of</strong> Prime's<br />

relationships (positive in a pr<strong>of</strong>essional context, but negative with his son), as well as to elicit<br />

speculation about a possible family confrontation.<br />

In the sequence following Giovanni's kidnap in which Barbara appears for the first<br />

time, the silence and physical distance between her and Primo inhibit any understanding <strong>of</strong><br />

her role. Any hypothesis about Barbara being Primo's wife is confirmed only after a delay <strong>of</strong><br />

several minutes; in the subsequent take inside the factory, viewers observe how the duo's<br />

sense <strong>of</strong> physical distance extends into the psychological sphere, emerging from the dialogue<br />

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which emphasizes how Primo's work is founded on an existential premise - he talks <strong>of</strong> the<br />

produce as if it were part <strong>of</strong> an extended family - whereas for Barbara its importance is<br />

merely economic. Because the narrative continues to be suppressive in nature, using<br />

retardation principles to withhold a proper introduction <strong>of</strong> the characters, (Bordwell, 1995:<br />

54-56) and providing no direct information about the narrative context, its structure is little<br />

more than a framework around which viewers have to assemble the narrative fragments to<br />

infer the state <strong>of</strong> things.<br />

In several sequences these narrative gaps combine with a close alignment with Primo,<br />

to induce viewers into a process <strong>of</strong> hypothesis-making and anticipation <strong>of</strong> his reactions. The<br />

most emblematic is the scene portraying the first disquieting encounter between Primo and<br />

Adelfo. It develops as Primo walks disconsolately around a city; suddenly the camera frames<br />

him from the back, at the centre <strong>of</strong> two loudspeakers mounted on the ro<strong>of</strong> <strong>of</strong> a van that draws<br />

ever closer. The peculiar frame composition evokes a target entering the sights <strong>of</strong> a gun, and<br />

the prolonged mystery concerning the identity <strong>of</strong> the people in the van endows the sequence<br />

with a menacing quality. For several minutes the narrative has the dual function <strong>of</strong> inducing<br />

hypotheses about Primo's life being in danger, and <strong>of</strong> eliciting emotional anxiety on account<br />

<strong>of</strong> his unawareness <strong>of</strong> the threat. The take evolves with Primo eventually mirroring the<br />

viewer's thoughts and emotions; he starts running as soon as he realizes that he is being<br />

stalked. The tension is held a little longer until it is dissipated by the driver introducing<br />

himself as Laura's friend.<br />

The degree <strong>of</strong> narrative limitation and the incongruity between the value systems <strong>of</strong><br />

protagonists such as Primo and Barbara make it difficult for viewers to establish any narrative<br />

schema based on cultural knowledge or plausible social interaction (Branigan, 1992: 27) and<br />

so every new piece <strong>of</strong> information has revelatory quality. One example occurs when Primo<br />

discovers Barbara's initiative to sell their property to a group <strong>of</strong> dignitaries. Returning home<br />

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with Adelfo and Laura, Primo is surprised to see the driveway full <strong>of</strong> cars. Entering the<br />

house, the camera adopts a POV shot to reflect the three characters' puzzlement as it pans<br />

over piles <strong>of</strong> expensive overcoats. The evolving hypothesis both from characters and viewers<br />

regarding an impromptu gathering is confirmed by images <strong>of</strong> a lively party that<br />

simultaneously startle characters and viewers; but the event's significance is gradually<br />

revealed as Barbara enters the diegesis, graciously accepting the <strong>of</strong>fers that the guests, like<br />

usurers, make for the family's goods. In these situations, viewers are induced to replicate<br />

Primo's mental processes, while also experiencing his sense <strong>of</strong> dismay. Besides, Bertolucci<br />

increases viewers' cognitive engagement by keeping one character - Barbara - in the dark<br />

about the developments in the kidnap saga. This puts viewers in a position <strong>of</strong> omniscience<br />

with respect to her situation, thus inducing further hypothesis-making regarding the possible<br />

point at which she will be told the truth, and her possible reaction.<br />

The affective and intellectual impact <strong>of</strong> the mise-en-scene<br />

The melancholic mood pervading the film is largely attributable to its structure and mise-en-<br />

scene. The dreamlike representation <strong>of</strong> the landscape, Primo's voiceover narration which<br />

elicits a sense <strong>of</strong> irreparability and inevitability, and the sombre music score which cues a<br />

sense <strong>of</strong> irrecoverable loss, are all 'emotion markers' (Smith G., 1999: 117-118). These<br />

elements are combined with a slow narrative pace and soundless images. The construction <strong>of</strong><br />

Tragedy echoes that <strong>of</strong> Tlie Spider's Stratagem, in that the clear knowledge <strong>of</strong> the<br />

protagonist's feelings, combined with a correspondingly bleak ambience in the film's audio­<br />

visual style, feed into the narrative as they represent the mental state - in this case<br />

sombreness and defeat - experienced by Primo and the viewers. With Tragedy Bertolucci<br />

seemed to have sidelined the virtuosismi <strong>of</strong> his previous films (1900 and La lima) in favour <strong>of</strong><br />

a restrained mise-en-scene. This factor can be read as a sign <strong>of</strong> his preoccupation with making<br />

stylistic choices that corresponded to the film's difficult socio-political issues. More<br />

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specifically, the depiction <strong>of</strong> the landscape through blurred and sepia coloured images<br />

diffuses a sense <strong>of</strong> melancholic unreality, the frequent panoramic framings subtly inducing<br />

sadness as viewers perceive the landscape's harmony being dissolved by the absurd hostility<br />

between factions <strong>of</strong> humankind.<br />

This conflict's absurdity is made explicit by the stark, lifeless images <strong>of</strong> the factory in<br />

a sequence designed to indicate the implications <strong>of</strong> the proposed sale. In a nocturnal<br />

sequence, long shots emphasize the factory's vast, empty spaces, while a metallic lighting<br />

illuminates with a limited palette <strong>of</strong> greyish-blue hues the spotless work benches and the rows<br />

<strong>of</strong> Parmesan cheeses on the shelves. The impression <strong>of</strong> lifelessness created by the visuals is<br />

emphasized by the disquieting echo <strong>of</strong> Barbara and Primo's footsteps. By engaging viewers<br />

affectively, the mise-en-scene strengthens the film's intellectual contention that the<br />

destruction <strong>of</strong> a communal productive reality signifies the death <strong>of</strong> part <strong>of</strong> society. A similar<br />

concept underpins the later sequence portraying the workers" discussions, where, however, a<br />

different aesthetic is used. The action is depicted in a realist style, which, by breaking the<br />

spell <strong>of</strong> the voiceover narration and the sophisticated visual description, allows viewers to<br />

temporarily re-emerge from the story's symbolic density and focus on an unambiguous<br />

narrative strand. The sequence highlights the impact <strong>of</strong> the terrorists' abstract political<br />

notions upon the workers as they curse the terrorists' actions and complain that the workers<br />

always pay in such situations. The adoption <strong>of</strong> dialect gives immediacy to the action, the<br />

colour scheme and lighting are plain and unembellished, and the depiction <strong>of</strong> working life<br />

unrhetorical. This simple but effective strategy elicits understanding <strong>of</strong> the workers'<br />

extraneousness from the abstract, convoluted praxis <strong>of</strong> the Red Brigade.<br />

Viewer alignment and allegiance<br />

However, the film's affective component is principally conditioned by the narrative's firm<br />

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spatio-temporal attachment to Primo and his thoughts, which elicit frequent and intense<br />

moments <strong>of</strong> empathy when, for example, his awareness <strong>of</strong> being perceived as a ridiculous<br />

man turns into a sombre realization that his family do not love him. Throughout the ensuing<br />

narrative, repeated reaction shots align viewers with Primo's deepening misery, which is<br />

amplified by the music score. The strongest moment <strong>of</strong> empathy towards Primo centres on<br />

his disillusionment when he learns that a plan to kidnap him had been aborted by his son only<br />

thanks to Laura. This dramatic sequence starts by showing Primo being startled by the brutal<br />

revelation. The camera follows him as he moves away from Laura and stops in a doorway: he<br />

is framed from the back as if to evoke the weight <strong>of</strong> the news on his shoulders. This shot is<br />

alternated with close-ups <strong>of</strong> Adelfo's uneasy expression, a reaction which appears designed<br />

to mirror the viewers' own response and increase the scene's affective charge; where viewers<br />

are concerned, facial close-ups can 'elicit response through the processes <strong>of</strong> affective<br />

mimicry, facial feedback and emotional contagion' (Plantinga, 1999: 240). Finally, the<br />

camera shows a close-up <strong>of</strong> Primo's anguished face as he swigs a bottle <strong>of</strong> whisky before<br />

fainting , and the take ends with a high-angle framing <strong>of</strong> Laura and Adelfo kneeling over him.<br />

Given Bertolucci's tendency to distance viewers from his protagonists, the alignment<br />

strategies in Tragedy represent a novel, one-<strong>of</strong>f experience. The consideration shown to<br />

Primo might be attributed - without undue speculation - to Bertolucci enunciating a fondness<br />

for something - the PCI - which had once been great (this being symbolized by Primo's<br />

enthusiasm in remembering the sense <strong>of</strong> hope and opportunity that characterized his youth),<br />

and melancholy at its inglorious end in terms <strong>of</strong> the younger generations" disowning the Party<br />

as an authoritative influence. This is reflected in the contempt shown by Giovanni and Laura<br />

in depriving Primo <strong>of</strong> any decision-making authority over the factory's future, and ultimately<br />

over their lives.<br />

The compassion elicited towards Primo and the viewer's engagement with the<br />

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character, through the strategies outlined in this chapter, was arguably instrumental in the<br />

way the character was received. Ugo Tognazzi, in fact, received the award <strong>of</strong> best protagonist<br />

at the 1981 Cannes Festival, recognition that had eluded higher pr<strong>of</strong>ile actors such as Marion<br />

Brando despite his performance in Last Tango in Paris. The casting <strong>of</strong> Tognazzi as the film's<br />

protagonist arguably undermines Socci's dismissive contention that the socio-political<br />

perspective in Tragedy was little more than a framing mechanism, and that Primo's<br />

enunciations reflected Bertolucci's desire 'to communicate his indifference towards the years<br />

<strong>of</strong> terrorism' by stating 'how much better a good meal, a snooze, and vigorous sex are'<br />

(Socci, 1996: 70). It is well documented that Tognazzi belonged to the school <strong>of</strong> actors who<br />

put into practice their philosophy on life both on and <strong>of</strong>f set. Politically, he was considered<br />

intelligent and uncompromising, notable for supporting the Left but also for articulating<br />

criticism when appropriate. In his private life, he struggled to combine a father's<br />

responsibilities with a lifestyle which was always open to life's pleasures. Therefore his<br />

casting for Tragedy appears intended to transfuse these qualities into a fictional protagonist,<br />

Primo Spaggiari, who himself embodied many <strong>of</strong> these values, and to elicit an immediate<br />

recognition <strong>of</strong> Primo's flawed but genuine humanity. These aspects <strong>of</strong> Tognazzi's personality<br />

had previously been transferred into characters in films by acclaimed, politically committed<br />

directors such as Ettore Scola, Marco Ferreri, and Luigi Comencini.(4)<br />

What Socci interprets as disenchantment or acquired wisdom on Bertolucci's part -<br />

namely the lines Primo utters while carrying the kidnap ransom through a wood ('I used to go<br />

to the wood in search <strong>of</strong> mushrooms or to make love, now it is completely normal to walk<br />

through the trees with a billion in cash') (Socci, 1996: 70) - is, on the contrary, perhaps<br />

another hint to make viewers reflect on how dramatically things had changed; society had<br />

definitively lost its innocence. Socci also overlooks the film's complexity, as the only<br />

technical input to draw praise is that <strong>of</strong> Ennio Morricone, since the music 'miraculously<br />

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manages to expand the flimsy substance <strong>of</strong> the apologue' (Socci, 1996: 67). Socci understates<br />

the film's whole framework by stating that it synthesized key themes in Dashiell Hammett's<br />

novel Red Han>est, an adaptation <strong>of</strong> which had supposedly been Bertolucci's original and<br />

more ambitious project (Socci, 1996: 67). The first assertion does no justice to the film's<br />

stratified structure in terms <strong>of</strong> the technique and content traced in this chapter, whereas the<br />

reference to Hammett's novel is not substantiated by any link between its fundamental<br />

themes and those implied by Tragedy. The novel in question is a story <strong>of</strong> political corruption<br />

which generates a series <strong>of</strong> murders; it is set in the USA in the pre-Second World War period,<br />

and rigorously adheres to noir conventions.<br />

Conclusion<br />

The fact that The Tragedy <strong>of</strong> a Ridiculous Man uses intimate perspectives to portray the<br />

dramatic events <strong>of</strong> the late 1970s in Italy does not diminish the political validity the film had<br />

and still has for present day audiences, especially regarding the symbolic representation <strong>of</strong><br />

the political inadequacy <strong>of</strong> both the PCI and the Red Brigade. In this context it is interesting<br />

that in his survey <strong>of</strong> Italian films on terrorism, Maurizio Fantoni Minnella praises Colpire al<br />

cuore (1983) by Gianni Amelio amid many other films that he criticizes for their lack <strong>of</strong><br />

complexity. Fantoni Minnella asserts that although Amelio is 'not interested in an analysis <strong>of</strong><br />

the phenomenon but in the consequences within an intellectual, bourgeois context' he<br />

strengthens the film by operating 'a dialectical reverse <strong>of</strong> the generational contrast. It is the<br />

apolitical son <strong>of</strong> the 1980s who judges the politically committed father <strong>of</strong> the 70s as nothing<br />

more than a murderer" (Fantoni Minnella 2004: 119). Amelio's film echoes Bertolucci's<br />

Tragedy, not only for its use <strong>of</strong> a father/son dichotomy to articulate political difference, but<br />

also for the way it also implicitly addresses the inadequacy <strong>of</strong> terrorism and also <strong>of</strong> the<br />

parliamentary Left as a whole; in the case <strong>of</strong> Amelio's film, this is represented by the Italian<br />

Left failing to provide a guiding role for the younger generations to contrast the gradual<br />

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disintegration <strong>of</strong> ideologies such as Communism in the 1980s. Therefore it might be<br />

suggested that Bertolucci's way <strong>of</strong> depicting Italy's political situation through the filter <strong>of</strong> the<br />

personal (an approach deployed, significantly, to great acclaim by Marco Bellocchio decades<br />

later in Buongiorno, notte / Good Morning Night, 2004) should not lead to a misinterpretation<br />

<strong>of</strong> this artistic approach as somehow overshadowing or rendering superficial the interest that<br />

Bertolucci had for the issue, since it undoubtedly lies at the centre <strong>of</strong> the film.<br />

Notes<br />

References<br />

1. The Italian magazine L 'Espresso accompanied the publication <strong>of</strong> the poem // PCI ai giovani with a<br />

forum between Vittorio Foa (leader <strong>of</strong> the Communist trade union), Claudio Petruccioli (secretary <strong>of</strong><br />

the Communist youth), and two delegates representing the rebellious students.<br />

2. In the introduction to Books for Burning, Timothy Murphy describes the criminalization process <strong>of</strong><br />

both the movement and Negri.<br />

3. The shift from the personal to the general level <strong>of</strong> fathers and sons is achieved through Primo using<br />

the plural form for his utterances: 'They are no longer able to manage a laugh, and above all they do<br />

not talk any more. From their gaze it is impossible to understand whether they are asking for help or if<br />

they are ready to kill you'<br />

4. Around the time <strong>of</strong> the film, Tognazzi was the acclaimed protagonist <strong>of</strong> the following films: La<br />

terrazza (1980) by the Communist director Ettore Scola (United Artists - France/Italy); Break-up<br />

(1979) by the leftist director Marco Ferreri (Carlo Ponti - France/Italy); L'ingorgo: una storia<br />

impossibile (1979) by Luigi Comencini, well known for his criticism <strong>of</strong> contemporary Italian<br />

capitalism (RFT- Italy/Spain/France).<br />

Annunziata, L. (2007) 7977, Ultima foto difamiglia, Turin: Giulio Einaudi Editore.<br />

Bocca, G. (1978) // terrorismo italiano 1970-1978, Milan: Rizzoli Editore.<br />

Bordwell, D. (1995) Narration in the Fiction Film, London: Routledge.<br />

Branigan, E. (1992) Narrative Comprehension and Film, London and New York: Routledge.<br />

Fantoni Minnella, M. (2004) Non riconciliati, Turin: UTET Diffusione S.r.l.<br />

Hammett, D. (1929) 'Raccolto rosso", in Franco Minganti (ed.) (2004) Romanzi e racconti,<br />

Milan: Mondadori.<br />

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Moravia, A. (1971) lo e lui, (1990) VIII Edizione, Milan: Tascabili Bompiani.<br />

Murphy, T.S. (2005) Books for Burning, London and New York: Verso.<br />

Negri, A. (1973) 'Workers' Party Against Work', in Murphy T.S., (2005) Books for Burning,<br />

London and New York: Verso.<br />

Negri, A. (1975) 'Proletarians and the State: Towards a Discussion <strong>of</strong> Workers 1 Autonomy<br />

and the Historic Compomise", in Murphy T.S., (2005) Books for Burning, London and<br />

New York: Verso.<br />

Negri, A. (1977) 'Domination and Sabotage: On the Marxist Method <strong>of</strong> Social<br />

Transformation', in Murphy T.S., (2005) Books for Burning, London and New York:<br />

Verso.<br />

Pasolini, P.P. (1968) 'II PCI ai giovani', in L'Espresso, 16 June 1968, Rome: Gruppo<br />

Editoriale L'Espresso.<br />

Plantinga, C. (1999) 'The Scene <strong>of</strong> Empathy and the Human Face on Film', in Plantinga C.<br />

and Smith, G. (ed.) Passionate Views, Baltimore: The John Hopkins <strong>University</strong> Press.<br />

Smith, G. M. (1999) 'Local Emotions, Global Mood, and Film Structure', in Plantinga C. and<br />

Smith G. (ed.) Passionate Views, Baltimore: The John Hopkins <strong>University</strong> Press.<br />

Socci, S. (1996) Bemardo Bertolucci, Milan: II Castoro Cinema.<br />

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Section Two; The Sensitizing <strong>of</strong> the Viewer; Cognitive and Intellectual Reflection<br />

Partner (1968); Ultimo Tango a Parigi/Last Tango in Paris (1972); / sognatori/The<br />

Dreamers (2003).<br />

These films can be considered as paradigmatic <strong>of</strong> the artistic course taken by Bertolucci<br />

during his career. They articulate his intention to question the socio-cultural reality <strong>of</strong> the<br />

societies depicted in the films and to experiment with cinematic form. In Partner, reflections<br />

on the nature <strong>of</strong> the existence <strong>of</strong> the individual and on societal conditions are elicited through<br />

a political discourse drawing on the work <strong>of</strong> Artaud, Brecht, and Godard, and which<br />

primarily addresses politically committed viewers and cinephiles. In Last Tango in Paris an<br />

intimate love triangle is used to question the repressive role that social constraints played in<br />

the development <strong>of</strong> authentic interpersonal relationships, the concept being expressed through<br />

contrasting forms <strong>of</strong> artistic representation. These elicit two types <strong>of</strong> viewer engagement;<br />

occasional sensual abandonment to the cinematic illusion but also an intellectual awareness<br />

<strong>of</strong> the director's use <strong>of</strong> different cinematic forms. This approach indicates Bertoluccfs<br />

willingness to open up his work to a broader audience - through aesthetic refinement and a<br />

greater emphasis on affective engagement - while preserving an authorial aura through<br />

complex narrations whose intellectual resonances require reflection, hi Tire Dreamers the<br />

evocation <strong>of</strong> a period <strong>of</strong> collective aspiration for a better world, intertwined with the notion <strong>of</strong><br />

cinema's pedagogical role, indicates a directorial desire to shake the political and cultural<br />

apathy that seemingly envelops the new generations. The tw<strong>of</strong>old discourse is expressed<br />

when the narrative is juxtaposed with moments when the cinematic medium is rendered overt<br />

through the insertion <strong>of</strong> archive clips. This strategy suggests that Bertolucci aimed to address<br />

both mainstream audiences and cinemagoers with expertise, thereby replicating the approach<br />

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established in Tango. Yet the analysis <strong>of</strong> The Dreamers in this section will highlight how its<br />

content arguably leaves the expectations <strong>of</strong> both kinds <strong>of</strong> audience unfulfilled, whereas its<br />

theoretical standpoint - both politically and culturally - is undermined by a praxis privileging<br />

cinematic spectacle.<br />

In cognitive terms, Godard's influence informs all three films. In Partner the<br />

references to Godard's film-making techniques represent a built-in feature, La Chinoise<br />

(1967) being mirrored in the sequences depicting the students' revolutionary project; in<br />

Tango the narrative strand related to the protagonists Jeanne and Tom merges elements <strong>of</strong><br />

Nouvelle Vague style and mainstream Hollywood cinema, and - as such - shapes the<br />

viewer's experience <strong>of</strong> the film. In The Dreamers, where Godard is the object <strong>of</strong> overt<br />

homage, influences from La Chinoise again emerge in the theme <strong>of</strong> youngsters secluding<br />

themselves in their bourgeois parents' apartment while articulating and accustoming<br />

themselves to political discourse, and in the way the narrative is cross cut with archive<br />

images. An evocation <strong>of</strong> Godard's Histoire(s) du cinema (1988-98) is also perceptible in the<br />

philosophical/intellectual use <strong>of</strong> clips from classic black and white films from European and<br />

American cinema. In addition, there are grounds for inferring that in the sequences depicting<br />

the protagonists Matthew and Theo debating politics and cinema, the characters are cyphers<br />

for the theoretical perspectives <strong>of</strong> Bertolucci and Godard. The Nouvelle Vague legacy is<br />

visible in the films, from the exposition <strong>of</strong> cinematic techniques in Partner and Tango, to the<br />

self-conscious reflections about film-making in The Dreamers - which, stylistically, also<br />

constitutes a return to jump cuts and discontinuity editing. This represents an important focus<br />

<strong>of</strong> attention for viewers, inviting a playful, cognitive anticipation, for example, <strong>of</strong> the way<br />

archive clips will be incorporated into the evolving narrative <strong>of</strong> The Dreamers and<br />

intellectual reflection on the range <strong>of</strong> artistic and political issues articulated in Partner.<br />

Nevertheless, this section will also illustrate how such distancing devices <strong>of</strong>ten<br />

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simultaneously elicit affective responses, for example by using film technique and aesthetics<br />

to beguile the spectator's senses, or by enhancing the emotion cued by characters or<br />

situations.<br />

The foregrounded presence <strong>of</strong> the cinematic medium increases the viewer's awareness<br />

that each film's fictive world is linked to the reality <strong>of</strong> the director's enunciation which is<br />

<strong>of</strong>ten conveyed conceptually by dialogue, and by shooting techniques which, regardless <strong>of</strong><br />

the sort <strong>of</strong> narrative focalization that is initially employed in given sequences, invariably give<br />

way to an extra-diegetic viewpoint, that <strong>of</strong> the director via the camera. In terms <strong>of</strong> narrative<br />

development, the viewer's cognitive activity <strong>of</strong> formulating hypotheses and expectations is<br />

rendered problematic in all three films, exemplified by the constraints that the style <strong>of</strong><br />

Partner puts on Branigan's notion <strong>of</strong> the bottom up process - the viewers' mental<br />

organization and interpretation <strong>of</strong> what occurs on screen, a process centred on the senses with<br />

'little or no associated memory' being involved (Branigan, 1992: 37). The viewer's cognitive<br />

engagement is also rendered difficult by devices such as the suppressive narration in Tango,<br />

and by the peripheral position assigned to Matthew's character to whom viewers form an<br />

attachment in The Dreamers.<br />

In all three films, the use <strong>of</strong> frame composition, colour and lighting create - together<br />

with the music - a mood <strong>of</strong> fascination and unease which is enhanced by the way the<br />

narrations cue a perception <strong>of</strong> the protagonists (Giacobbe's double in Partner, Paul in Tango,<br />

and the unpredictable twins in The Dreamers) as disturbing. However - compared with<br />

Partner - Tango and The Dreamers present visual approaches characterized by a greater<br />

emphasis on sensuous, refined aesthetics, although their narratives rarely feature sustained<br />

sequences <strong>of</strong> clear-cut emotions. Like Partner, their viewing experiences are characterized by<br />

the intense and saturated modal qualities described by Grodal, as intellectual and stylistic<br />

cross-references are evoked. The depiction <strong>of</strong> sexuality in Tango and The Dreamers was<br />

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evidently designed to push the boundaries <strong>of</strong> cinematic representations <strong>of</strong> eroticism in art<br />

cinema, but in affective, cognitive and intellectual terms, any viewer arousal may be<br />

accompanied by unease. In Tango, this is quite intentional, whereas in The Dreamers the<br />

sensation is generated by a perception that the articulation <strong>of</strong> the eroticism is more<br />

attributable to directorial self-indulgence than to the youngsters' supposed aspiration to<br />

sexual liberation. This defect in the film's structure can also be traced to an insufficient<br />

development <strong>of</strong> the notion <strong>of</strong> the viewers' 'pro-attitude' towards the characters (Carroll,<br />

1999: 31-32). In general, despite the repeated use <strong>of</strong> shots in The Dreamers that accentuate<br />

facial feedback and bodily posture, techniques that generate some viewer attachment to the<br />

protagonists, no allegiance is ultimately elicited; in the case <strong>of</strong> Partner and Tango even the<br />

level <strong>of</strong> recognition outlined by Murray Smith, the phase during which viewers identify<br />

plausible human behavioural traits in screen characters, is inhibited (M. Smith, 1995: 82-83).<br />

In Partner the nature <strong>of</strong> character representation is too abstract, and in Tango, the<br />

bewildering nature <strong>of</strong> Paul's personality makes any viewer engagement with the character<br />

virtually impossible.<br />

References<br />

Branigan, E. (1992) Narrative Comprehension and Film, London and New York: Routledge.<br />

Carroll, N. (1999) 'Film, Emotion and Genre', in Plantinga, C. and Smith, G. (ed.)<br />

Passionate Views, Baltimore: The John Hopkins <strong>University</strong> Press<br />

Smith, M. (1995) Engaging Characters, Oxford: Oxford <strong>University</strong> Press<br />

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Partner: Social Discontent and Artistic Purity<br />

Four years after Before the Revolution which, stylistically, placed Bertolucci in the orbit <strong>of</strong><br />

the Nouvelle Vague, the director released Partner (1968) - a film so connected to Godard's<br />

film-making that Kolker considers it 'a strange attempt to end the relationship [with Godard]<br />

by turning influence into imitation" (Kolker 1985: 15). By contrast, this chapter's view is that<br />

Partner embodies Bertolucci's unrelinquished enthusiasm for Godard's cinema,(l) despite<br />

the critical and commercial failure <strong>of</strong> Before the Revolution and the years <strong>of</strong> inactivity that<br />

followed. His determination to embrace the new mode <strong>of</strong> film-making emerges from several<br />

declarations. In a 1966 interview, Bertolucci talks about the necessity for a film-maker 'to<br />

take a position [...] also in confronting the art he creates', something he said - that he had<br />

done in previous films and something which he would do 'above all' in his future work<br />

(Bragin, 1966: 23). One implication <strong>of</strong> this approach was that, due to the difficulties <strong>of</strong><br />

financing his films, he agreed to make documentaries to avoid compromising his ideas on<br />

how cinema should be (Bragin, 1966: 26). hi 1967 Bertolucci indicated that his decision to<br />

work with the Living Theatre was motivated by his aspirations towards 'a kind <strong>of</strong> "rigor",<br />

which ultimately 'prevented [him] from working for several years' (Morandini, 1967: 31). On<br />

the fortieth anniversary <strong>of</strong> the release <strong>of</strong> Marco Bellocchio's seminal Fists in the Pocket,<br />

Bertolucci recalls how, when viewing it, he commented: 'between this film and my film<br />

[Before the Revolution] a kind <strong>of</strong> new Italian cinema was born'; in comparing the cinematic<br />

ideas expressed by the two films, Bertolucci asserts that he was 'completely for the French<br />

Nouvelle Vague\ whereas Bellocchio was 'very much for the English Free Cinema like<br />

Lindsay Anderson' (Bertolucci, 2008). These comments support this study's evaluation <strong>of</strong><br />

Partner as Bertolucci's attempt to introduce to Italy a mode <strong>of</strong> film-making that he<br />

considered new; in addition, the film criticized the transformation that consumerism was<br />

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inging to contemporary Italian society.<br />

Given the film's dense theoretical basis - which includes Godard, Artaud, Brecht,<br />

and the Expressionist Theatre - Partner can be viewed as an essay on all the issues that<br />

interested Bertolucci in that period, questions such as the language <strong>of</strong> cinema and the role <strong>of</strong><br />

cinema in contemporary society. The film, inspired by Dostoevsky's novel Tiie Double, deals<br />

with the dualities <strong>of</strong> realism and anti-realism in cinematic representation, and with the<br />

dualism between submission and rebellion within human nature. The two discourses are<br />

merged mainly through style, creating a result that no other Bertolucci film emulates in terms<br />

<strong>of</strong> self-conscious artificiality. Within this study's parameters, one could suggest that Partner<br />

mainly focuses on cognitive and intellectual forms <strong>of</strong> viewer engagement; while this is true,<br />

this chapter also shows how the film's intellectual orientation informs its emotional structure<br />

in generating a viewing experience typified by what Grodal terms intense and saturated<br />

modal qualities (Grodal, 1999: 136). The construction <strong>of</strong> disconcerting emotional<br />

associations by means <strong>of</strong> decor, colour, lighting, sound and music, like the dissonant violin<br />

score that dominates the soundtrack when violence is initiated, create a mood <strong>of</strong> angst<br />

punctuated by moments <strong>of</strong> empathy or <strong>of</strong> disorientation and estrangement.<br />

Plot summary<br />

In the style <strong>of</strong> cinema verite a cafe is shown where a man (later recognizable as Giacobbe's<br />

double) is reading a book about the film Nosferatu (1922) and he replicates the vampire's<br />

idiosyncratic movements by mimicking his hunched back and claw-like hands. Outside, men<br />

put up posters extolling freedom for Vietnam. In the next sequence, shot in theatrical style,<br />

the man shoots a youth playing a piano, while caressing his head; the youth seems to submit<br />

voluntarily to death. The soundtrack is filled with melancholy noise, produced by a spinning<br />

chandelier <strong>of</strong> which only a shadow is visible. The screen fades to black to end <strong>of</strong> what is a<br />

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prologue to the film's narration. The protagonist - Giacobbe - is a docile and frustrated man<br />

living in a claustrophobic flat, whose only company is his servant Petruschka (the same name<br />

as his counterpart in Dostoevsky's novel arguably facilitates the viewer's recollection <strong>of</strong> the<br />

story's Russian origins). Giacobbe, a drama teacher in Rome, suffers continuous<br />

humiliations, especially regarding his love for the shallow Clara, since her family considers<br />

him inadequate because <strong>of</strong> his lower social class. His vengeful intentions remain at a useless<br />

declamatory level until the mysterious appearance <strong>of</strong> his double. Here the analogies with<br />

Dostoevsky's novel end, because while in the book the double is depicted contemptuously<br />

because he adheres to the hypocrisy <strong>of</strong> bourgeois society, in the film he organizes violent<br />

responses to Giacobbe w s private and social situations. As the film unfolds, the double kills<br />

Clara and an attractive saleswoman; the drama students first embrace but eventually<br />

withdraw from the double's revolutionary project. After this failure, Giacobbe and the double<br />

disappear to continue their existentialist conversations.<br />

Using avant-garde theatre to create intense and saturated modal qualities<br />

The sequence which begins the narrative <strong>of</strong> Partner shows Giacobbe reading aloud, in a<br />

declamatory style, from Artaud's Le theatre et son double. This quotation and its delivery<br />

signal Bertolucci's intention to translate into cinematic form the European quest to give the<br />

performing arts a pedagogical role in society. A link between Partner and Artaud's work was<br />

recognized by critics, who traced Bertolucci's first articulation <strong>of</strong> the French dramatist's<br />

theories to the short film Agonia, which he shot in 1967 for the collective film Vangelo 70,<br />

and which was distributed in 1969 under the title Amore e Rabbia (Socci 1996: 34). The short<br />

is constructed around a long take showing people at the bedside <strong>of</strong> a dying cardinal. The<br />

performance is highly gestural; figures emerge from the floor or from elsewhere in the room,<br />

try to seize the cardinal, and then fall back again. Movement and words (never in form <strong>of</strong><br />

dialogues) evoke memories and thoughts from the cardinal's guilty conscience. Bertolucci<br />

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said he was inspired by the Third Canto <strong>of</strong> Dante's Inferno - which describes punishments<br />

for cowardice - and this made him think <strong>of</strong> Artaud's idea <strong>of</strong> 'the theatre <strong>of</strong> cruelty'. The<br />

casting <strong>of</strong> New York's Living Theatre, led by Julian Beck who was a follower <strong>of</strong> Artaud's<br />

concepts, followed from this (Morandini, 1967: 30). This encounter appears to have<br />

influenced the making <strong>of</strong> Partner, rather than the short itself. Soon after the film's release,<br />

Bertolucci declared that the rapport he established with the actor Pierre Clementi was<br />

inspired by his 'formative experience with the Living Theatre'; he talked <strong>of</strong> the importance <strong>of</strong><br />

the 'sacredness <strong>of</strong> theatre and <strong>of</strong> theatrical recitation' that he had learned from them, this<br />

being represented, for example, in dementi's monologue behind a wall <strong>of</strong> books (Apra-<br />

Ponzi-Spila, 1968:48).<br />

The pedagogical role assigned to theatre by Artaud comes from the connection he<br />

established between the perverse mindset <strong>of</strong> a plague victim and the experience <strong>of</strong> theatre.<br />

Both involve a revelatory process; the illness exteriorizes an undercurrent <strong>of</strong> savagery within<br />

humanity while the theatrical process forces us to "see ourselves as we are, making the mask<br />

fall and divulging our world's lies, aimlessness, meanness, and even two-facedness' (Artaud,<br />

1938: 21-22). hi the film Giacobbe uses this concept to rebuff Catholicism's criticism <strong>of</strong><br />

theatre's potential for spreading supposedly poisonous ideas. He affirms, in fact, that the<br />

theoretical 'poison' diffused by theatrical art shares similarities with the plague, and<br />

conceives it as a scourge with purifying, vindictive characteristics. In general Giacobbe's<br />

behaviour, resembling that <strong>of</strong> a delirious individual as he runs in and out <strong>of</strong> buildings and<br />

wanders aimlessly around deserted urban streets, embodies a paroxystic and increasingly<br />

disorganized societal situation.<br />

The desire that audiences be provided with 'truthful distillations <strong>of</strong> dreams' (Artaud,<br />

1938: 70) is fulfilled by Partner's mise-en-scene when situations are presented in a dreamlike<br />

mode, such as the sequence in which Giacobbe's raving monologue about human liberation is<br />

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accompanied by the thunder and lightning <strong>of</strong> an unreal storm which is complemented by<br />

images <strong>of</strong> exploding molotov cocktails - desired by Giacobbe - which detonate around the<br />

city and are intercut with images <strong>of</strong> students shouting. Certainly Giacobbe's incoherent<br />

shouting is endowed with the 'vibrations and qualities' (Artaud, 1938: 70) that Artaud<br />

considered necessary to allow screams to 'enter the spectator's breast rather than his ear'<br />

(Artaud, 1938: 99-100). This is achieved by enhancing the disturbing nature <strong>of</strong> the emissions<br />

with frontal filming <strong>of</strong> Giacobbe's upper body swaying, and by close-ups <strong>of</strong> his tense face<br />

and throat. Through this reconfiguration <strong>of</strong> Artaudian aesthetics, the mise-en-scene comes<br />

close to achieving the sensory bombardment to which Artaud aspired, thus establishing<br />

intense viewer engagement both at a cognitive and affective level. Additionally, Giacobbe's<br />

double embodies Artaud's concept that the 'hallucinatory and fearful aspect' <strong>of</strong> theatre, as re­<br />

established by the 'metaphysical enactment' <strong>of</strong> Balinese theatre, could be re-enacted through<br />

the Western theatrical feature <strong>of</strong> the double, since it maintains a disquieting impact as a<br />

consequence <strong>of</strong> being a direct evocation <strong>of</strong> the 'other world' (Artaud, 1938: 35-37).<br />

Giacobbe's double engenders this ambience <strong>of</strong> hallucination and disquiet; although the<br />

character does not generate notions <strong>of</strong> another world, he manifests the forces that reside<br />

within every human; more specifically, through him, the cruelty <strong>of</strong> the individual materializes<br />

in response to that <strong>of</strong> society.<br />

Partner's mise-en-scene presents stylistic elements and themes associated with<br />

German Expressionist theatre that connect the film's contemporary malaise as expressed by<br />

the 1968 student unrest (2) with that <strong>of</strong> a movement founded by young intellectuals at the<br />

beginning <strong>of</strong> the 20 th century. According to D.F. Kuhns, that generation staged a rebellion<br />

against 'Wilhelmine authoritarian social structures' moved by 'a strong need to declare, in<br />

specifically emotional terms, their individual liberation from Wilhelmine patriarchal values'<br />

(Kuhns 1997: 21). They rebelled by using the arts, and in 1914 they established rules for the<br />

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creation <strong>of</strong> Expressionist theatre which centred on abstract or overtly theatrical<br />

representations <strong>of</strong> social life; influenced by ancient Greek rhetoric, they adopted the decision<br />

to produce art that was both symbolic and rhetorical. In Partner both aspects are present. The<br />

mise-en-scene is overtly theatrical, a sense <strong>of</strong> the abstract emerging in Giacobbe's workplace<br />

where the presence <strong>of</strong> a few chairs, a door frame standing in the centre <strong>of</strong> the room, and a<br />

canvas evoking Mondrian's primary colours which dominates the background, are used<br />

symbolically to represent the desire for a less conventional approach to art and ultimately to<br />

life, hi another room the ceiling, decorated with a pattern resembling the American flag,<br />

imposes itself sinisterly when framed in close-up and again when it is framed in the<br />

background as it hangs over a gigantic black guillotine. The two features function as<br />

metaphors for the violence generated by and derived from repressive power. The American<br />

flag pattern implies an oppressive presence determined from above, an allusion to American<br />

imperialism in Vietnam. By contrast, the guillotine emerging from the foot <strong>of</strong> the frame<br />

alludes to the inevitable counter-violence produced by popular insurrections, a process fixed<br />

in people's collective memories by the French Revolution. This exemplifies the way the<br />

film's intellectual resonances are conveyed via visual and spatial arrangements that are<br />

disturbing from a sensory perspective.<br />

Other aspects <strong>of</strong> mise-en-scene replicate this effect <strong>of</strong> combining intellectual<br />

articulations <strong>of</strong> the human condition with an affective charge; the set representing Giacobbe's<br />

house evokes expressionist themes related to the human conditions <strong>of</strong> isolation and<br />

precariousness, in which individuals act out their despair as a consequence <strong>of</strong> their lack <strong>of</strong> a<br />

clear individual and collective identity. This is emphasized by the dusty piles <strong>of</strong> books which<br />

symbolize how the culture <strong>of</strong> the older generations no longer has significance for the young.<br />

The presence <strong>of</strong> two pictures highlights a metaphysical sense <strong>of</strong> loss; the painting on the left,<br />

in a surrealist style, shows a girl walking in a deserted city, and it intensifies Giacobbe s<br />

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sense <strong>of</strong> solitude and uselessness. The picture on the right evokes Cretacic Rocks in Riigen by<br />

Caspar David Friederich; it shows a bleak seascape viewed through white rocks which form a<br />

sort <strong>of</strong> eye, an effect which creates an impression <strong>of</strong> a two-way viewing process, the viewer's<br />

eye being drawn towards the sea and also internally towards two small figures, one <strong>of</strong> them<br />

kneeling, who seem to talk at a distance. The camera pans from the picture towards Giacobbe<br />

and vice versa, as he - crouched childishly on the floor and against the wall - reflects on his<br />

miserable condition, in dialogue with the double who is also crouched down, but in a<br />

wardrobe. The scene creates an effect similar to the picture, in terms <strong>of</strong> positioning the<br />

viewer as a beholder <strong>of</strong> both the diegetic world and the extra-diegetic world <strong>of</strong> the author's<br />

expression.<br />

In the performances <strong>of</strong> Giacobbe and the double, Expressionist rhetoric takes the form<br />

<strong>of</strong> existentialist monologues punctuated by literary and poetic metaphors. The characters'<br />

lines are full <strong>of</strong> peculiar utterances, notably a repetition <strong>of</strong> the words 'freedom', 'theatre' and<br />

the phrase 'let's throw <strong>of</strong>f the masks', shouted in different tones. The statement 'It is<br />

forbidden to forbid, it is prohibited to prohibit' is recited like a litany. The image <strong>of</strong> Giacobbe<br />

exhausting himself in screaming out his social discomfort - through a combination <strong>of</strong><br />

anguished outbursts and rhetorical language - is the result <strong>of</strong> Bertolucci's fusion <strong>of</strong><br />

Expressionist rhetoric with the disturbing qualities <strong>of</strong> Artaud's theatre. These two stylized<br />

representational modes, which shape Partner in visual and narrative terms, demand<br />

continuous mental associations and confer an emotional charge upon the film's intellectual<br />

concerns regarding the troubled rapport between the individual and society. They establish a<br />

desolate mood <strong>of</strong> angst throughout the film, and provide bursts <strong>of</strong> emotion during Giacobbe's<br />

moments <strong>of</strong> despair.<br />

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The Godardian scheme<br />

Partner's debt to Godard's film-making resides in the constant distancing <strong>of</strong> viewers from<br />

the ongoing action through different devices. One frequent effect is a stylized camera<br />

perspective that cannot be attributed to a diegetic character's viewpoint; this is created by the<br />

camera being positioned frontally and close to the diegesis, a perspective that erases spatial<br />

depth and stresses the stylization <strong>of</strong> the performance. Additionally, throughout Partner,<br />

viewers focus on deciphering the meaning <strong>of</strong> the viewed, but also on identifying the cross-<br />

references and intellectual associations that are featured in the narration. Godard's location<br />

shooting techniques, and his idiosyncratic dissections and insertions <strong>of</strong> Hollywood genres in<br />

his work, (3) albeit in a more theatrical configuration, also occur in Partner. However, unlike<br />

Godard's films, in which the subversion <strong>of</strong> traditional cinematic codes can militate against<br />

emotional viewer engagement, Partner foregrounds the tendency <strong>of</strong> Bertolucci's work to<br />

generate emotion during the viewing experience; indeed, even the way in which he exposes<br />

the nature <strong>of</strong> cinematic devices cues emotional responses. Bertolucci himself recognized that<br />

even in Partner there is a degree <strong>of</strong> abandonment to the magic <strong>of</strong> cinema, (Ungari 1982: 52)<br />

and that it would have been impossible to create that 'distancing from emotion <strong>of</strong> the type<br />

Godard does' given the film's emphasis on dementi's acting style which was classical and<br />

'entirely against Brecht'(Apra-Ponzi-Spila,1968: 46).<br />

Moreover, Bertolucci's manipulations <strong>of</strong> cinematic techniques feature a self-<br />

consciousness that sometimes borders on the comic, and they invariably feature a fusion <strong>of</strong><br />

the emotional and the intellectual. One re-elaboration is <strong>of</strong> a scene from Murnau's Nosferatu<br />

(1922), a film to which Bertolucci alludes in the prologue. A night sequence shows Giacobbe<br />

wandering around the city; his shadow, thanks to the lighting and to the camera position -<br />

which, from a straight-on angle moves to a high angle - gradually outgrows him in such a<br />

way that it menacingly assumes a life <strong>of</strong> its own. The scene subsequently shifts towards the<br />

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absurd as Giacobbe and the shadow petulantly kick each other. The scene's development<br />

illustrates how Bertolucci's film-making simultaneously engages the emotions, through<br />

disquieting then comic visuals, and the intellect - via the viewer's background awareness <strong>of</strong><br />

the elements <strong>of</strong> Expressionist cinema that are being cited. Classical Hollywood cinema is<br />

referenced in the film, in the form <strong>of</strong> the much-desired nocturnal encounter between Clara<br />

and the double, whom she believes to be Giacobbe, who are supposed to run away<br />

romantically together. An amusing self-consciousness characterizes the mise-en-scene <strong>of</strong> the<br />

encounter as, framed from a low-angle, the couple meet on an improbably long white bridge,<br />

which is fully illuminated from across a dark forest. An overstated romantic theme forms the<br />

backdrop for the pair's bliss, and classic Hollywood representations <strong>of</strong> romance from genres<br />

such as the musical are therefore cited, creating a conspiratorial irony between director and<br />

viewer. Surrounded by the woodland, the couple are subsequently filmed frontally as they sit<br />

in a stationary sports car with Petruska at the wheel, who in contrast with the couple's<br />

summer clothing, is wearing a fur coat and a bearskin. The scene's stillness is broken by<br />

Petruska manoeuvring the steering wheel ostentatiously and mimicking the noise <strong>of</strong> the car<br />

engine, bizarre conduct that continues throughout the scene. The mise-en-scene here refers to<br />

the tendency in early Hollywood films to fake driving scenes when dialogues took place<br />

inside a car. But the scene's intellectual impact, generated by the ironic reference, is soon<br />

altered by an emotional unease cued by the double's aggressive behaviour towards Clara,<br />

who is sexually assaulted, insulted and even spat on. Despite the surreality <strong>of</strong> the situation,<br />

the viewer's response shifts from the intellectual to the emotional, as if the abuse was really<br />

happening. This is achieved mainly by the alternation <strong>of</strong> frontal framing showing the<br />

double's aggressive behaviour with close-ups <strong>of</strong> Clara s facial reactions, integrated with her<br />

cries on the soundtrack.<br />

The cinematic device <strong>of</strong> feigning the movement <strong>of</strong> vehicles is deployed again in the<br />

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scene <strong>of</strong> Clara's murder by the double, during an encounter inside a bus. This time, the<br />

sequence evokes Godard in mimicking the Hollywoodian mechanism <strong>of</strong> using projected<br />

backdrops, as Bertolucci uses speeded-up city images that are visible from the bus windows.<br />

The resulting artifice is enhanced by filming with a mute soundtrack, another Godardian<br />

effect. Also, on this occasion, the viewer's awareness <strong>of</strong> the cinematic devices that are being<br />

exposed does not prevent an emotional response to Clara's death. The scene featuring the<br />

third murder by the double, that <strong>of</strong> a saleswoman, is inspired by Godard's Unefemme est une<br />

femme (1961) with its meta-documentarial frontal shooting by a fixed camera, portraying,<br />

with a mute soundtrack, the playful interaction between the protagonists. Gradually, as the<br />

camera tracks backwards and roams the set to frame the two characters sensually playing<br />

with the foam that overflows from a washing machine, the scene takes on a lyrical form,<br />

before being unexpectedly interrupted by the double turning his caress into a stranglehold.<br />

The mode <strong>of</strong> killing is the same as that used for Clara, but the doublets earlier attitude <strong>of</strong><br />

contempt is replaced here by tenderness towards the woman, whose job had previously been<br />

likened to prostitution at the service <strong>of</strong> a police state that keeps society under control by<br />

means <strong>of</strong> consumption - a theme <strong>of</strong> several films by Godard between 1962 and 1966 (Dixon<br />

1997: 30). However, even the long take <strong>of</strong> the salesgirl's murder contains a wry self-<br />

consciousness, the double being filmed from the back as he sits on a washing machine with<br />

his raincoat open in front <strong>of</strong> the girl, thus evoking comic representations <strong>of</strong> male<br />

exhibitionism.<br />

Bertolucci "s use <strong>of</strong> Godard's mode <strong>of</strong> location filming with surreal insertions <strong>of</strong> staged<br />

elements is visible in the sequences shot around Rome. Nonetheless in Partner the scenes'<br />

metaphorical sense remains more attached to a narrative function, as their symbolic meaning<br />

fills narrative omissions. An example <strong>of</strong> this occurs during a sequence featuring a student -<br />

blindfolded with a red scarf - who tries to cross a busy road and is followed by others (this<br />

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mirrors, in a condensed form, equivalent sequences in Godard's La Chinoise), the scene<br />

implying the hazardous and unpredictable outcome <strong>of</strong> revolutionary activity. Similarly a later<br />

emblematic sequence signifies the students backing out <strong>of</strong> the revolutionary project; it depicts<br />

them being approached by the double one after the other. They stop at different street corners<br />

in the city, and silently cover their faces with handkerchiefs. This kind <strong>of</strong> narration, based on<br />

the contrast between realist visuals and the characters' theatrical performances, creates what<br />

Grodal describes as a transposition <strong>of</strong> the representation into 'types and paradigms 1 ; the sense<br />

<strong>of</strong> distance that is consequently created between spectators and screen events allows viewers<br />

to identify the symbolic meaning implied by the actions being performed (Grodal 1999: 140).<br />

The relevance <strong>of</strong> Brecht's distanciation effect<br />

With regard to the forms <strong>of</strong> distanciation set up by the film narration, Partner also shows<br />

how Bertolucci subscribed to Brecht's idea that viewer engagement could be interrupted to<br />

prompt a broader awareness <strong>of</strong> the intellectual agenda underpinning a work. Brecht indicated<br />

how viewers' attention would shift towards the device used to interrupt their affective<br />

processes, thus awakening their critical faculties. To break Partners narrative illusion, the<br />

filirf s camerawork and montage radically shift the viewer's attention both during scenes and<br />

between scenes to reposition them in the role <strong>of</strong> observers, whilst increasing their awareness<br />

<strong>of</strong> certain details <strong>of</strong> the mise-en-scene that might go unnoticed. The camera might move<br />

arbitrarily away from the diegetic characters and towards an element <strong>of</strong> decor, lingering on it<br />

to increase the viewer's awareness <strong>of</strong> the filmic medium. This is instantiated in the scene <strong>of</strong> a<br />

drama class during which the double delivers a political speech to the students. The initial<br />

framing includes the students filmed frontally as they sit listening, while the double is shot<br />

from the back, sitting on the desk. Slowly, the frame narrows until only the lower part <strong>of</strong> his<br />

back is visible, together with a close-up <strong>of</strong> the keyhole <strong>of</strong> the desk drawer, on which the<br />

camera lingers. Such shots initially confuse the viewer's cognitive engagement with the<br />

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scene, since objects indexed by the camera traditionally possess a narrative significance.<br />

However, in Partner, these details have no narrative relevance, and the viewer's cognitive<br />

confusion eventually recedes into a distanced consideration <strong>of</strong> the scene's possible<br />

intellectual implications. Without emotional and cognitive significance, the framing<br />

transports viewers away from the diegesis, and through the double's voiceover, an impression<br />

is created that the external beliefs <strong>of</strong> the director are being articulated.<br />

hi the case <strong>of</strong> the viewer s attention being shifted between scenes, this technique<br />

occurs when tense sequences, such as those <strong>of</strong> the murders or <strong>of</strong> the double inciting the<br />

students to riot, are followed by cuts to comic images <strong>of</strong> a very short man, framed frontally as<br />

he snores while perched on a column <strong>of</strong> chair inside the cafe shown in the prologue, now<br />

closed for the night, hi one scene, the double even wakes him by knocking on the window to<br />

get him to adjust the pile <strong>of</strong> chairs. These insertions break the dark, affective intensity<br />

generated by the preceding scenes, and they possess a similar, disruptive function to that <strong>of</strong><br />

the techniques which confound the viewer's cognitive schemata. Together, these affective<br />

and cognitive devices are designed to reconnect viewers with the film's intellectual<br />

framework, since their presence ultimately reveals the director's presence. Towards the end<br />

<strong>of</strong> the film, in full Brechtian style, Giacobbe breaks the film's fragile narrative illusion by<br />

turning to the camera and addressing viewers directly, warning them to check the presence <strong>of</strong><br />

their own double. He urges viewers to reflect on what they have seen, so that the 'beast'<br />

inside them might be liberated to fight their enemies. This performance mode ratifies the<br />

film's didactic intent, showing the negligible narrative relevance <strong>of</strong> solving the enigma <strong>of</strong><br />

who the double might ultimately be in the world <strong>of</strong> the film. This is confirmed by the closing<br />

sequence which occurs after this address. With the duo <strong>of</strong>f-screen and Giacobbe's voiceover<br />

confessing to his double that he still has not understood whether they are one or two<br />

individuals, Bertolucci again teases any viewers whose engagement with the film has been<br />

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informed by canonical codifications <strong>of</strong> fiction.<br />

Disrupting cognitive activity<br />

Bertolucci's re-examination <strong>of</strong> cinematic language in the light <strong>of</strong> the methodologies <strong>of</strong><br />

Godard and, in a theatrical context, <strong>of</strong> Brecht, included a reconsideration <strong>of</strong> editing, an<br />

interest which emerges in Bertolucci's analysis <strong>of</strong> Deux on trois choses que je sais d'elle<br />

(1966) in the article Versus Godard. There he declares his fascination for Godard's<br />

unconventional editing ideas, which posit that the order <strong>of</strong> images will evolve spontaneously<br />

at the moment <strong>of</strong> placing one shot next to another, because if they possess a poetic charge, a<br />

relationship between them will emerge regardless <strong>of</strong> anything else (Bertolucci, 1967: 140).<br />

This interest matured over four years <strong>of</strong> inactivity during which he 'did almost nothing but<br />

think about film, about cinematic style"; Bertolucci distinguishes between editing as a tool<br />

used by auteurs and as a process used by studios during which 'every film loses its stylistic<br />

violence' and is homogenized (Apra-Ponzi-Spila, 1968: 39-40). Hence, in making Partner,<br />

Bertolucci admits to using editing as a form <strong>of</strong> authorial affirmation and self-contradiction,<br />

deliberately interrupting shots to produce discontinuity either using by cuts or inserts (Apra-<br />

Ponzi-Spila, 1968: 41). The combination <strong>of</strong> idiosyncratic editing, theatrical components, and<br />

the distanciation schemata, generates a narration and style that enable Partner to be classified<br />

as metafiction, particularly with regard to Grodal's definition <strong>of</strong> the term as 'fiction that lays<br />

bare its devices and makes the relation between addressee and fiction visible in a critique <strong>of</strong><br />

cliches <strong>of</strong> representation 5 (Grodal 1997: 209).<br />

In particular, Partner's, structure includes contextual frames where Bertolucci's<br />

artistic and political perspectives form the meta-frame through which viewers follow the<br />

film's events with an awareness <strong>of</strong> extradiegetic and metafictional intentions, which, in this<br />

case, is an awareness <strong>of</strong> Bertolucci's articulation <strong>of</strong> three discourses: the obsolescence <strong>of</strong><br />

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conventional art, the injustices <strong>of</strong> the social class system, and the corrupting nature <strong>of</strong><br />

consumer society. The internal frame is constituted by Giacobbe's vicissitudes, but the action<br />

remains substantially abstract since the narrative's suppressive and disorienting nature<br />

prevents viewers even from 'recognizing', to use Murray Smith's term, Giacobbe as a<br />

credible manifestation <strong>of</strong> humankind. By making it difficult to recognize Giacobbe as an<br />

authentic screen embodiment <strong>of</strong> a real world person, viewers are led to perceive him as a<br />

symbolic representation <strong>of</strong> the human condition in the context <strong>of</strong> the problems <strong>of</strong><br />

contemporary society, and to recognize him as a cypher through which the author-director<br />

communicates his socio-political perspectives. The empathic phenomena elicited towards<br />

Giacobbe's unease and frustration over the power held by capitalist values over humanity do<br />

not result in an emotional attachment to the character, but reinforce the film's intellectual<br />

agenda by adding a sense <strong>of</strong> urgency to the demanded socio-political changes.<br />

Conclusion<br />

The issues that the film articulates undoubtedly possess validity for the new millennium, and<br />

Partner still elicits a fascinating intellectual and aesthetic experience. In 1996, Socci asserted:<br />

'One thing is certain: once viewed, it is not easy to forget' (Socci 1996: 36). However the<br />

film's failure at the time - the third in a row for Bertolucci - caused him such distress (4) that<br />

it brought him to disown the film and distance himself from the avant-garde cinema <strong>of</strong> the<br />

1960s. At Ungari's comment that Partner was the manifesto <strong>of</strong> a self-questioning cinema that<br />

required the same attitude from viewers, denying them a sense <strong>of</strong> cinematic spectacle,<br />

Bertolucci replied that in this kind <strong>of</strong> cinema there was the sadism <strong>of</strong> compelling viewers to<br />

distance themselves from their emotions, and the masochism <strong>of</strong> making films that nobody<br />

wanted. Significantly, he argued that it was the consequence <strong>of</strong> 'a bad reading <strong>of</strong> Brecht'<br />

(Ungari 1982: 52). The director's bitterness at not having been understood still seems to be<br />

present, since in 2004 he spoke <strong>of</strong> Partner as a film foregrounding a desire to be<br />

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'revolutionary' in cinematic terms, and because <strong>of</strong> this, it had no circulation because 'nobody<br />

wanted to see it, it interested nobody' (Fantoni Minnella 2004: 230). Therefore, it is<br />

interesting to speculate regarding the type <strong>of</strong> film output that Bertolucci would have produced<br />

- experimental or commercial - if there had been greater public and critical appreciation <strong>of</strong><br />

his earlier work, since this would arguably have enabled him, like Godard, to continue to<br />

explore new forms <strong>of</strong> cinematic language.<br />

Notes<br />

1. Discussing his idea <strong>of</strong> cinema, Bertolucci praises A bout de souffle which he considered to be a film<br />

that questioned everything and revolutionized cinematic language (Ungari, 1982: 177).<br />

2. It should be reiterated that Partner was shot in the cultural milieu <strong>of</strong> the 1968 student demonstrations, a<br />

context evoked by the title <strong>of</strong> the play that Giacobbe wants to stage - (The Power <strong>of</strong> the Imagination)<br />

which re-arranges the words <strong>of</strong> a popular student slogan: 'Power to the Imagination' The social<br />

context is also evoked by images <strong>of</strong> posters exhorting the liberation <strong>of</strong> Vietnam, which was the main<br />

issue that catalyzed the students' political rebellion.<br />

3. Godard's experimentation with Hollywood genres emerges in: A bout de souffle, a reworked love story;<br />

Le petit soldat, which takes its stylistic cues from film noir; Unefemme est unefemme, a musical shot<br />

in a studio; Les Carabiniers, which assimilates and elaborates the characteristics <strong>of</strong> war movies; Bande<br />

a part - a reworking <strong>of</strong> classic crime capers; Alphaville - an idiosyncratic work <strong>of</strong> science fiction.<br />

Also, for the later film Germany Year Nine Zero (1985), elements <strong>of</strong> Hollywood road movies have<br />

been traced. D. Sterritt, The Films <strong>of</strong> Jean-Luc Godard: Seeing the Invisible (Cambridge: Cambridge<br />

<strong>University</strong> Press, 1999), p. 13.<br />

4. Bertolucci confessed: This film caused me a tremendous psychological trauma, because nobody,<br />

almost nobody, accepted it' (Bachmann, 1973: 96).<br />

References<br />

Apra, A., Ponzi, M. and Spila, P. (1968), 'Bernardo Bertolucci: Partner', in Gerard, F.S.,<br />

Kline, T.J. and Sklarew, B. (ed.) (2000) Bemardo Bertolucci Internets, Jackson:<br />

<strong>University</strong> Press <strong>of</strong> Mississippi.<br />

Artaud, A. (1938) The Theatre and its Double, translated from French by Corti, V., (ed.<br />

2005), London: Calder Publications.<br />

Bachmann, G., (1973) 'Every Sexual Relationship is Condemned: An Interview with<br />

Bernardo Bertolucci', in Gerard, F.S., Kline, T.J. and Sklarew, B. (ed.) (2000)<br />

Bernardo Bertolucci Interviews, Jackson: <strong>University</strong> Press <strong>of</strong> Mississippi.<br />

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Bertolucci, B. (1967) 'Versus Godard', in Francione, F. and Spila, P. (ed.) (2010) Bernardo<br />

Bertolucci: la mia magnified ossessione, Milan: Garzanti.<br />

Bertolucci, B. (26/01/2008) '1 quarantanni de / pugni in tasca\ [Online] Available:<br />

http://w.youtube.coin/watch?v=swDPnaTSUrI.<br />

Bragin, J. (1966) 'A Conversation with Bernardo Bertolucci', in Gerard, F.S., Kline, T.J. and<br />

Sklarew, B. (ed.) (2000) Bernardo Bertolucci Interviews, Jackson: <strong>University</strong> Press <strong>of</strong><br />

Mississippi.<br />

Branigan, E. (1992) Narrative Comprehension and Film, London and New York: Routledge.<br />

Dixon, W. (1997) The Films <strong>of</strong>Jean-Luc Godard, Albany: State <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> New York.<br />

Fantoni Minnella, M. (2004) Non riconciliati, Turin: UTET Diffusione S.r.l.<br />

Grodal, T. (1999) 'Emotions, Cognitions, and Narrative Patterns in Film", in Plantinga, C.<br />

and Smith, G. (ed.) Passionate Views, Baltimore: The John Hopkins <strong>University</strong> Press.<br />

Kolker, R. P. (1985) Bemardo Bertolucci, London: BFI Publishing.<br />

Kuhns, D.F. (1997) German Expressionist Tlieatre: Tlie Actor and the Stage, Cambridge:<br />

Cambridge <strong>University</strong> Press.<br />

Morandini, M. (1967) 'In Refusing to Make Westerns Bertolucci Has Come to the Gospel',<br />

in Gerard, F.S., Kline T.J., and Sklarew, B., (ed.) (2000) Bernardo Bertolucci<br />

Interviews, Jackson: <strong>University</strong> Press <strong>of</strong> Mississippi.<br />

Socci, S. (1996) Bernardo Bertolucci, Milan: II Castoro Cinema.<br />

Ungari, E. (1982) Scene madri di Bernardo Bertolucci (2nd Ed. 1987), Milan: Ubulibri.<br />

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Ultimo tanso a Parisi/Last Tango in Paris: Bertolucci's Cinematic Manifesto<br />

After the successful reception <strong>of</strong> The Conformist, Last Tango in Paris (1972) is arguably the<br />

film with which Bertolucci heralded the new ideas about film-making that he had<br />

investigated two years earlier. Hence the elements that contributed to the success <strong>of</strong> The<br />

Conformist were transposed in the making <strong>of</strong> Tango: the editing was assigned to Franco<br />

Arcalli, the man responsible for Bertolucci's u-turn regarding montage (see the 'Conclusion'<br />

in the chapter on The Conformist}; the photography was again assigned to Vittorio Storaro;<br />

Ferdinando Scarfiotti moved from costume design to production design; a famous actor -<br />

Marion Brando - was cast as a protagonist; finance for the project came from a European<br />

production company that had links with an American counterpart, in this case Italy's P.E.A.<br />

(Produzione Europee Associate Rome), and France's Artistes Associes (Paris) linked with<br />

the American United Artists. Because these companies exemplified the idea <strong>of</strong> private<br />

production companies being open to politically committed films - for instance P.E.A.'s<br />

production list included Pasolini's Said (1975) and Rosi's Illustrious Corpses (1976) - the<br />

organizational ingredients <strong>of</strong> Tango convey Bertolucci's intention to construct another film<br />

amalgamating auteurist elements with a Classical Hollywood legacy, a film appealing both to<br />

the senses and the intellect. This was an artistic path virtually described by Bertolucci<br />

himself:<br />

Partner was entirely based on the contradiction between the 'spectacle' and "distanciation" [...] The<br />

Conformist was my first film-spectacle, an exploration into the desire to create a spectacle. But it was<br />

only with Last Tango in Paris that I stopped feeling that notions <strong>of</strong> experimentation and spectacle were<br />

contradictory (Ungari, 1982: 89).<br />

In Tango, Bertolucci explored contemporary social malaise, articulating the theme within a<br />

Hollywood mode <strong>of</strong> film-making enriched by sophisticated camera movement and frame<br />

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compositions; the outcome is a dense filmic style which engages viewers intellectually,<br />

cognitively and affectively. The presence within the film <strong>of</strong> a parallel cinematic style,<br />

pursued by Tom, a secondary character, is an expose <strong>of</strong> Nouvelle Vague conventions and<br />

arguably designed to substantiate Bertolucci's decision to abandon the mode <strong>of</strong> film-making<br />

that had characterized his early work. The film's portrayal <strong>of</strong> the existential unease and angst<br />

in society is centred on the protagonist Paul, whose tormented journey towards self-<br />

awareness draws on elements from literary and philosophical sources. The decision to depict<br />

Paul's search for authenticity in a relationship based on uninhibited sexuality marked a real<br />

cinematic innovation at the time <strong>of</strong> the film's release.<br />

Plot summary<br />

Again, as in films such as The Spider's Strategem, the film's opening credits draw a cognitive<br />

engagement from viewers by foreshadowing its content; clues regarding this are conveyed via<br />

two paintings by Francis Bacon: the image <strong>of</strong> a man lying bleeding on a red armchair is<br />

replaced by that <strong>of</strong> a woman with a swollen face, sitting on a chair against a black backdrop<br />

and a red floor. Eventually both pictures are shown together, but <strong>of</strong>f-centre, hinting at the<br />

excruciating liaison that is to follow. The film depicts the development <strong>of</strong> a love triangle as<br />

two strangers, Paul and Jeanne, meet while viewing a Parisian apartment. In their subsequent<br />

secret relationship, based on uninhibited sexual exploration, they follow a rule established by<br />

Paul - who is contemptuous <strong>of</strong> social institutions and mores - to remain in the dark about<br />

each other, even withholding their names. To portray their lives outside the apartment, the<br />

film's narrative follows two parallel tracks that never merge. Paul is an unemployed<br />

American drifter, married to the French proprietor <strong>of</strong> a hotel <strong>of</strong> ill repute, who has just<br />

committed suicide. Jeanne is younger and is engaged to Tom, a tedious young director who is<br />

using her as the subject <strong>of</strong> a TV film project entitled 'Portrait <strong>of</strong> a Young Woman'. She is<br />

excited by Paul's uninhibited sexuality and fascinated by his subversive criticisms <strong>of</strong> society.<br />

145


Yet, ultimately disillusioned by Paul's self-centred nature and feeling threatened by his<br />

aggressive attitude, she eventually kills him.<br />

The rejection <strong>of</strong> social identity<br />

Paul's depiction as an individual tormented by social constraints evokes the antiheroes<br />

created by Luigi Pirandello, particularly Vitangelo Moscarda in Uno, nessuno e centomila<br />

(1909) - and Mattia Pascal - the protagonist <strong>of</strong> II fu Mattia Pascal (1904). Paul suffers from<br />

Moscarda's anguish at not being able to recognize his interior nature in the perception that<br />

others have <strong>of</strong> him, and consequently rejects any personal attributes - especially names -<br />

which are likened to cages that imprison the true self. Paul also shares Pascal's painful<br />

awareness <strong>of</strong> an inescapable personal destiny which is mapped out by a person's miserable<br />

origins. In particular, Paul abolishes the use <strong>of</strong> names to achieve maximum indeterminacy<br />

between him and Jeanne, and when she later comments: 'I must invent a name for you', he<br />

dryly replies: 'I've been called a million names all my life... I don't want any'. In another<br />

scene, after narrating his miserable background, Paul leaves Jeanne (and the viewers) in<br />

doubt about the authenticity <strong>of</strong> his story. Bertolucci's emphasis on the way names can be<br />

instrumentalized as reductive labels, together with the ambiguous account that emerges <strong>of</strong><br />

Paul's past life, implies the difficulties in elaborating any reliable notion <strong>of</strong> an individual's<br />

interior identity, a concept characterizing Pirandello's work. Two analogies further connect<br />

Paul to the character <strong>of</strong> Moscarda; both are shot by the only person (a woman) with whom<br />

they have been able to share fragments <strong>of</strong> their authentic selves, and with whom they wanted<br />

to start everything again. The second parallel is that both women use guns that belonged to<br />

their dead fathers. Therefore the film elicits an intellectual engagement that - despite<br />

Bertolucci's movement towards the mainstream in terms <strong>of</strong> production and casting - has a<br />

strong resonance for viewers familiar with European and particularly Italian literary history.<br />

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Like Pirandello's protagonists, Paul estranges himself from his reality to achieve a<br />

more authentic relationship with his inner self. For Moscarda, the countryside is an idyllic<br />

place where he can abandon himself and his identity; a journey around Italy is, for Pascal, the<br />

opportunity to reshape his life by adopting a new name and a distinguished past; a secret<br />

rented apartment is Paul's retreat. This space, which critics have likened to a grave where<br />

Paul buries himself and his disappointments, or to a womb where the couple (Paul and<br />

Jeanne) undertake a Freudian process <strong>of</strong> regression,(l) embodies, in my view, a place where<br />

Paul can distance himself from the world, and voice his existential unease. This interpretation<br />

finds further correspondence in another existentialist influence on the film - a Sartrean one -<br />

which is consistent with Pirandello's world view, as it shares the same impulse to withdraw<br />

from the world and to explore an individual's needs and desires. Together with Heidegger,<br />

Sartre is considered a key proponent <strong>of</strong> atheistic Existentialism (the other form, Christian<br />

Existentialism, appears in the analysis <strong>of</strong> Besieged) which, by denying God's existence,<br />

stresses humanity's solitude and fragility. Paul's tormented behaviour reflects Sartre's<br />

description both <strong>of</strong> consciousness and <strong>of</strong> the painful process <strong>of</strong> awareness that comes with it.<br />

According to Sartre, consciousness emerges when man becomes aware <strong>of</strong> his 'being-in-the-<br />

world', by detaching himself from his reality and questioning it; this process generates<br />

anxiety on account <strong>of</strong> the past that has entrapped an individual within a given identity, and<br />

also as a consequence <strong>of</strong> the individual's awareness <strong>of</strong> his freedom to determine the future<br />

(Sartre, 1943: 89-92). Such concepts strengthen the interpretation <strong>of</strong> the Parisian apartment as<br />

a physical representation <strong>of</strong> Paul's conscious detachment, whereas his questioning <strong>of</strong> reality<br />

leads him to undergo the process described by Sartre. This theoretical orientation is<br />

manifested in the film narration as viewers witness Paul experiencing a form <strong>of</strong> anguish that<br />

is generated by his unhappiness about the existing determination <strong>of</strong> his 'persona', and by his<br />

awareness <strong>of</strong> the need to shape his future.<br />

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As source <strong>of</strong> social constraint, the film specifically points to the concept <strong>of</strong> the<br />

familial unit which is perceived as a means through which capitalism organizes socio­<br />

political control and also develops global markets - a process that is evident in the publicity<br />

posters that are visible on walls within the film's mise-en-scene, adverts which, to sell<br />

products, initially portray smiling couples and then, ultimately, contented families. However,<br />

Tango's attack on the concept <strong>of</strong> 'family' appears to be based on integrating Pasolini's<br />

condemnation <strong>of</strong> Catholicism's repressive nature (foregrounded in Before the Revolution) and<br />

Pirandello's perspective <strong>of</strong> the family as being responsible for untold misery, because <strong>of</strong> its<br />

hypocrisy, artifice and propensity for generating psychological abuse. The denunciation<br />

reaches its peak in the scene during which Paul, while sodomizing Jeanne, obliges her to<br />

recite an indictment against the institution <strong>of</strong> the family.(2) As regards this sequence, my<br />

analysis coincides with other critics' opinions (Socci, 1995: 54) that, rather than the sexual<br />

act, it was the nature <strong>of</strong> the indictment, and above all its religious overtones through the use<br />

<strong>of</strong> the adjective 'holy', which caused the film to be condemned and banned. However, the<br />

likelihood <strong>of</strong> this condemnation <strong>of</strong> the familial institution striking a chord within viewers is<br />

likely to be high, either at an intimate, emotional level as a consequence <strong>of</strong> personal exposure<br />

to repressive upbringings or at a more objective, intellectual level based on an awareness <strong>of</strong><br />

the way an individual's self-realization is conditioned by domestic influences.<br />

The ambiguity <strong>of</strong> a 'liberating' sexuality<br />

It has been frequently observed that the film s sexual content represented a means <strong>of</strong><br />

highlighting and rupturing the lack <strong>of</strong> authenticity in human relationships that are conditioned<br />

by social repression and inhibition. Yet the process appears flawed by a fundamental<br />

ambiguity in the film's representation <strong>of</strong> these scenes. Bertolucci's idea <strong>of</strong> having the<br />

protagonists use sex as 'a new kind <strong>of</strong> language' leading to liberation (Bachmann, 1973: 94)<br />

has an antecedent in Orwell's Nineteen Eighty-Four (1949) in which the protagonists<br />

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Winston and Julia establish a loving, passionate relationship to rebel against the totalitarian<br />

regime. But unlike Orwell's novel, in which the relationship is between equals, in Tango<br />

Paul's dominance is established from the initial scene <strong>of</strong> instinctual sex; it remains as the<br />

story unfolds, and even escalates towards the narrative's conclusion. In this context, ideas <strong>of</strong><br />

the apartment as a 'womblike' space where 'a remarkable representation <strong>of</strong> the un-conflicted<br />

part <strong>of</strong> the ego' (Kline, 1987: 116) takes place, or as a place where fantasies come true,<br />

imbued with a Marcusian 'political dimension' consisting <strong>of</strong> 'an urge to destroy the existing<br />

order [...] and move to a new Utopian order based on the pleasure principle' (Loshitsky, 1995:<br />

72-73) appear to be tenuous, given Jeanne's uncertain and submissive position in the<br />

relationship. Her role makes her frustrated, anxious and even unhappy: 'Are you afraid? You<br />

are always afraid' Paul whispers to her. Kline struggles to explain why 'Brando plays such an<br />

impenetrably mercurial role throughout, moving from tenderness to sudden fits <strong>of</strong> sadistic<br />

and punitive behaviour' (Kline, 1987: 115). Bertolucci, in comparing the eroticism in The<br />

Dreamers and Tango, defines the latter as 'rather deathly' (Fantoni Minnella, 2004: 232). So<br />

while the affirmation that 'the sexual in Bertolucci's Tango is fundamentally political'<br />

(Loshitsky, 1995: 68) may be correct, Paul's dominance nevertheless undermines the political<br />

impact the film intended to deliver. The unbalanced nature <strong>of</strong> the duo's rapport is made<br />

evident by two sequences, perhaps revealing an awareness <strong>of</strong> the issue on Bertolucci's part.<br />

In one scene, Jeanne leaves the apartment frustrated at Paul's latest manifestation <strong>of</strong> egoism;<br />

she meets Tom in the subway and launches an angry tirade at him, accusing him <strong>of</strong> abusing<br />

her. The outburst is motivated by Paul's behaviour, but the fact that Tom continues to regard<br />

her as an actress, framing Jeanne within an imaginary viewfinder formed by his hands, invites<br />

viewers to infer that Tom is also (ab)using her. Another sequence shows Jeanne's despair at<br />

discovering that Paul has abandoned the apartment, his intention being to re-establish their<br />

relationship on a more unconcealed basis, but without bothering to tell her.<br />

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Bertolucci's affirmation that the encounter between Paul and Jeanne ultimately<br />

embodies 'forces pulling in different directions' like the 'encounter <strong>of</strong>ferees which exists at<br />

the base <strong>of</strong> all political clashes', the director noting how Jeanne's bourgeois lifestyle is<br />

'upset' (Bachmann, 1973: 93), is not entirely validated by the intellectual implications <strong>of</strong><br />

what appears on screen. The narration depicts the bourgeois Jeanne as the one who wants to<br />

believe in Paul's vision <strong>of</strong> a new, unconventional relationship; it is she who highlights the<br />

hypocrisy <strong>of</strong> her parents' relationship by questioning her mother about the photo <strong>of</strong> the<br />

Algerian lover that her father kept in his wallet; it is Jeanne who likens love to 'two workers<br />

who go to a secret apartment, take <strong>of</strong>f their overalls, become man and woman again and make<br />

love', and who seeks a more authentic existence through Tom. By contrast, the decision <strong>of</strong><br />

the proletarian Paul 'to re-enter the world' (Kolker, 1985: 138) is depicted as if his retreat<br />

from the world, and the ideological implications <strong>of</strong> this, had not happened.<br />

Arguably, opinions on the film's ending may differ depending on the gender <strong>of</strong> the<br />

viewer or critic, since Kolker's affirmation that Jeanne's decision to choose Tom 'signifies<br />

her ultimate betrayal <strong>of</strong> the passion Paul attempts finally, and too late, to <strong>of</strong>fer to her'<br />

(Kolker, 1985: 135) can be reversed by a female perspective that might view Paul's egoism in<br />

inviting Jeanne to live at the hotel once owned by his wife and where she committed suicide<br />

as a betrayal <strong>of</strong> Jeanne after she had embraced his idea <strong>of</strong> a more idealist, non-conformist<br />

lifestyle. This reading <strong>of</strong> Jeanne's character implies a degree <strong>of</strong> coherence that is superior to<br />

that <strong>of</strong> Paul and therefore her character cannot be considered as a representation <strong>of</strong> the 'hated<br />

bourgeoisie', nor is she a 'mediocre heroine' (Loshitzky, 1995: 22). This is because Jeanne<br />

does not exist in a socio-political context <strong>of</strong> young politicized, leftist intellectuals, but in a<br />

context <strong>of</strong> bourgeois youngsters becoming aware <strong>of</strong>, and reacting against, social constraints.<br />

Therefore, there are many elements in Jeanne's characterization that are intellectually<br />

coherent, and for viewers and critics who are able to look beyond her particular social class,<br />

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the character might be perceived positively for leaving her comfort zone. However, the<br />

following sections will outline how viewer attachments to Jeanne and to the film's other<br />

characters are problematic within the film's overall scheme.<br />

Erasing the viewer's pro-attitude<br />

A pattern emerges in Bertolucci's work where the viewer's nascent affective attachments<br />

towards characters are systematically blocked. After spectators assess whether Paul's life<br />

trajectory and values are compatible with their own value system, whatever this may be, the<br />

narration provokes viewer detachment after the sequence that symbolically concludes Paul's<br />

quest. The sequence resembles one at the beginning <strong>of</strong> the film, but with Paul and Jeanne in<br />

inverted positions. In the opening sequence, the camera followed a disconsolate Paul, while<br />

Jeanne stared at him as he passed; now it is Paul who passes a disconsolate Jeanne, and stops<br />

to introduce himself using his real identity. This symbolic, circular representation <strong>of</strong> the end<br />

<strong>of</strong> Paul's retreat into an alternative existence cues a possible cognitive expectation from<br />

viewers <strong>of</strong> a positive narrative outcome that might encompass his new self-awareness and<br />

Jeanne's love for him. Instead, Bertolucci dwells on Paul's dominance within the film's<br />

scheme, hi the next sequence viewers witness Paul's mockery <strong>of</strong> a tango competition - which<br />

functions as a metaphor for society's fakeness - but viewers also have access to Paul's<br />

thoughts, through his voiceover, as he reflects on how in America Jeanne would be<br />

considered a bimbo. And this is how he treats her in dismissing her understandable<br />

reservations about a prospective future at the hotel, and in reacting to her decision to end their<br />

relationship by compelling her to masturbate him under the table, because 'there is something<br />

left to do'. In this long take, which heralds the film's dramatic denouement, Paul's egocentric<br />

dominance, examples <strong>of</strong> which this chapter has already highlighted, escalates into the worst<br />

form <strong>of</strong> patriarchal contempt towards the female, and the film's last traces <strong>of</strong> progressive<br />

liberation evaporate. This inevitably dismays those viewers who had been sensitive to the<br />

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film's earlier discourses regarding the role <strong>of</strong> the individual within society, and it ultimately<br />

distances viewers emotionally and intellectually from the protagonists' destiny.<br />

The construction <strong>of</strong> a mood <strong>of</strong> anxious tension<br />

To portray Paul's powerful ego, Bertolucci cast Marion Brando, who was an icon <strong>of</strong><br />

subversive behaviour on and <strong>of</strong>f screen, and whose persona would therefore lend a degree <strong>of</strong><br />

authenticity to Paul's criticisms <strong>of</strong> society. Furthermore, Brando's presence would maximize<br />

the impact on viewers, as their fascination for him as a film legend would guarantee an<br />

interest in his character almost by default. In this respect, some critics have recognized that<br />

Bertolucci used details <strong>of</strong> Brando's real life and cinematic biography, "a boxer, an actor, a<br />

revolutionary in South America, a reporter in Japan, he hangs about in Tahiti, learns French<br />

then comes to Paris...', as a basis for Paul's troubled past (Socci, 1995: 50-51). To convey the<br />

character's aggression, Brando alternates silences with outbursts <strong>of</strong> rage; he is repeatedly<br />

filmed in the dark, leaning against a wall while either sitting on the floor or standing in the<br />

corner <strong>of</strong> a room (a composition reminiscent <strong>of</strong> those <strong>of</strong> Giacobbe in Partner), suddenly<br />

emerging from these positions for confrontations with his interlocutor who has to retreat or<br />

succumb. Paul's intolerance <strong>of</strong> social hypocrisy makes him aggressive towards all the<br />

characters with whom he interacts; at the hotel, after turning <strong>of</strong>f the power, Paul drags his<br />

mother-in-law into the semi-darkness <strong>of</strong> the hallway, menacingly whispering that he knows<br />

she is afraid <strong>of</strong> dying. The anxiety generated by this sequence, heightened by the shouting <strong>of</strong><br />

the hotel guests, is dissipated as Paul denounces the woman as an 'old whore' who still<br />

enjoys 'the job' now and then. In this regard, certain elements <strong>of</strong> the scene, such as the<br />

darkness, the protagonist's haranguing <strong>of</strong> a semi-imaginary diegetic audience, and the<br />

manhandling <strong>of</strong> a victim, recall the sequence in The Conformist in which Marcello Clerici<br />

denounces his Fascist friend Italo to the people celebrating the end <strong>of</strong> Fascism.<br />

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Another scene that creates a tense viewing experience occurs in the apartment, when<br />

Jeanne furtively goes through Paul's jacket pockets and finds a razor. In the next shot she is<br />

replaced in the frame by Paul, who takes the razor and a barber's leather strap, before joining<br />

Jeanne in the bathroom. Cognitively, the discovery <strong>of</strong> a concealed, dangerous artefact is<br />

imbued with sinister narrative potential and emotionally the apprehension cued by the silent<br />

and furtive acting is enhanced by close-ups <strong>of</strong> the pocket and the protagonists' hands, and by<br />

a high-pitched violin soundtrack. The tension is only eventually released by the argument that<br />

develops between the characters. Consequently, the narrative and aesthetic mechanisms<br />

outlined above militate against any viewer alignment with either the paradigm <strong>of</strong> male<br />

menace or that <strong>of</strong> female vulnerability.<br />

To perpetuate the emotions <strong>of</strong> anxiety and isolation that permeate Tango, occasionally<br />

supplementing them with a sensuality that does not substantially alter the film's mood,<br />

Bertolucci assigns a key role to the film's colours and tones. The hotel's colour scheme is<br />

designed to accentuate Paul's anguish, and evokes the seedy ambience in several hotel<br />

sequences in The Conformist: there is constant darkness around the characters, enhanced by<br />

low key lighting. Many shots present the characters emerging from a totally black backdrop,<br />

or surrounded by nocturnal hues obtained by using blue filters. The general monochrome <strong>of</strong><br />

certain scenes is only broken by a splash <strong>of</strong> colour on some details <strong>of</strong> the decor. Furthermore,<br />

the montage is based on fade-outs and fade-ins, and this is so recurrent that black may be<br />

considered a colour motif. Yet the film's fascination relies greatly on the strange, secluded<br />

apartment set, as well as on the sophisticated, artificial light sources and filters used for its<br />

mise-en-scene. The apartment's colour scheme is constituted by a limited palette <strong>of</strong> luminous<br />

orange hues breaking through the darkness <strong>of</strong> the pervading reddish-brown tonality. This<br />

enhances the characters" naked bodies and underlines the couple's separation from reality.<br />

The orange hues, obtained through a sapient use <strong>of</strong> filters, allow details such as Paul's facial<br />

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close-ups and the couple's nudity to emerge from the enveloping darkness.<br />

On the use <strong>of</strong> the colour orange Bertolucci recalls that he and Storaro wanted to<br />

recreate the light <strong>of</strong> the sun just before sunset, 'when it strikes the windows with its warm<br />

orange rays', whereas Bacon's colours as a source <strong>of</strong> inspiration are also acknowledged by<br />

Bertolucci as he recalls how he and Storaro even went to an exhibition <strong>of</strong> the painter's work<br />

that was held in Paris (Ungari, 1982: 117). Moreover, the apartment's symbolic meaning is<br />

hinted at by the whiteness <strong>of</strong> a sheet, thrown over what viewers can easily envisage as old<br />

furniture. Standing out amidst the dim hues, it is a sad, ghostly remnant <strong>of</strong> the life that existed<br />

in the apartment before Paul and Jeanne's arrival, thus functioning as a reminder <strong>of</strong> life's<br />

transience and the precariousness <strong>of</strong> the human condition. To portray Jeanne's despair at<br />

finding the apartment empty and Paul gone, Bertolucci films her from the back as, falling to<br />

her knees, she pulls down the sheet, finally uncovering the furniture.<br />

The affective charge <strong>of</strong> the film's sexuality<br />

The film's emotional structure is conditioned by the sexual arousal generated by the depiction<br />

<strong>of</strong> Paul and Jeanne's intimacy. The natural quality <strong>of</strong> the depiction is partly attributable to<br />

Bertolucci's explanation that, for him, sexuality is determined 'not so much by your sexual<br />

life, but by your sexual formation as a child' (Quinn, 1977: 106). Bertolucci spent his<br />

childhood in the countryside where 'the discovery <strong>of</strong> one's sexuality happens early',<br />

(Maraini, 1973:87) probably because children witness the sexual life <strong>of</strong> animals (Ungari<br />

1982: 14). This detail might account for the director's decision to have the protagonists<br />

imitate animal noises at certain points. As regards the film's visually innovative and intense<br />

sensuality, shot realistically through close-ups, Paul arguably represents the director's alter<br />

ego, impacting upon Jeanne and the film's viewers in a similar way. Like her, viewers are<br />

initially taken by surprise, then constantly kept in suspense, since they soon become aware<br />

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that the quotient <strong>of</strong> sexuality will escalate. Through Jeanne, viewers oscillate from attraction<br />

- engendered by the mix <strong>of</strong> passion and tenderness in scenes where she is washed by Paul<br />

while taking a bath - to uneasiness caused by his escalating dominance which is brought to<br />

extremes, initially by the act <strong>of</strong> sodomy and later by his insolent masturbation request.<br />

The film's representation <strong>of</strong> sex elicits both a strong fascination and a recognition <strong>of</strong><br />

its ideological perspective concerning the necessity <strong>of</strong> opposing conventional - and therefore<br />

inauthentic - depictions <strong>of</strong> sexual relationships in film. Maria Schneider, the actress<br />

portraying Jeanne, undertook a challenging role with a mixture <strong>of</strong> childish spontaneity and<br />

rebelliousness. But due to their young age at the time <strong>of</strong> filming, a question has to be posed as<br />

to whether the vulnerability <strong>of</strong> Schneider and, later, Eva Green (Isabel in Tlie Dreamers),<br />

compared with more established actresses, was visually exploited by the director, particularly<br />

in scenes where the camera's graphic representation <strong>of</strong> them cannot be ascribed to a diegetic<br />

character's POV. This occurs in the scene in which Jeanne is being bathed by Paul, and gets<br />

to her feet for no apparent narrative reason, her body effectively being objectified in the dual<br />

gazes <strong>of</strong> Paul and the viewer. Another scene, in the apartment's bathroom as the two<br />

protagonists argue, again presents Schneider in a state <strong>of</strong> undress, viewed through the<br />

camera's medium-long shot and also in the reflection <strong>of</strong> the bathroom mirror, the actress<br />

positioning herself - or being asked to position herself - frontally before the camera at a<br />

certain point. So while the film can be considered intellectually progressive in its<br />

conceptualization <strong>of</strong> sexual mores, much <strong>of</strong> the actual eroticism <strong>of</strong> its emotional charge is<br />

attributable to a far less progressive objectification and visual consumption <strong>of</strong> Schneider.<br />

Obstructions <strong>of</strong> the viewer's cognitive schemata<br />

The narrative context <strong>of</strong> Last Tango in Paris is introduced but then left undetermined for a<br />

large part <strong>of</strong> the film, eliciting affective responses appropriate to 'the representation <strong>of</strong> the<br />

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unfamiliar', (Smith M., 1995: 93). This occurs when restricted narratives stimulate viewers to<br />

engage with the characters on an instinctive, emotional level. The presentation <strong>of</strong> Paul's<br />

character appears designed to achieve this aim: to create what might be termed a retarded<br />

recognition <strong>of</strong> the character's attributes and back history, while establishing an immediate<br />

rapport between viewers and the character on an instinctive, emotional level. The film's first<br />

images show Paul as he covers his ears and screams at a train which passes with a deafening<br />

noise. The camera tracks him as he wanders the streets, talking to himself and gesturing in<br />

dismay, his face unshaven and his eyes brimming with tears. This introduction <strong>of</strong> Paul's<br />

character reflects Smith's discussion <strong>of</strong> 'those visual representations in which we are denied<br />

all cues aside from those provided by facial expression and bodily posture', which he<br />

considers to be effective in eliciting affective mimicry (Smith M., 1995: 101-102). Films such<br />

as Partner and Tango share this kind <strong>of</strong> narration, which according to Smith elicits<br />

'sympathetic (and antipathetic) responses towards characters undergoing experiences <strong>of</strong><br />

traumatic loss, violation, and self-questioning that few <strong>of</strong> us will have direct experience <strong>of</strong>,<br />

and none in the precise configuration put forward by the narrative" (Smith M., 1995: 93-94).<br />

Both films, through an initial emotional channel, elicit a form <strong>of</strong> imagination and insight from<br />

viewers 'that fosters new perspectives on the social', (Smith M., 1995: 93-94) and an<br />

understanding <strong>of</strong> societal contexts different from their own.<br />

Although not as cryptic as Partner, Tango also features a restricted narration that<br />

forces spectators to speculate about omitted narrative events, such as Paul and Jeanne's lives<br />

prior to their encounter. The narration follows an internal focalization attached to Paul's<br />

subjectivity and an external focalization attached to the director behind the camera. This is<br />

revealed by the camera being positioned at floor level even when the characters are standing<br />

up, or by other conspicuous positioning such as the high-angle shot that allows a complete<br />

view <strong>of</strong> the action, as in the sodomization scene. Close-ups are alternated with medium shots<br />

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from peculiar angles, sometimes through glass. The camera movement privileges diagonal<br />

tracking and side panning, whereas the editing is based on spatio-temporal ellipses in terms<br />

<strong>of</strong> cuts from one interior to another (the apartment, the hotel, Jeanne's house), through the<br />

simple framing <strong>of</strong> the opening or closing <strong>of</strong> doors. Regarding this visual framing <strong>of</strong> doors,<br />

Bertolucci mentions one particular tracking shot, towards an empty door that excludes Paul<br />

and his mother-in-law from the frame during their first encounter, as a re-elaboration <strong>of</strong> the<br />

cinematic experimentation articulated in Partner (Ungari, 1982: 89). In fact Bertolucci<br />

recognizes Tango as 'the one [<strong>of</strong> his films] most closely related to Partner', since in Tango<br />

he was finally able to control the cinematic obsessions that dominated him in Partner, here<br />

too he pursued 'research on the use <strong>of</strong> the camera; an attempt to question the structures <strong>of</strong><br />

cinema' (Bachmann, 1973: 96-97). Regarding the effect <strong>of</strong> these stylistic choices upon the<br />

viewer's cognitive engagement with the film - effects such as spatio-temporal ellipses and<br />

the unorthodox visual marginalizing <strong>of</strong> characters within the frame - the task <strong>of</strong> interpreting<br />

the developing action and predicting, as in real life, courses <strong>of</strong> action and narrative<br />

developments, is complicated.<br />

Engaging viewers with music and parallel mises-en-scene<br />

Another element <strong>of</strong> Tango's complexity derives from the contrasting mises-en-scene that<br />

depict different facets <strong>of</strong> the Paul-Jeanne-Tom relationship. The narrative focus moves from<br />

one environment to another, eliciting intellectual comparisons from viewers. In the depictions<br />

<strong>of</strong> Paul and Jeanne's relationship, narrative time flows in a linear way, continuity being<br />

provided by their regular arrangements to meet. Their meetings connect the film's different<br />

strands and this is made evident by recurrent patterns in the way Jeanne's arrivals at the<br />

apartment are framed: an <strong>of</strong>f-centre view <strong>of</strong> a suspended walkway leading to the apartment<br />

block and the lock <strong>of</strong> the apartment door filmed from the inside as she enters. The pattern is<br />

reinforced by the way the main motif <strong>of</strong> the film's score is aired. Regarding music, Bertolucci<br />

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declared that starting from its title, Tango was the film that gave music a prime role in his<br />

work. Unlike his previous films in which he considered the music to be independent from the<br />

images and in which pre-existing music was used, here he asked the composers to create<br />

music that would follow, precede, or accompany the camera movements to achieve a synergy<br />

or a contrast (Ungari, 1982: 87-89). In Tango music carries 'representational meaning', in<br />

Claudia Gorbman's words, as it consists almost <strong>of</strong> a single theme (based on a saxophone<br />

piece by Gato Barbieri) played in different nuances connected to specific 'representational<br />

elements' in the film; the theme signals 'the same character, locale, or situation each time it<br />

appears', acting therefore as a marker and creating continuity, and it is also instrumental 'in<br />

the film's dynamic evolution' (Gorbman, 1987: 27). The evocative saxophone sound shapes<br />

the film's mood every time it reintroduces a liaison between Paul and Jeanne, and ultimately<br />

evolves into a grandiose orchestral theme towards the end <strong>of</strong> the film. Music, as had been the<br />

case in The Conformist, therefore begins to occupy a more pivotal role in the emotional<br />

ambience <strong>of</strong> Bertolucci's films from this point in his career.<br />

By contrast the simple mise-en-scene that acts as a backdrop to Jeanne and Tom's<br />

relationship appears to emphasize the relatively monotonous emotional mood <strong>of</strong> the<br />

sequences, which are only occasionally diversified by different shooting locations. Tom, with<br />

his monothematic personality, essentially views his relationship with Jeanne in terms <strong>of</strong> its<br />

use in his films. Consequently, their relationship receives no narrative stimulus to develop,<br />

remaining repetitive and one-dimensional. This perception is accentuated by a recurring<br />

framing technique; regardless <strong>of</strong> whether scenes take place in interiors or on location, the first<br />

shot is usually a close-up <strong>of</strong> Jeanne, or a medium shot <strong>of</strong> her running somewhere; then Tom<br />

materializes, followed by his troupe who are filming that very scene. Eventually the frame<br />

enlarges to show the whole set. The colours are also uniform and continuous, since the cold<br />

green and grey hues adopted for the interiors merge with those <strong>of</strong> the Paris landscape, which<br />

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also cue a sense <strong>of</strong> cold unresponsiveness. The repetition <strong>of</strong> narrative and technical elements<br />

fosters little expectation <strong>of</strong> development in the protagonists' lives and therefore very few<br />

stimuli engage viewers either affectively, in terms <strong>of</strong> fear, anxiety or elation at the characters'<br />

destinies, or cognitively as regards the evolution <strong>of</strong> events.<br />

The sense <strong>of</strong> viewer detachment is maintained by Tom's omnipresent troupe, whose<br />

presence keeps viewers aware <strong>of</strong> the film's self-consciousness regarding the construction <strong>of</strong><br />

narrative illusions. This particular mise-en-scene highlights Nouvelle Vague narrative and<br />

stylistic conventions which include the lack <strong>of</strong> goal-oriented protagonists, loose causal<br />

connections in narrative terms, a 'casual', unplanned atmosphere, location shooting, a mobile<br />

camera, and discontinuous editing. However, Bertolucci's use <strong>of</strong> this style is so overt that it<br />

betrays a sense <strong>of</strong> irony. For instance, when the troupe is shooting in the dark, spotlights are<br />

paraded around the set in the same ostentatious way in which huge microphones are regularly<br />

visible in the frame. Consequently, the depiction <strong>of</strong> Paul and Jeanne's problematic<br />

relationship and intense sexuality, so explicit for this period in cinematic history, presents an<br />

intrinsic genuineness that clashes with the arid style <strong>of</strong> the sequences that feature Tom. This<br />

use <strong>of</strong> different cinematic styles represents a statement, on Bertolucci's part, about which<br />

style he intended to embrace. This is confirmed by several assertions he has made over time;<br />

in a 1978 interview he affirmed that Tom was a stark portrayal <strong>of</strong> the tedious cinephile that<br />

he himself had been (Casetti, 1978: 10). Bertolucci stated that the segments <strong>of</strong> Tango<br />

focusing on Tom and his perspectives were also a message to his Nouvelle Vague colleagues<br />

exhorting them to move on from that cinematic formula (Casetti, 1995: 9-10). The idea that<br />

has been put forward in my study, that Tango - which was released soon after The<br />

Conformist - embodies Bertolucci's quest for a broader appreciation <strong>of</strong> his work is<br />

corroborated by an interview given to Gideon Bachmann: 'As far as the public is concerned,<br />

the only sure thing I know is that I seem to be seeking an ever larger one' (Bachmann, 1973:<br />

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96).<br />

Conclusion<br />

Although the director chose a denouement for Last Tango in Pans - Paul proposing marriage<br />

to Jeanne, her refusal, his intimidating stalking <strong>of</strong> her and Jeanne's violent reaction - which<br />

privileged the element <strong>of</strong> spectacle in line with classical Hollywood narratives and generated<br />

a dramatic effect, overall it is an ending that generates a sense <strong>of</strong> anticlimax as it weakens the<br />

film's socio-political perspective. While the ending may reinforce the film's emotional<br />

structure which is founded on anguish and distress, the representation <strong>of</strong> Paul's escalating<br />

selfish dominance makes the character incongruent with the discourses <strong>of</strong> personal and social<br />

freedom that have been aired until the film's final sequences, and this creates an unsatisfying<br />

narrative outcome. An open ending would have given the film a clearer position in the<br />

context <strong>of</strong> contemporary debates regarding the social constraints affecting relationships. In<br />

these terms, Tango typifies a pattern in Bertolucci's films that would cause controversy and<br />

partly invalidate the intellectual resonances in his work. It centres on his occasional tendency<br />

to lose the balance between intellectual rigour and cinematic spectacle, a balance that he<br />

sometimes achieved through articulating pertinent socio-political issues through sophisticated<br />

mises-en-scene and film narration. Nonetheless, as will be reiterated in the conclusion to this<br />

study, Last Tango in Paris remains one <strong>of</strong> his most influential films.<br />

Notes<br />

1. Casetti. F., (1978) Bertolucci, Florence: La Nuova Italia, p. 83; Loshitzky Y., (1995) The Radical<br />

Faces <strong>of</strong> Godard and Bertolucci, Detroit: Wayne State <strong>University</strong> Press, pp. 72-73.<br />

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2. 'Holy family, church <strong>of</strong> good citizens, where children are tortured until they tell the first lie, the world<br />

is broken in repression and freedom is assassinated by egoism'.<br />

References<br />

Bachmann, G. (1973) 'Every Sexual Relationship Is Condemned: An Interview with<br />

Bernardo Bertolucci', in Gerard, F.S., Kline, T.J. and Sklarew, B. (ed.) (2000)<br />

Bemardo Bertolucci Interviews, Jackson: <strong>University</strong> Press <strong>of</strong> Mississippi.<br />

Barberis, A. (1962), 'Making Movies? It's Like Writing Poetry', in Gerard, F.S., Kline, T.J.<br />

and Sklarew, B. (ed.) (2000) Bemardo Bertolucci Intei-views, Jackson: <strong>University</strong><br />

Press <strong>of</strong> Mississippi.<br />

Fantoni Minnella, M. (2004) Non riconciliati, Turin: UTET Diffusione S.r.l.<br />

Gorbman, C. (1987) Unheard Melodies, London: BFI Publishing.<br />

Kline, T.J. (1987) Bertolucci's Dream Loom: a Psychoanalytic Study <strong>of</strong> Cinema, Amherst:<br />

The <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Massachusetts Press.<br />

Kolker, R. P. (1985) Bernardo Bertolucci, London: BFI Publishing.<br />

Loshitzky, Y. (1995) The Radical Faces <strong>of</strong> Godard and Bertolucci, Detroit: Wayne<br />

<strong>University</strong> Press.<br />

Maraini, D. (1973) 'Who were you?', in Gerard F.S., Kline, T.J., and Sklarew B. (ed.) (2000)<br />

Bernardo Bertolucci Interviews, Jackson: <strong>University</strong> Press <strong>of</strong> Mississippi.<br />

Morrey, D. (2005) Jean-Luc Godard, Manchester: Manchester <strong>University</strong> Press.<br />

Pirandello, L. (1904) II fu Mattia Pascal, (ed. 1965), Verona: Mondadori.<br />

Pirandello, L. (1909) Uno, nessuno e centomila, (ed. 1995), Rome: Newton Compton Editori.<br />

Quinn, S. (1977) "1900 Has Taken Its Toll on Bernardo Bertolucci", in Gerard, F.S., Kline,<br />

T.J. and Sklarew, B. (ed.) (2000) Bernardo Bertolucci Interviews, Jackson: <strong>University</strong><br />

Press <strong>of</strong> Mississippi.<br />

Sartre, J.P. (1943) 'Being and Nothingness', in Molina F. (1962) Existentialism as<br />

Philosophy, Englewood Cliffs N.J.: Prentice-Hall Inc.<br />

Socci, S. (1996) Bemardo Bertolucci, Milan: II Castoro Cinema.<br />

Ungari, E. (1982) Scene madri di Bernardo Bertolucci (2nd Ed. 1987), Milan: Ubulibri.<br />

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sosnatori I The Dreamers: 1968 Revisited: Replacing the Political with a Cinematic<br />

Education<br />

Released in 2003, I sognatori I The Dreamers was meant to stimulate in the younger<br />

generations the enthusiasm <strong>of</strong> the students <strong>of</strong> 1968 who rebelled against the socio-political<br />

situation <strong>of</strong> the time.(l) Instead the film provoked criticism that centred on the accusation<br />

that it was a personalized and distorted account <strong>of</strong> the student uprising.(2) The following<br />

analysis <strong>of</strong> the film partly recognizes the validity <strong>of</strong> this criticism, positing that The Dreamers<br />

elicits narrative expectations that ultimately remain unfulfilled, in the sense that the narrative<br />

strand outlining the socio-historical ferment in France is effectively closed <strong>of</strong>f after twenty<br />

minutes before being revived during the film's final scenes. The following discussion <strong>of</strong> the<br />

film's structure indicates how viewers are presented with an intimate narrative strand -<br />

referred to henceforth as the 'second narrative' - which, inscribed within the filmic whole,<br />

redirects their attention towards a discourse on cinema that Bertolucci enunciates by<br />

celebrating masterpieces that have contributed to the history <strong>of</strong> cinema, and have fuelled the<br />

imagination <strong>of</strong> audiences and their ability to comprehend different realities. Therefore rather<br />

than being a distorted account <strong>of</strong> historical events, the film's initial socio-historical context<br />

becomes a frame within which Bertolucci's more personal agenda is articulated.<br />

The film's didactic intent - with regard to imparting the importance <strong>of</strong> cinema -<br />

springs from observations Bertolucci made in an interview in 1997 about the world being<br />

'less and less educated, thanks to television', which he considered to be 'a great repository <strong>of</strong><br />

non-culture', (Nowell-Smith and Halberstadt , 1997: 247) and about the depressing situation<br />

where global interest in movies is based on their commercial success, Bertolucci illustrating<br />

this by comparing the differing destinies <strong>of</strong> Rouge (1994) from Kieslowski's Three Colours<br />

and Pulp Fiction (1994) by Quentin Tarantino. According to this value system, Bertolucci<br />

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easoned, 'great movies <strong>of</strong> the past, entire schools <strong>of</strong> cinema' nowadays 'would be<br />

completely ignored' and he felt that 'something has to be done' (Nowell-Smith and<br />

Halberstadt, 1997: 250-251). In concrete terms, the film that Bertolucci eventually directed<br />

seems to draw on his personal experiences in Paris, where he studied at the Cinematheque<br />

Franqaise in 1959, (Gerard F.S., Kline T.J. and Sklarew B., 2000: XVII) and to evoke<br />

Godard's Histoire(s) du Cinema. However, the following analysis <strong>of</strong> the film will highlight<br />

how the development <strong>of</strong> both narratives and the intellectual validity <strong>of</strong> their discourses are<br />

undermined by the affective charge created by the film's extended and <strong>of</strong>ten self-indulgent<br />

depictions <strong>of</strong> the sexual rites-<strong>of</strong>-passage <strong>of</strong> the young protagonists.<br />

Plot summary<br />

The opening credits roll over images <strong>of</strong> an American student - Matthew - attending the<br />

screening <strong>of</strong> Hollywood and European films at the Cinematheque in Paris, hi voiceover and<br />

in the past tense he reflects on the excitement experienced by students in discovering the<br />

intimate connection between cinema and life, and the ways in which films clarify intricate<br />

existential questions. The scene switches to the crowds gathered at the university to oppose<br />

the Government's decision to close the Cinematheque and expel its creator, Henri Langlois.<br />

There, Matthew gets to know Isabel and her twin brother Theo, just as a confrontation with<br />

the police starts. With the twins' parents leaving Paris for a holiday, and Matthew staying at<br />

their apartment with them, the focus <strong>of</strong> the film shifts from the socio-historical events <strong>of</strong> 1968<br />

towards the intimate narration <strong>of</strong> their cohabitation. Secluded in the apartment, the trio<br />

distance themselves from the turmoil outside, and spend their days discussing cinema and<br />

politics and exploring their sexuality. Yet when the turmoil in Paris finally bursts into their<br />

life again, Matthew remains faithful to his non-violent beliefs and departs, while the twins<br />

join the barricades to attack at the police, whose uniforms are uncannily modern. This detail<br />

makes the images <strong>of</strong> the police charge - shot frontally and in digital slow motion - lose their<br />

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sense <strong>of</strong> temporal definition and assume more contemporary connotations, an effect that hints<br />

at the invariable nature <strong>of</strong> state repression.(3) The film's sense <strong>of</strong> history is re-established<br />

through night images <strong>of</strong> the streets now deserted but still illuminated by burning Molotovs.<br />

The return to Nouvelle Vague style<br />

To depict the vibrant lifestyle <strong>of</strong> the students <strong>of</strong> 1968, with a particular focus on the influence<br />

<strong>of</strong> cinema which, thanks to the Cinematheque, had evolved from mere entertainment into a<br />

more didactic role, Bertolucci draws on elements <strong>of</strong> Nouvelle Vague style such as location<br />

filming, hand-held camerawork and natural sound, and by adopting a realist aesthetic for the<br />

settings and the actors' performances. Although Matthew's voiceover implies that the<br />

narrative will evolve through his perspective, the overall representation <strong>of</strong> this early segment<br />

remains neutral up to Isabel's first utterances. Before that, no dialogue takes place except for<br />

the sound <strong>of</strong> indistinct chatter, no element indicates the beginning <strong>of</strong> the narrative, and the<br />

camera perspective is that <strong>of</strong> a non-diegetic presence following Matthew. These stylistic<br />

elements place viewers in the position <strong>of</strong> observers whose cognitive engagement remains<br />

unactivated, in the sense that the aural-visual information to be processed does not regard the<br />

construction <strong>of</strong> a story, but rather the reconstruction <strong>of</strong> an ambience characterized by cultural<br />

and political ferment. These elements underpin the film's early stages, manifesting<br />

themselves via the intensity with which the 1968 generation experienced cinema as an art<br />

form that questioned society, identifying its covert tendencies towards violence and<br />

oppression. Fereydoun Hoveyda, a co-founder <strong>of</strong> the journal Cahiers du Cinema, (Hoveyda<br />

F., 2000: x) recalls the director Edward Zwick saying that his generation used to return 'to the<br />

dorm for hour upon hour <strong>of</strong> cigarette-hazed conversations' about the films they viewed<br />

because they challenged individuals 'to look at (their) lives, politics and society' (Hoveyda<br />

F., 2000: 111). In The Dreamers this Zeitgeist is evocatively depicted when the camera roams<br />

the darkness <strong>of</strong> the Cinematheque until it locates the origin <strong>of</strong> the luminous blue beam, tracks<br />

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it towards the images being splashed on the screen, and turns back to the darkness, panning<br />

along the young spectators who - enveloped in a 'cigarette-hazed' silence - are absorbed in<br />

disquieting films about social injustice in France and the USA.<br />

The viewers' impression <strong>of</strong> watching a reconstruction <strong>of</strong> history is reinforced by the<br />

staged re-enactment <strong>of</strong> the political confrontation being intercut with documentary footage<br />

from 1968. In some cases fictive images and footage are edited in a way that gestures<br />

initiated by fictional characters are completed by real people in the footage. By this use <strong>of</strong><br />

archive clips Bertolucci implies that his portrayal <strong>of</strong> events is interchangeable with archive<br />

material in terms <strong>of</strong> socio-historical veracity, and therefore the archive clips confirm the<br />

positioning <strong>of</strong> viewers in the role <strong>of</strong> observers, as they function as markers <strong>of</strong> the real world.<br />

The narrative remains fragmentated, as if Bertolucci assumed that viewers shared an<br />

understanding <strong>of</strong> how the revolutionary component within the cultural ferment was rapidly<br />

identified and opposed by the state. That the film's mise-en-scene was based on authentic<br />

audiovisual references to 1968 primarily to evoke the period's socio-political ferment, is<br />

corroborated by one <strong>of</strong> Bertolucci's statements, namely that 'the film's meaning resided in<br />

the attempt to re-capture and recount, above all to the present young generations, [...] the<br />

spirit <strong>of</strong> that period'.(4) Indeed, in affective terms, this segment <strong>of</strong> the film appears designed<br />

to elicit curiosity or nostalgia, according to the age <strong>of</strong> individual viewers.<br />

With the twins' parents leaving for a holiday and Matthew staying at the apartment, a<br />

shift in the film's narrative occurs that disorients viewers' cognitive expectations, as it<br />

abandons the unfolding <strong>of</strong> events connected to the students' rebellion and redirects the<br />

viewers' focus <strong>of</strong> attention towards the secluded set <strong>of</strong> the apartment. The shift in the<br />

narrative is accompanied by a shift in theme which, from the political, changes into the<br />

cinematic, with an emphasis on the fascination and the pedagogical role <strong>of</strong> cinema. This is<br />

carried out by means <strong>of</strong> character dialogues - that at times assume the form <strong>of</strong> debates -<br />

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integrated with a beguiling technique that uses insertions <strong>of</strong> clips from European and<br />

American black and white movies soon after the characters mention them.(5) This technique<br />

evokes Godard's use <strong>of</strong> images in direct reference to utterances by characters in his film La<br />

Chinoise. The tw<strong>of</strong>old function <strong>of</strong> the dialogues combined with the insertion <strong>of</strong> clips - that <strong>of</strong><br />

didacticism and evocation - also evokes Godard's own project Histoire(s) du cinema; this<br />

originated as a collaboration with Henri Langlois, the founder <strong>of</strong> the Cinematheque, and is an<br />

oeuvre composed <strong>of</strong> hundreds <strong>of</strong> images from different films (Morrey 2005: 220). In Die<br />

Dreamers the film clips are also the object <strong>of</strong> a quiz played by the characters, and their<br />

insertion implies an appeal on Bertolucci's part to the sensibilities and intellect <strong>of</strong> a cinephile<br />

viewer, possibly <strong>of</strong> the director's own generation. The clips activate viewers' attention or<br />

memory - according to their age - and constitute something <strong>of</strong> a cognitive/intellectual game<br />

between the director and cognizant viewers regarding the ways in which clips will be worked<br />

into the developing narrative. Typical <strong>of</strong> this strategy is Theo's question about the film in<br />

which a cross formed by lighting indicates a murder spot (Scarface, 1949); the few seconds'<br />

interval between the formulation <strong>of</strong> the question and the screening <strong>of</strong> the clip serves to set in<br />

motion viewers' participation in the game.<br />

Contrasting intellectual perspectives<br />

The dominance <strong>of</strong> the cinematic discourse in the second narrative explains the director's<br />

decision to depict the student uprising from a cinematic perspective - the closure <strong>of</strong> the<br />

Cinematheque - rather than from the more renowned standpoints <strong>of</strong> the time: the Vietnam<br />

War or the sexual revolution. This approach also suggests the presence <strong>of</strong> (auto)biographical<br />

elements in the narrative, and that the personal/cinematic will be an influential filter for the<br />

developing action; and it is possible to argue that the dialogue in general, and sometimes the<br />

character <strong>of</strong> Matthew in particular, reflects Bertolucci's own perspectives. The first clue that<br />

Matthew might embody Bertolucci's personal experience is given during the opening credits<br />

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when, in voiceover, he recollects: 'I received my education here. All directors <strong>of</strong> the Nouvelle<br />

Vague used to come to the Cinematheque to learn the pr<strong>of</strong>ession. Modern cinema was bom<br />

here. It was our private Cultural Revolution'. A few sequences later the dialogue between<br />

Theo and Matthew concerns films by Nicholas Ray, with an explicit mention <strong>of</strong> Godard, as<br />

his statement 'Nicholas Ray is cinema' is quoted. Their different preferences concerning<br />

Ray's best films (In a Lonely Place (1950) for Theo and Johnny Guitar (1954), Rebel<br />

Without a Cause (1955) for Matthew) set the tone for the cinematic debate that informs the<br />

dialogue <strong>of</strong> The Dreamers, which is used by Bertolucci to air some <strong>of</strong> his sharpest<br />

judgements. For example, with regard to the characters' different evaluations <strong>of</strong> Buster<br />

Keaton's and Charlie Chaplin's works, Bertolucci gives Theo a line in which he rebukes<br />

Matthew's preference for Chaplin, Theo saying that it is no surprise that Americans do not<br />

understand a thing about their own culture and that they did not understand Jerry Lewis. The<br />

initial impression regarding this line is that it might imply the director's residual bitterness<br />

about the American reception <strong>of</strong> his films, but this gives way to an impression <strong>of</strong> witnessing a<br />

personal, distanced form <strong>of</strong> communication with Godard, set up by Bertolucci through the<br />

characters representing their different personae.<br />

Three further elements <strong>of</strong> dialogue seem to juxtapose Bertolucci's and Godard's<br />

cinematic and political perspectives, as well as established critical interpretations <strong>of</strong> their<br />

work. In chronological order, there is the scene in the bath tub, during which Matthew speaks<br />

about the film-maker as a voyeur spying through the keyhole <strong>of</strong> his parents" bedroom, to<br />

which Theo sardonically comments that he'll have to say goodbye to his dreams <strong>of</strong> becoming<br />

a director because his parents always used to leave their bedroom door open; it is an<br />

exchange that contains considerable self-irony on Bertolucci's part, given the role <strong>of</strong><br />

psychoanalysis in his own life and in much scholarship on his films. The second sequence<br />

concerns the issue <strong>of</strong> Maoism that divided Bertolucci and Godard. Theo suggests that Mao<br />

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should be conceived as a film-maker making an epic movie, which, using culture as a<br />

weapon, depicts the people's liberating march; Matthew, instead, is critical about culture<br />

being constituted by a single book, noting dryly that the Red Guards all carry the same book<br />

and sing the same song, and that everybody, in this 'epic film', is just an extra. This is a<br />

discernible political/intellectual perspective in Bertolucci's work and it also emerges, I will<br />

argue, in The Last Emperor. In another sequence <strong>of</strong> Tlie Dreamers there is an overt<br />

accusation <strong>of</strong> elitism; Matthew tells Theo that if he really believed in the revolution he would<br />

be out in the street, not secluded in the apartment, talking about Mao while drinking<br />

expensive wines. Matthew finishes his attack by asserting that Theo conceives <strong>of</strong> the word<br />

'together' as not meaning a million people, but 'two or three'. This concept <strong>of</strong> not being 'out<br />

in the street' and connecting with people evokes a comment by Douglas Morrey, who links<br />

the unsatisfactory destiny <strong>of</strong> the Dziga Vertov collective films - which were commissioned<br />

by European television companies but then ultimately given broadcast slots during the night -<br />

to Steve Cannon's observation that 'there is something a little perverse about this apparent<br />

refusal to make films in France during what was a time [1968] <strong>of</strong> real revolutionary ferment<br />

and political possibility' (Morrey 2005: 91). The content and tone <strong>of</strong> these dialogues elicits<br />

the viewer's intellectual awareness <strong>of</strong> the extra-diegetic presence <strong>of</strong> the real-world author, an<br />

awareness even perhaps experienced by viewers unfamiliar with Bertolucci's career; the<br />

dialogue is endowed with a degree <strong>of</strong> historical awareness and clarity that is inconsistent with<br />

the protagonists' young age, and also with the chaotic state <strong>of</strong> flux <strong>of</strong> the contemporary socio­<br />

political situation.<br />

Further correspondences with La Chinoise<br />

Besides the repeated insertion <strong>of</strong> clips. The Dreamers evokes other elements <strong>of</strong> La Chinoise;<br />

in particular the theme <strong>of</strong> youngsters debating politics (although in The Dreamers cinematic<br />

issues largely replace political questions) while secluded in a bourgeois apartment belonging<br />

168


to one <strong>of</strong> the character's parents and living at their expense. If this safe, comfortable location<br />

has led critics <strong>of</strong> La Chinoise to affirm that it creates 'an irresistible sense <strong>of</strong> young people<br />

playing at polities' (Morrey, 2005: 54) in The Dreamers it is the response <strong>of</strong> the twins'<br />

parents to the situation that they encounter after returning to the flat - looks <strong>of</strong> surprise and<br />

then the decision to leave a cheque so that the youngsters' experience can be bankrolled a<br />

little longer - that elicits ironic humour. Compared with La Chinoise, the characters in<br />

Bertolucci's film are given a more serious attitudinal perspective, especially Theo, who is<br />

constantly depicted reading from books like his counterpart Guillaume in La Chinoise, even<br />

the same passage from Mao's Little Red Book.<br />

The youngsters' disconnection from the external world - which, in La Chinoise, is<br />

symbolized by the prolonged ringing <strong>of</strong> the doorbell that goes unanswered is reflected in<br />

The Dreamers by mute TV pictures <strong>of</strong> street riots. These images cue a strong sense <strong>of</strong><br />

remoteness, both in spatial terms within the diegesis, and in temporal terms with respect to<br />

their portrayal in a 21 st century film project like The Dreamers; consequently, this increases<br />

the viewers' perception <strong>of</strong> the extent to which the initial socio-political narrative has been<br />

sidetracked. Even one <strong>of</strong> the provocative depictions <strong>of</strong> sexuality within The Dreamers, a<br />

theme to be discussed shortly, seems to be connected with a scene from La Chinoise,<br />

reversing, in the process, the wholly cerebral relationship between the French characters in<br />

Godard's film, a mentality which resembles the ascetic attitude <strong>of</strong> the terrorists in The<br />

Tragedy <strong>of</strong> a Ridiculous Man. The sequence depicting Guillaume as he moistens with saliva<br />

an arrow he is about to fire at a wall covered with pictures <strong>of</strong> famous historical characters<br />

who are considered to be revisionists, watched by Veronique who stands behind him, is<br />

transmuted into Theo's act <strong>of</strong> masturbation against the wall where a poster <strong>of</strong> Marlene<br />

Dietrich is attached, watched by Isabel behind him. However, the naive atmosphere generated<br />

169


y the scene in Godard's film is transformed by Bertolucci into an atmosphere <strong>of</strong> voyeurism<br />

that engenders an uneasy viewing experience.<br />

In tracing these links to Godard's personality and films, a question emerges: in this<br />

context, who or what does Isabel's character represent? Considering that in the intricate game<br />

<strong>of</strong> cinematic citations set in motion by Bertolucci, she compares herself to Patricia, the<br />

protagonist <strong>of</strong> A bout de souffle, one answer might be that she represents cinema, the<br />

cinematic muse, or the spirit <strong>of</strong> cinema, as seen by Bertolucci, who has always considered<br />

that Godard's debut film heralded a new form <strong>of</strong> cinema. Therefore, metaphorically, the<br />

relationship between Isabel and Matthew - if Matthew becomes a cypher for Bertolucci and<br />

Theo a Godardian figure - could be read as Bertolucci's acknowledgment that although he<br />

has mastered, and enjoyed mastering, the art <strong>of</strong> film-making, the spirit <strong>of</strong> cinema has always<br />

ultimately been possessed by Godard, remaining with him. hi the world <strong>of</strong> the film this<br />

interpretation is implied in the exchange between Matthew and Isabel, the former<br />

commenting that 'he [Theo] has never been inside you', Isabel replying 'he is always inside<br />

me'. This inseparable complicity is also implied in the film's last sequence when Isabel opts<br />

to stay with Theo in joining the student rebellion. The reading <strong>of</strong> an (auto)biographical<br />

element within the trio's relationship makes for interesting forms <strong>of</strong> interplay between the<br />

emotional and the intellectual for viewers and critics who give credence to this hypothesis.<br />

The plausible intellectual basis for this interpretation, together with the way the film cues<br />

empathy from viewers towards Matthew via his intermittent voiceover and the frequent<br />

reaction shots <strong>of</strong> him, creates a poignant resonance that is both affective and intellectual on<br />

account <strong>of</strong> Matthew/Bertolucci's genuine feeling for both Isabel/the spirit <strong>of</strong> cinema and<br />

Theo/Godard that culminates in immense sadness as the trio finally separate, but also in<br />

pr<strong>of</strong>ound respect on the part <strong>of</strong> Matthew/Bertolucci for Theo/Godard's choice to embrace<br />

political and artistic radicalism.<br />

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Sexuality and shifts <strong>of</strong> subjectivity<br />

The narration <strong>of</strong> the second narrative within The Dreamers <strong>of</strong>ten appears overwhelmed by its<br />

eroticism, and further convoluted by the twins' incestuous relationship. This eroticism<br />

constitutes a frame that diverts viewers' attention from the film's intellectual theses to what<br />

appears to be a visual fixation with graphic sexuality. From this perspective the narration<br />

assumes a subjective quality, facilitating a cognitive identification between the viewer and<br />

Matthew based on the recognition <strong>of</strong> erotic gratification and social acceptance as the values<br />

motivating his conduct (Grodal, 1997: 87). This makes viewers empathize with his erotic<br />

desire for Isabel and his enjoyment <strong>of</strong> the new friendship that has vanquished his solitude,<br />

and it is supplemented by the emotional attachment to the character discussed above.<br />

However because Matthew is not a source <strong>of</strong> narrative impetus, but rather the object <strong>of</strong> the<br />

other two protagonists' whims, the identification with him shapes the viewers' experience <strong>of</strong><br />

the diegetic events, as they never know what is coming next as regards the initiatives that<br />

Theo and Isabel put to him. Consequently, viewers feel Matthew's disorientation at<br />

discovering Theo and Isabel's incestuous relationship and they relate to his erotic<br />

gratification and the misery deriving from his frequent exclusion from the twins" bond.<br />

But ambiguity is cast on this identification structure by recurring camera viewpoints<br />

that produce shifts in perspective regarding narrative events. An external perceptual<br />

'presence' assumes an increasing importance, acting as a filter through which narrative<br />

events are viewed and distorted. The effect occurs both when the camera perspective<br />

functions as a 'third eye' or omniscient narrator, and also when it surreptitiously replaces a<br />

character's viewpoint, especially during sexual scenes. Central to this strategy are mobile<br />

camera movements which roam the apartment, allowing viewers to know what the characters<br />

are doing at any moment. This occurs after Isabel's hysterical reaction to Theo's sexual<br />

rapport with another girl. The camera movement starts from the centre <strong>of</strong> Isabel's bedroom,<br />

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lingering on her as she lies asleep on the bed; then the camera guides viewers into Theo's<br />

room where it finds him on the bed, reading aloud a passage from Mao's Little Red Book.<br />

Again, the camera leaves Theo and seeks Matthew who is spotted from the corridor as he<br />

does exercises in his room. Here, the mobile frame provides viewers with a complete and<br />

simultaneous understanding <strong>of</strong> the trio's different responses to Theo sanctioning his sexual<br />

independence: Isabel's inability to accept it, Theo's melancholy awareness <strong>of</strong> a lost<br />

happiness, and Matthew's frustration at his own sentimental defeat. However, although this<br />

third eye allows viewers to explore the fictive world without the mediation <strong>of</strong> diegetic<br />

characters, it is not neutral. In focusing on the characters' love pains, it seems to take as a<br />

given Isabel and Theo's disturbing bond, which, by contrast, may remain an unresolved issue<br />

at the back <strong>of</strong> most viewers" minds, given the difficulty <strong>of</strong> integrating it within the schemes<br />

<strong>of</strong> human behaviour (Branigan, 1992: 27). This unease is likely to vitiate the director's<br />

attempts to elicit compassion for the trio via this palpably 'humane' camera gaze, and this<br />

disquiet may distance viewers from wanting to engage with the characters' destinies - an<br />

outcome reflecting the viewing experience in La hma.<br />

Several sex scenes present a cinematic technique consisting <strong>of</strong> an initial perspective<br />

through a character's point <strong>of</strong> view, which is subtly replaced by a non-aligned camera<br />

perspective. In this respect, one particular sequence is emblematic. It is set in the kitchen,<br />

with Theo immobilizing Matthew and Isabel removing his clothing while making sarcastic<br />

comments. The exposure <strong>of</strong> Matthew's genitals is initially shot from a perspective that is<br />

closest to Theo's, but because Theo's head is visible in pr<strong>of</strong>ile, the perspective does not<br />

belong to a diegetic character. A change <strong>of</strong> position brings the camera towards Isabel's visual<br />

field, but again, the perspective is such that the close-up <strong>of</strong> Matthew's penis is slightly<br />

angled, while a POV shot from Isabel's perspective would have entailed a frontal, straight-on<br />

shot. The angled view, unattached to any protagonist, results in a fragmented image <strong>of</strong> male<br />

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nudity, commodified on to celluloid. Again, the shot is anything but 'neutral', its tangible<br />

voyeurism making viewers into accomplices in Matthew's ordeal, and inducing an affective<br />

response which may switch from arousal to unease as a result <strong>of</strong> the shot's increasing<br />

gratuitousness.<br />

The sexual exploration in the secluded apartment represents a self-referential element,<br />

evoking Paul and Jeanne's situation in Last Tango in Paris and that <strong>of</strong> Kit and the Tuareg<br />

Mustafa in Tire Sheltering Sky. These analogies, founded on Bertolucci's depiction <strong>of</strong><br />

passionate, pr<strong>of</strong>ound sexual fulfilment, are continually linked to seclusion, a suspension <strong>of</strong><br />

time, and detachment from everyday life. This condition finds theoretical corroboration in<br />

Sasha Weitman's analysis <strong>of</strong> erotic sexuality in everyday life, which is 'constituted as a<br />

separate, distinct reality', a phenomenon which is 'largely a social construction' in terms <strong>of</strong><br />

being deliberately set apart in time, segregated in space, somewhat staged with drawn<br />

curtains, dimmed lights and sexy clothes, and sometimes 'aided by the intake <strong>of</strong> mood-<br />

altering substances" (Weitman, 1999: 74-75). The narrative shift from external event towards<br />

internal intimacy in The Dreamers certainly depicts a reality separated from everyday life,<br />

and presents the elements listed by Weitman. The sense <strong>of</strong> clock time dissolves at the twins'<br />

parents' departure, and this removes any familial/societal obligation for the trio. The mute<br />

television images <strong>of</strong> the political conflict outside merely increase the impression <strong>of</strong><br />

remoteness. The film's pace slows, the dialogue becoming totally self-referential to the trio's<br />

intimate experiences in the apartment where they seclude themselves. Striking costumes and<br />

decor are designed to enhance their sexual arousal, whereas stylized red and green filtered<br />

lighting hints at an altered, desire-driven state <strong>of</strong> consciousness.<br />

This detachment from the street confrontations redirects the modal quality <strong>of</strong> the<br />

film's reception, as it transforms the tense - in terms <strong>of</strong> telic action - into the intense, by<br />

replacing the social body with the erotic body. This might be read as the director's personal<br />

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strategy to protect the three protagonists (and ultimately himself) from the harshness <strong>of</strong> real<br />

life. This is a condition already depicted in Tango where Paul is saved from his own<br />

destructive desperation after his wife's suicide, and in The Sheltering Sky where Kit - as I<br />

will discuss later - is protected against self-abandonment and annihilation after her husband's<br />

death. This process reflects Weitman's consideration that sexual pleasure entails "experiences<br />

<strong>of</strong> erotic inclusion' in which lovers cease to feel isolated 'in a largely indifferent [...] or<br />

hostile world' (Weitman, 1999: 85). Viewers are easily aligned with all three characters'<br />

desires and uncertainty, and although there may be intellectual frustration at the way the<br />

narrative disconnects itself from its socio-historical context, it is likely that most viewers'<br />

emotional and cognitive engagement with the narrative will converge into a desire for the<br />

characters to attain a sense <strong>of</strong> harmonious fulfilment.<br />

The incongruousness <strong>of</strong> decadent style<br />

Cas Wouters' analysis <strong>of</strong> the evolution <strong>of</strong> human relationships since the 1960s' sexual<br />

revolution indicates how, in the 1960s, 'for the first time, women themselves actively took<br />

part in public discussions about their carnal desires and a more satisfactory relationship', and<br />

how the 'emancipation <strong>of</strong> women ran in tandem with changes in public morality as well as in<br />

individuals' codes and ideals regarding love and sex' (Wouters, 1999: 188). By contrast, in<br />

The Dreamers, the protagonists' sexual experimentation is characterized by a secluded<br />

bourgeois 'privacy' in the cavernous apartment which is nevertheless rendered claustrophobic<br />

by the way Bertolucci frames the protagonists within it. Combined with the elements <strong>of</strong><br />

incest implied in the narrative, this depiction is arguably inappropriate for the social context<br />

<strong>of</strong> the late 1960s, and is partly responsible for the film being perceived as unconnected to real<br />

events. This conceptual dissonance extends to the mise-en-scene, which casts an aura <strong>of</strong><br />

decadence on the visual experience. Above all, the potentially arousing qualities <strong>of</strong> the film's<br />

sexual sequences are frequently transmuted into uneasiness, as they reflect John Reed's<br />

174


notion that 'Decadence cultivates a fastidious affection for the disreputable' and that it<br />

'stresses the interrelationship <strong>of</strong> virtue and vice, beauty and ugliness' (Reed, 1985: 14). The<br />

scenes are <strong>of</strong>ten lugubrious, closer to a morbid adult maturity than to the exuberance <strong>of</strong><br />

inexperienced youth.<br />

The sequence <strong>of</strong> Theo masturbating before a poster <strong>of</strong> Marlene Dietrich while being<br />

watched by Matthew and Isabel exemplifies this contrived prurience. The characters'<br />

positioning, with Theo distanced from Isabel and Matthew, creates a performance space<br />

characterized by separation and silence, this being interrupted only by the noise <strong>of</strong> the<br />

physical act. Contemporary 1960s values <strong>of</strong> spontaneity, collectivity and interaction are<br />

absent, and the scene evokes a sense <strong>of</strong> oppression with Theo perceived as a victim <strong>of</strong> a<br />

demeaning forfeit rather than the protagonist <strong>of</strong> a provocative gesture to dispel any lingering<br />

inhibitions. In a suitably gratuitous epilogue to the scene, Isabel runs her fingertips over her<br />

brother's sperm which is splashed over the poster. A similar impression evolves as Isabel is<br />

deflowered by Matthew on the kitchen floor in the presence <strong>of</strong> Theo, who is portrayed<br />

nonchalantly frying eggs nearby. Echoing the way Isabel explored the texture <strong>of</strong> his sperm,<br />

Theo kneels to touch his sister's vaginal discharge, a gesture which is repeated by an<br />

astonished Matthew, before he embraces Isabel and weeps with her. Here too the scene's<br />

composition, combined with the verbal silence and the calculatedly slow pace <strong>of</strong> the take,<br />

removes any hint <strong>of</strong> romantic love or joyfulness, while generating a disconcerting sense <strong>of</strong><br />

objectification rather than sensual satisfaction. These examples, together with the<br />

idiosyncratic camerawork discussed earlier, establish the presence <strong>of</strong> a subjectivity that has<br />

little in common with youthful exuberance, and they open up a range <strong>of</strong> considerations that<br />

go beyond questions <strong>of</strong> aesthetics. Paradoxically, in a film that purports to depict an era<br />

characterized by a progressive liberation <strong>of</strong> the individual, many <strong>of</strong> it sequences hint at a<br />

more exploitative dynamic at its point <strong>of</strong> production. Perhaps the visual excess in T\ie<br />

175


Dreamers is unsurprising, given the considerable difference in status between an influential,<br />

established director and three young, unknown actors.<br />

In the same way, decadence pervades the decor, the costumes, and even the bodies <strong>of</strong><br />

the actors, <strong>of</strong>ten intertwined in positions that evoke those <strong>of</strong> models positioned by a sculptor.<br />

These elements create an effect <strong>of</strong> studied stylization - a form <strong>of</strong> (re)production emanating<br />

from an artistic consciousness rather than a mimetic evocation <strong>of</strong> Paris in 1968. Regarding<br />

the choice <strong>of</strong> costume in certain sequences, the kimonos worn by Matthew and Theo are<br />

emblematic. Wearing a black silk kimono himself, Theo <strong>of</strong>fers Matthew a kimono with a<br />

feminine, flowered pattern; even allowing for the frisson <strong>of</strong> bisexual eroticism hinted at in<br />

these scenes, these touches have more in common with decadent bourgeois aesthetics than<br />

with the apparel <strong>of</strong> the rebellious youngsters <strong>of</strong> 1968, whose fashions - to say the least - were<br />

informal and basic. It is significant that in The Conformist, the abductor Lino <strong>of</strong>fers his<br />

victims a Japanese kimono; the inference is that for Bertolucci, these costumes, gestures, and<br />

decor possess a personal significance connected with a loss <strong>of</strong> innocence, and that these<br />

components emerge in what are arguably cinematic re-enactments <strong>of</strong> these fantasies.<br />

Conclusion<br />

For viewers familiar with Bertoluccrs work, The Dreamers can be compared to an individual<br />

returning to a key location in one's life, as the film contains most <strong>of</strong> the themes and<br />

influences regarding cinema and politics that have emerged in his career. The film is<br />

characterized by a neophyte's enthusiasm for cinema's technical and visual power, as well as<br />

for its role in enabling humans to understand reality. In this sense the Nouvelle Vague<br />

influence and the culture <strong>of</strong> the Cinematheque is tangible in the film. Stylistically, Jlte<br />

Dreamers typifies Bertolucci's hybrid approach in which realism and sophisticated filmic<br />

techniques merge to create an art form that is affectively fascinating and intellectually<br />

176


engaging. Unfortunately the core <strong>of</strong> the second narrative is antithetical to the vibrant,<br />

nonconformist nature <strong>of</strong> the 1968 students' movement, and this is mainly responsible for the<br />

uneasy confluence <strong>of</strong> value systems that characterizes the film, and for the sense <strong>of</strong><br />

disappointment for those spectators who were attracted to the film for its socio-historical<br />

premise.<br />

Notes<br />

1. On July 11 th 2002, during filming, the film's producer Jeremy Thomas told journalists: 'Despite what has<br />

been said so far, The Dreamers is not a film about the barricades in 1968 Paris, but it is about the youthful<br />

idealism that inspired them'. From the article 'Bertolucci torna a Parigi con The Dreamers' -<br />

www.kataweb.it/cinema/cerca.jsp?textfields=the+dreamers&select=anicoli . In an interview by Vittorio<br />

Renzi on October 12th 2003, Bertolucci affirmed: The film particularly addresses the youngsters who were<br />

not yet born [...] I wished to create a contaminating effect and tell them that if it was right to rebel at that<br />

time, it is still right nowadays', www.cineclick.it/recensioni/archivi/dreamers.asp<br />

2. On October 19th 2003, in // Sole 24Ore, Luigi Paini praised the authentic depiction <strong>of</strong> the Cinematheque<br />

battle but then criticized the film through a series <strong>of</strong> rhetorical questions: 'And afterwards? What happens<br />

after that? Why, little by little, do we not feel involved anymore? [...] It happens that Bertolucci does not<br />

have much left to say [...] He has made a great effort in those initial sequences, and now he has only an<br />

empty story to tell". A more scathing review was written by G<strong>of</strong>fredo F<strong>of</strong>i, in the 23 rd October 2003 edition<br />

<strong>of</strong> Panorama. 'They dream very little, the three protagonists <strong>of</strong> this film [...] Bertolucci seems to have no<br />

real interest in the events, but a strong one in psychoanalysis tailored to his own benefit [...] The Dreamers<br />

<strong>of</strong>fers a version <strong>of</strong> the events suitably and opportunistically undermined. Politics and youthful revolution<br />

have very little to do with the film' www.mymovies.it/recensioni/?id=34652<br />

3. In 'Incontro con Bernardo Bertolucci con interventi di Gilbert Adair', edited by Luciana Morelli and<br />

published on October 7th 2003, Bertolucci was asked what linked the film to the present and he specifically<br />

mentioned the scene <strong>of</strong> the police attack. 'I slowed down [the scene] by a digital technique, I would have to<br />

extend it up to the time <strong>of</strong> Genoa 2001. This is the umbilical cord existing between the present and the past<br />

that I wanted to be perceived in the film' [Online] available at ww\v.cinefile.biz /dreamcs.htm [March 2004]<br />

4. In the interview 'Bertolucci, il sognatore' <strong>of</strong> the 18 th <strong>of</strong> September 2002, Bertolucci affirmed: 'The meaning<br />

<strong>of</strong> the film is its attempt to recapture and recount, above all to the young generations <strong>of</strong> today who know<br />

nothing about '68, which for us is extraordinary, the spirit <strong>of</strong> that time.'<br />

www.kataweb.it/cinema/cerca.isp?textfield=the+dreamers&select=articoli.<br />

5. C/rv Lights, (1931) by Charles Chaplin, Charles Chaplin Productions; Freaks, (1932) by Tod Browning,<br />

Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM); Bande apart, (1964) by J.L. Godard, Columbia Films, Anouchka Films.<br />

Full list at http://www.imdb.com/title/tt039987/movieconnections .<br />

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References<br />

Bertolucci, B. (2002) 'Bertolucci il sognatore', [Online] available:<br />

www.kataweb.it/cinema/cerca.isp?texfields=the+dreamers&select=articoli [March 2004].<br />

F<strong>of</strong>i, G. (2003) review in Panorama, October 23rd 2003, [Online] available:<br />

www.mvmovies.it/recensioni/?id.+34652 [March 2004].<br />

Gerard, F.S., Kline, T.J. and Sklarew, B. (ed.), (2000) Bernardo Bertolucci Interviews,<br />

Jackson: <strong>University</strong> Press <strong>of</strong> Mississippi.<br />

Hoveyda, F. (2000) The Hidden Meaning <strong>of</strong> Mass Communications Cinema, Books, and<br />

Television in the Age <strong>of</strong> Computers, Westport: Praeger Publishers.<br />

Morelli, L. (ed.) (2003) 'Incontro con Bernardo Bertolucci', [Online] available:<br />

www.cinefile.biz/dreamcs.htm [March 2004].<br />

Nowell-Smith, G. and Halberstadt, I. (1977) 'Interview with Bernardo Bertolucci', in Gerard,<br />

F.S., Kline, T.J., and Sklarew, B. (ed.) (2000) Bernardo Bertolucci Inteniews, Jackson:<br />

<strong>University</strong> Press <strong>of</strong> Mississippi.<br />

Paini, L. (2003) review in // Sole 24 Ore, October 19th 2003, [Online] available:<br />

www.mvmovies.it/recensioni/?id.+34652 [March 2004].<br />

Reed, J. (1985) Decadent Style, Ohio: Ohio <strong>University</strong> Press.<br />

Renzi, V. (2003) 'Intervista a Bernardo Bertolucci', [Online] available:<br />

www.cineclick.it/recensioni/archivi/dreamers.asp [March 2004].<br />

Thomas, J. (2002) 'Bertolucci torna a Parigi con TJie Dreamers', [Online] available:<br />

www.kataweb.it/cinema/cerca.isp?textfields+the+dreamers&select+articoli [March 2004].<br />

Weitman, S. (1999) 'On the Elementary Forms <strong>of</strong> the Socioerotic Life\ in Featherston, M.<br />

(ed.) Love and Eroticism, London: Sage Publications.<br />

Wouters, C. (1999) 'Balancing Sex and Love since the '60s Sexual Revolution', in<br />

Featherston M. (ed.) Love and Eroticism, London: Sage Publications.<br />

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Section Three: Between History and Nostalgia<br />

// Conformista/The Conformist (1970), Novecento/1900 (1976).<br />

These films represent two key points in Bertolucci's career. The Conformist marked a shift <strong>of</strong><br />

orientation in Bertolucci's work, the director seeking to amalgamate authorial elements<br />

within film-making as a visual spectacle; 1900 marked his desire to break into the American<br />

market after the acclaim <strong>of</strong> Last Tango in Paris. Both films therefore involved a change in<br />

the nature and in the scale <strong>of</strong> the audience to be addressed, but they retain Bertolucci's<br />

propensity for complex narrative construction, sophisticated mise-en-scene, and intellectual<br />

cross-references. These characteristics, and the sheer length <strong>of</strong> 1900, make it difficult to<br />

categorize these films as 'commercial'; instead their nature lends weight to Bertolucci's<br />

declaration that he had wanted to infiltrate the cinematic 'system' in order to combine the<br />

best traditions <strong>of</strong> Hollywood film-making with auteur cinema (Mirabella-Pitiot 1991: 42).<br />

Critics have already described the distribution saga <strong>of</strong> 1900 (Kolker 1985: 73-75); in the<br />

following chapter, I will only highlight how the conduct <strong>of</strong> the producer, Alberto Grimaldi,<br />

appeared to be incongruous with his role <strong>of</strong> acting on behalf <strong>of</strong> the American Majors, which<br />

seemed to be unaware <strong>of</strong> fundamental information about the film, such as its length, until the<br />

film's screening at Cannes.<br />

Most critical analyses <strong>of</strong> the two films have traced several points <strong>of</strong> contact, starting<br />

from their narratives which portray Italy's Fascist period. This historical frame - which is<br />

added to in The Conformist by the presence <strong>of</strong> film noir conventions that alert viewers to their<br />

conscious use by Bertolucci - is instrumental in distancing viewers from the ongoing action<br />

by eliciting continuous intellectual and memory associations that shape the viewing<br />

experience by creating the saturated modal qualities referred to by Grodal (Grodal, 1997:<br />

179


178-180). Yet the way the events are depicted relies on a subjective evocation <strong>of</strong> history,<br />

rather than on an objective representation, both films featuring narrations constructed<br />

according to the codes <strong>of</strong> nostalgia films, which are deployed in The Conformist through the<br />

glossy, evocative quality <strong>of</strong> the images in segments <strong>of</strong> the film, and in 1900 through<br />

references to paintings <strong>of</strong> the time. In addition, the peculiar construction <strong>of</strong> the scenes <strong>of</strong><br />

violence creates a dreamlike effect that blurs their reality status. This stylistic choice endows<br />

the films with an intense quality, due to the vivid sensations that they elicit. Additionally, the<br />

films present emotion structures based on general moods that envelop viewers from<br />

beginning to end, being achieved mainly through colour schemes and lighting. In this respect,<br />

Bertolucci's comments about the construction <strong>of</strong> 1900 being linked to a four season colour<br />

scheme explain the stylistic choices that shaped it. In general, however, the emotions<br />

engendered by the films tend to be predicated on the depiction <strong>of</strong> landscapes or situations,<br />

and rarely on identification with the characters, towards whom the viewer's lack <strong>of</strong> allegiance<br />

is significant when compared with the prolonged alignment that viewers <strong>of</strong>ten have with the<br />

films' key figures. The films restrict the viewer's cognitive activity <strong>of</strong> elaborating<br />

hypotheses; The Conformist, presents a retarded and distributed narrative - according to the<br />

film's reconfiguration <strong>of</strong> American and French noir conventions. A predominance <strong>of</strong><br />

paratelic qualities characterizes 1900, given that the viewer's supposed pre-existing<br />

knowledge <strong>of</strong> the film's historical subject matter makes the narrative a process <strong>of</strong> displaying<br />

events rather than unfolding them in a process <strong>of</strong> disclosure.<br />

References<br />

Kolker, R. P. (1985) Bernardo Bertolucci, London: BFI Publishing.<br />

Mirabella, JC. and Pitiot, P. (1991) Intervista a Bernardo Bertolucci, Rome: Gremese<br />

Editore.<br />

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II conformista/The Conformist: The Foundation <strong>of</strong> Bertolucci^s Theoretical 'Third Way'<br />

In 1970, as well as The Spider's Stratagem, Bertolucci released // Conformista / The<br />

Conformist which represents his first complete attempt to blend Classic Hollywood<br />

conventions with European auteur cinema. In this sense it represents a turning point in his<br />

conception <strong>of</strong> film-making, a shift in orientation generated by his forced reassessment <strong>of</strong> his<br />

artistic perspectives after the failure <strong>of</strong> Partner, In this respect Bertolucci himself stated:<br />

'Perhaps part <strong>of</strong> my process <strong>of</strong> liberation was the acceptance <strong>of</strong> the fact that I had always<br />

wanted to create a spettacolo [...] with The Conformist I really accepted the role <strong>of</strong> author <strong>of</strong><br />

story films' (Bachmann, 1973: 96). With regard to financing the film, asked if he had a<br />

'guilty conscience' in accepting American money - something that Godard was refusing at<br />

that time - Bertolucci denied it, but admitted his unease at the contradictions that arose from<br />

the need for finance in cinema, a problem that was difficult to resolve. He praised Godard's<br />

viewpoint, but stated that this was not the only valid stance to take; in his view Godard's<br />

choice was due to not wanting to be a leader any more (Goldin, 1972: 66). On Bertolucci's<br />

high regard for Godard, there is a significant anecdote about their meeting after the premiere<br />

<strong>of</strong> The Conformist in Paris, at a more mundane venue, a 'drugstore in St. Germain' where<br />

Godard had asked Bertolucci to meet him. But Godard - Bertolucci recounts - only stopped<br />

for a second to give him a picture <strong>of</strong> Mao on which he had written 'II Faut Lutter Contre<br />

L'Egoisme et L'lmperialisme' (Ungari, 1982: 237). While Bertolucci did not subscribe to this<br />

tendency to sanctify Mao and to turn one's support for Maoism into blind faith, (Ungari,<br />

1982:237) the fact that he willingly met with Godard, being interested to hear his opinion <strong>of</strong><br />

The Conformist, problematizes the critical writing that has sought to demonstrate that, for<br />

Bertolucci, the film marked the point at which he ceased to consider Godard as his cinematic<br />

mentor, these assertions usually being based on elements such as Bertolucci using Godard's<br />

181


eal Paris address in the film as the address <strong>of</strong> Pr<strong>of</strong>. Quadri, a mentor who is ultimately<br />

liquidated (Socci, 1995: 8).<br />

The Conformist and the legacy <strong>of</strong> French and American film noir<br />

With regard to the structure and aesthetics <strong>of</strong> The Conformist, Bertolucci's new approach to<br />

film-making focused on the legacy <strong>of</strong> film noir. Although elements <strong>of</strong> noir have already been<br />

traced in The Grim Reaper, and the structure <strong>of</strong> 77?? Spider's Strategem demonstrated<br />

Bertolucci's knowledge <strong>of</strong> detective movie conventions, the use <strong>of</strong> noir themes and visuals in<br />

The Conformist to portray the Fascist epoch - with ambiguity, decadence, and violence as its<br />

defining characteristics - suggests that Bertolucci's choice <strong>of</strong> style for the film was well<br />

motivated. The effectiveness <strong>of</strong> noir's content and form in representing the individual's<br />

alienation from an increasingly oppressive and cynical societal structure was ideal for<br />

expressing the Fascist regime's covert menace and its impact on individuals. In addition, the<br />

simmering sexuality permeating noir linked well with the repressed passions <strong>of</strong> the bourgeois<br />

characters in The Conformist and also functioned as a launching pad for the increasingly<br />

daring representations <strong>of</strong> sexuality in Bertolucci's later work.<br />

Analysing the differences between Stratagem and TJie Conformist, Bertolucci<br />

indicates that while Stratagem draws on his real-life memories, the origins <strong>of</strong> Tlie Conformist<br />

lie in 'the French and American cinema <strong>of</strong> the 30s" (Ungari, 1982: 71). Ginette Vincendeau<br />

has traced in the French poetic-realist films <strong>of</strong> the 1930s many <strong>of</strong> what came to be recognized<br />

stylistic features <strong>of</strong> noir, (Vincendeau, 2007: 26) and has suggested that some continuity from<br />

French to American noir can be traced in the work <strong>of</strong> those 'prominent emigres', such as<br />

Fritz Lang and Max Ophuls, who worked in France on their way to Hollywood (Vincendeau,<br />

2007: 27). For this chapter's purposes, some analogies emerge between Jean Renoir's La<br />

Bete Humaine/The Human Beast/Judas was a Woman (1938) and The Conformist, in relation<br />

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to the female protagonists Severine and Giulia (Marcello Clerici's wife). They both allow<br />

wealthy, older men, linked to their families, to seduce them; a train journey constitutes a<br />

turning point in the stories, during which Severine is forced to witness the assassination <strong>of</strong> a<br />

man by her husband's hand, whereas Giulia confesses the affair to her husband, who - in<br />

accordance with the cynicism permeating the film - reverses jealousy into a perverse<br />

eagerness to re-enact the intimacy enjoyed by Giulia's older lover.<br />

Julien Duvivier^s Pepe le Moko (1937) can also be considered as a possible influence,<br />

particularly for its use <strong>of</strong> lighting that creates striking interplay between darkness and<br />

shadows, combined with unconventional camera angles, techniques that, in The Conformist,<br />

become an important motif in the mise-en-scene. As regards potential influence from<br />

American noir, The Conformist perhaps relies on more codified visual traits, such as colour<br />

schemes, lighting, disorienting visual effects, and the use <strong>of</strong> flashbacks as a structural<br />

component; it has something in common with American noir'?, construction <strong>of</strong> a male<br />

protagonist who is not fighting against an adverse social environment as epitomized by Jean<br />

Gabin's roles, but who is driven by fate, and characterized by an ambiguous, violent attitude.<br />

The Conformist shares another similarity with American noir for its incorporation <strong>of</strong> the<br />

figure <strong>of</strong> the femme fatale into its narrative, an element which is absent from French noir on<br />

account <strong>of</strong> many female characters being 'too marginal to qualify for the label <strong>of</strong> femme<br />

fatale' (Vincendeau, 2007: 26) or 'too vulgar" (Vincendeau, 2007: 34). Consequently, Tlie<br />

Conformist presents numerous artistic nuances with the potential to elicit intellectual<br />

recognition and engagement from sections <strong>of</strong> its audience familiar with key features and<br />

tenets <strong>of</strong> European and American noir.<br />

Earlier critical writing on The Confomnst has identified several noir strands within it,<br />

Barbara Creed highlighting the film's development <strong>of</strong> the figure <strong>of</strong> i\\e femme fatale, (Creed,<br />

1993: 407) while James Naremore considered that Polanski's noirish Chinatown (1974) had<br />

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een 'to some degree inspired by Bertolucci's Conformist' (Naremore, 1998: 206). By<br />

contrast it does not appear in Mary Wood's survey <strong>of</strong> Italian film noir, the critic mentioning<br />

instead The Grim Reaper for the final scene set in the dance hall (Wood, 2007: 249). Wood<br />

introduces her analysis by highlighting the difficulty <strong>of</strong> discussing noir in an Italian context,<br />

given that the term giallo defines an established tradition <strong>of</strong> crime stories, and has become so<br />

broad that it is <strong>of</strong>ten accompanied by an adjective, such as giallo erotica, giallo politico<br />

(Wood, 2007: 236). Wood's view that 'noir conventions are used so widely that they<br />

constitute an intellectual and creative choice, rather than a genre' is also valid (Wood, 2007:<br />

238). I would add that when they are used in different kinds <strong>of</strong> narratives, such as the cases<br />

where noir touches are blended with a realist style, certain films can fall into the broader<br />

category <strong>of</strong> 'poliziesco' (the detective genre), with the exception <strong>of</strong> films by Antonioni,<br />

which remain centred on symbolic representations <strong>of</strong> existentialist issues. Wood adds that the<br />

films <strong>of</strong> Damiani, Petri and Rosi are conceived <strong>of</strong> in Italy as films 'di impegno civile' or<br />

films committed to exploring social issues (Wood 2007: 268).<br />

While my earlier comparison between Rosi's Salvatore Giuliano and The Grim<br />

Reaper indicated some analogies, Elio Petri's Investigation <strong>of</strong> a Citizen Above Suspicion<br />

(1970) which was made during the same period as Tlie Confonnist signals a self-<br />

awareness <strong>of</strong> the kind <strong>of</strong> genre being deployed, by repeated close-ups <strong>of</strong> gialli novels strewn<br />

around the female protagonist's room, that is more overt and playful than in Bertolucci's<br />

film. Although Petri's film, like The Confonnist, is constructed around flashbacks, they<br />

proceed on the logical and chronological lines <strong>of</strong> a telic narration, with the protagonist always<br />

in control <strong>of</strong> the situation. Instead, in The Conformist, the protagonist is far from in control,<br />

and the flashbacks follow an associational pattern which reflects the film's paratelic<br />

narration. The eroticism <strong>of</strong> the female protagonist in Petri's film was a provocative ingredient<br />

to startle the hypocritical moral attitude <strong>of</strong> contemporary Italian society, and does not<br />

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constitute an example <strong>of</strong> the femme fatale. By contrast, while The Conformist contains the<br />

possibility that Italian politics might still have some positive future prospect, given the fall <strong>of</strong><br />

Fascism, in Investigation the sense <strong>of</strong> bewilderment towards Italian State institutions in the<br />

late 1960s is total, the film depicting them as entirely hostile. While elements <strong>of</strong> noir were<br />

deployed in many Italian films <strong>of</strong> the period that dealt with the dark side <strong>of</strong> Italian<br />

institutional power, (Wood, 2007: 237) The Conformist appears to be a film in which a self-<br />

conscious, comprehensive use <strong>of</strong> noir constitutes the narrative's main stylistic imprint.<br />

Plot summary<br />

Bertolucci's use <strong>of</strong> film noir conventions in The Conformist can be seen during its opening<br />

credits as the first shot shows a nocturnal urban setting and a flashing red neon sign that<br />

projects its light onto a restless individual who is sitting on a bed in the dark. The man - later<br />

identified as Marcello Clerici - receives a phone call: a female character has 'gone', and<br />

Clerici takes a gun and leaves the building. Present time events and flashbacks intertwine to<br />

narrate his life. His boyhood is affected by an attempted sexual seduction that ends with the<br />

boy believing he has killed his abductor, the family chauffeur Lino. His adulthood is marked<br />

by a determination to establish 'normality' within his existence by integrating himself within<br />

the mediocrity <strong>of</strong> Fascist society. He marries the shallow, bourgeois Giulia, and uses their<br />

honeymoon to fulfil a Fascist mission <strong>of</strong> killing his former university tutor - Pr<strong>of</strong>essor Quadri<br />

- who is involved in anti-Fascist resistance during his exile in Paris. Followed by the Fascist<br />

agent Manganiello, Clerici and Giulia spend time with Quadri and his alluring wife Anna, in<br />

an ambience <strong>of</strong> mutual suspicion. Clerici's attraction to Anna weakens his criminal intent;<br />

consequently his frantic pursuit <strong>of</strong> the Quadris on their trip to Savoia is interpreted as an<br />

attempt to save her. Instead Clerici passively witnesses the couple's violent death. One night,<br />

in the aftermath <strong>of</strong> Mussolini's fall, distraught by the discovery that Lino is alive and still<br />

pursuing his loathsome conduct, Clerici denounces him to various bystanders as the Quadris'<br />

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murderer together with his mentor and friend Italo, a blind former Fascist intellectual. Alone<br />

in the street, Clerici looks through the gate <strong>of</strong> a ruined house at a youth Lino whom had<br />

addressed. The final shot freezes his enigmatic stare behind the bars <strong>of</strong> the gate.<br />

Clerici's noir ambivalence and the viewer's cognitive confusion<br />

In the film Clerici is depicted as pr<strong>of</strong>oundly alienated; his aspirations to normality do not<br />

prevent him from despising the world around him, towards which he shows a mixture <strong>of</strong><br />

contempt and ambiguity. Conditioned by his past, his actions constitute a sort <strong>of</strong> inertia that<br />

condemns him to a desperate solitude. This sort <strong>of</strong> male characterization derives from French<br />

critical writings on noir from the 1950s, when the surrealists' interpretations <strong>of</strong> its dreamlike<br />

ambience were complemented by existentialist analyses that focused on the male protagonist.<br />

Influential in this respect was Andre Bazin who identified in Humphrey Bogart's screen<br />

persona a character 'defined by fate whose raison d'etre <strong>of</strong> his existence was in some sense<br />

to survive' (Naremore, 1998: 24). Bazin's definition <strong>of</strong> Bogart as 'the triumph <strong>of</strong><br />

interiorization and ambiguity' is explained by James Naremore as a combination <strong>of</strong> 'a radical<br />

isolation or individuality that forces the subject to create identity out <strong>of</strong> existential choice'<br />

and 'ethical complexity' respectively (Naremore, 1998: 26). Such statements can also be<br />

linked to analyses by Francois Truffaut and Jacques Rivette <strong>of</strong> films directed by Nicholas<br />

Ray,(l) Truffaut focusing on the 'moral solitude' <strong>of</strong> the male protagonist, while Rivette<br />

identified 'the interior demon <strong>of</strong> violence, which seems linked to man and his solitude'<br />

(Naremore, 1998: 26).<br />

Clerici closely embodies these theoretical features. His existence is heavily marked by<br />

fate, which has exposed him to abduction and led him towards murder, so his identity forms<br />

around the survival tactics he has used to overcome the deviations affecting his life's<br />

trajectory. He denies himself any existential choice by submitting himself to people he<br />

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despises, ranging from Fascist <strong>of</strong>ficials to his wife and her family. Driven by solitude, he<br />

releases his inner demon <strong>of</strong> violence to destroy the only people (Pr<strong>of</strong>. Quadri, Anna, and<br />

Italo) for whom he had genuine affinity. The final shot framing Clerici's face behind 'bars',<br />

while staring enigmatically at the seductive youth (see<br />

image), epitomizes film noir traditions, and is a<br />

metaphor for the male protagonist remaining a<br />

hopeless prisoner <strong>of</strong> his own compromised destiny.<br />

From a cognitive perspective, the criteria which<br />

underpin the viewer's perception <strong>of</strong> Clerici's character inevitably engender negative<br />

expectations regarding the character s development. This evaluation also conditions the<br />

viewer's reconstruction <strong>of</strong> the story as the character's ambiguity inhibits the formulation <strong>of</strong><br />

reliable hypotheses about his decision making. By anchoring the narrative to such an<br />

ambivalent protagonist, it is difficult for viewers to anticipate the character's behaviour; the<br />

viewers' 'top-down' perceptual processes based on their acquired knowledge and mental<br />

schemas, which are used to make hypotheses and create narrative expectations (Branigan,<br />

1992: 37) are difficult to activate. The emotional implications <strong>of</strong> this will be discussed later in<br />

the chapter.<br />

Noir camerawork; isolation, disorientarion and disproportion<br />

The imposing character <strong>of</strong> the regime is conveyed in<br />

the film by its use <strong>of</strong> Fascist architecture with its<br />

gigantic, daunting spaces. In these settings, Clerici is<br />

<strong>of</strong>ten framed in extreme long shots that make him<br />

appear insignificant (see image). During his visit to the<br />

Fascist ministry, when he peers through the door <strong>of</strong> a<br />

minister's <strong>of</strong>fice, the distance between him and the <strong>of</strong>ficial's desk seems abyssal, and later he<br />

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appears overwhelmed by the list <strong>of</strong> the names <strong>of</strong> dead soldiers on huge marble slabs fixed on<br />

the wall. Elsewhere, Clerici is dwarfed by the full size wall painting in the brothel, and is<br />

swallowed up by the huge courtyard <strong>of</strong> an asylum where the patients appear lost in its<br />

mesmerising whiteness. To reinforce the sense <strong>of</strong> the individual's vulnerability within these<br />

spaces, the scenes are sometimes shot with Bertolucci using the noir device <strong>of</strong> unbalanced<br />

frame compositions. The effect <strong>of</strong> these framings is sometimes heightened by using wide-<br />

angle lenses, as occurs in the overwhelming setting <strong>of</strong> the Minister's <strong>of</strong>fice; this space is<br />

traversed by Clerici and by an administrator in an <strong>of</strong>f-centre motion in order to create a sense<br />

<strong>of</strong> imbalance to accompany the subtle sense <strong>of</strong> visual distortion.<br />

A similar result is achieved by the use on several occasions <strong>of</strong> another noir effect,<br />

skewed camera angles, one showing Clerici walking along a street to his mother's house,<br />

when the car <strong>of</strong> Manganiello - Clerici's Fascist<br />

'minder' - suddenly appears in the frame, looking for<br />

him (see image). The sense <strong>of</strong> oppressive<br />

disorientation intensifies as the car suddenly brakes<br />

close to a gate behind which Clerici has sought<br />

protection. Another skewed camera angle is deployed when Clerici travels by taxi to Quadri's<br />

house, hi both scenes Bertolucci uses a disorienting visual scheme to emphasize Clerici's<br />

sense <strong>of</strong> being out <strong>of</strong> his depth and vulnerable as a result <strong>of</strong> joining the Fascist secret police.<br />

To reiterate that 'these strained compositions and angles are not merely embellishments or<br />

rhetorical flourishes, but form the semantic substance <strong>of</strong> the film (noir)' (Harvey, 1998: 23) it<br />

is worth mentioning a scene in the Paris hotel when Clerici is filmed frontally as if he is<br />

waiting for the lift. Startlingly, the next shot shows a group <strong>of</strong> people who move indifferently<br />

towards and beyond him. Viewers, momentarily disoriented, realize that Clerici was not<br />

waiting for the lift, but was inside it. Subsequently, when he steps out and stands staring at<br />

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the closed doors, his sense <strong>of</strong> solitude is increased by the camera moving unexpectedly<br />

backwards, instead <strong>of</strong> tracking him as he turns and walks along the corridor.<br />

Configuring Anna Quadri as a femme fatale<br />

The viewer's cognitive and affective engagement with the film is also influenced by the<br />

character <strong>of</strong> Anna Quadri who is made to conform to the figure <strong>of</strong> the femme fatale by<br />

Bertolucci's adaptation <strong>of</strong> Alberto Moravia's original novel. Bertolucci shapes the character<br />

into a mysterious figure who derives power from her sexuality, which she uses to get<br />

information to protect her husband: in <strong>of</strong>fering herself to Clerici, she utters: 'Please do not<br />

harm us', the 'us' obviously implying her husband, but Bertolucci does not completely<br />

sideline the lesbian overtones <strong>of</strong> the equivalent character in Moravia's novel. Instead, he uses<br />

them in a subtle yet provocative way to arouse Clerici - and, via the character's POV shots,<br />

the viewer - as elements <strong>of</strong> voyeurism are introduced. Bertolucci opts for a close-up <strong>of</strong><br />

Anna's face as she notices Clerici behind the hotel room door which is ajar. Consequently,<br />

the calculated way in which Anna, still looking towards Clerici, lavishes attention on Giulia<br />

is as much <strong>of</strong> a titillating provocation as an expression <strong>of</strong> genuine sexual interest towards her.<br />

Similarly, the sequence <strong>of</strong> Anna and Giulia dancing at the restaurant can be considered as<br />

another early example <strong>of</strong> Bertolucci's penchant for sensual aestheticism bordering on<br />

voyeurism that resurfaced in his subsequent films. The accompanying dialogue between<br />

Clerici and Quadri represents two sides <strong>of</strong> the bourgeois psyche perfectly, Clerici's prudish<br />

discomfort at a public (not private) display <strong>of</strong> sensuality as he asks Quadri to stop the women<br />

dancing, and Quadri's more voyeuristic pleasure as he comments: 'Why, can't you see how<br />

beautiful they are?'<br />

Bertolucci utilizes the actress Dominque Sanda to generate the iconic allure <strong>of</strong> the<br />

femme fatale, a strategy which elicits dual processes <strong>of</strong> affective and intellectual engagement<br />

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from cinephile viewers, who respond emotionally to the character's sensuality while<br />

simultaneously recognizing the director's elaboration <strong>of</strong> noir signifiers. Sanda plays three<br />

roles; Clerici's first glimpse <strong>of</strong> her is at the Fascist ministry, lying on an employee's desk.<br />

She resurfaces as a prostitute whom Clerici meets at a Fascist brothel, before taking her<br />

principal role as Quadri's wife. Clerici naturally experiences an uncanny sense <strong>of</strong> deja vu<br />

with regard to Anna Quadri, who, in his eyes, represents a juxtaposition <strong>of</strong> her former<br />

incarnations in the film, and to viewers she becomes a hybrid into which ihefemmefatale's<br />

traditional qualities are distilled, the different layers <strong>of</strong> characterization merging to create a<br />

sexually independent woman under whose influence the male protagonist feels torn between<br />

desire and suspicion. Anna's image corresponds to the iconography outlined in Janey Place's<br />

analysis, in terms <strong>of</strong> costume, grooming, and accessories such as cigarettes which are a<br />

trademark femmefatale accessory (Place, 1998: 45).<br />

In The Conformist, Anna's clothes reflect the fe/male function <strong>of</strong> trousers and slacks -<br />

to underline an independent, almost masculine<br />

attitude (see image) - together with outfits such as<br />

figure hugging dresses to emphasize her seductive<br />

femininity. In addition, her long hair and leggy<br />

physique embody the physical characteristics, which,<br />

according to Place, are important in the early sequences <strong>of</strong> a film noir in terms <strong>of</strong> signposting<br />

a character's potential as a prospective femmefatale - an embodiment <strong>of</strong> unrestrained female<br />

sexuality. Place notes that the first view <strong>of</strong> femmes fatales such as Velma in Murder My<br />

Sweet and Cora in The Postman Always Rings Twice 'is a significant, appreciative shot <strong>of</strong><br />

their bare legs, a directed glance [...] from the viewpoint <strong>of</strong> the male character who is to be<br />

seduced' (Place, 1998: 45) and this resembles the first shot <strong>of</strong> Sanda in The Conformist. It is a<br />

view - from Clerici's perspective - <strong>of</strong> her left leg as it swings down from the desk she is<br />

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lying on. Bearing in mind the manner in which Cora is <strong>of</strong>ten represented as having 'her<br />

angelic face turban wrapped' (Place, 1998: 23) it is arguable that this character acted as a<br />

visual prototype for Bertolucci, and this is noticeable in Anna Quadri's hairstyle and<br />

appearance as she gracefully exits the Paris hotel. Consequently the film creates interplay<br />

between the affective and the intellectual, particularly for those viewers aware <strong>of</strong> cinema's<br />

back catalogue <strong>of</strong>femmes fatales, blending beguiling visuals with a pr<strong>of</strong>ound awareness <strong>of</strong><br />

one <strong>of</strong> noir's iconic figures.<br />

The femmefMale's death as the film's emotional fulcrum<br />

The sense <strong>of</strong> endorsement that noir <strong>of</strong>ten elicits for endings featuring the femme fatale's<br />

eventual punishment, appears reversed in The Conformist. Bertolucci, in fact, opts to make<br />

Anna Quadri's death the most empathic moment in the film, a feeling originating from the<br />

sense <strong>of</strong> impotence that viewers share with her as she is propelled towards a destiny that she<br />

fears and cannot avert. Her death scene is a long take centring on a scene <strong>of</strong> empathy which is<br />

counterpointed by Clerici's despicable behaviour. It starts with Pr<strong>of</strong>. Quadri's murder, the<br />

camera lingering on Anna's facial reactions and deep distress. The sense <strong>of</strong> horror intensifies<br />

as she reaches Clerici's car and pounds her fists against the window for what seems an<br />

eternity, with Clerici motionless on the back seat, unable either to use his gun to put Anna out<br />

<strong>of</strong> her misery, or to save her. The camera, now moving to a neutral directorial point <strong>of</strong> view,<br />

follows Anna as she runs into the wood pursued by the assassins, tension being generated by<br />

their heavy breathing which fills the soundtrack, by the noise <strong>of</strong> leaves being trampled upon,<br />

and by gun shots. Anna slows down, falls, and gets to her feet again, her beautiful features<br />

now covered with blood filling the screen during a sustained shot, until she falls to the floor<br />

once more. This intense violence, stylized through a striking colour scheme and lighting,<br />

represents the emotional fulcrum <strong>of</strong> the film, and it eventually induces viewers into a state <strong>of</strong><br />

detachment. Grodal describes a process where viewers assume modes <strong>of</strong> engagement to cope<br />

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with the disturbing fates <strong>of</strong> impotent screen protagonists, the critic indicating how their<br />

identification with the screen figure becomes purely perceptual. This is a defensive act during<br />

which 'the mind dissociates perceptions and emotions in strongly negatively charged<br />

situations, as when people involved in catastrophes experience them as happening to<br />

somebody else' (Grodal, 1997: 158). Therefore the film's disconcerting emotional mood -<br />

diffused by its visuals and mise-en-scene - is intensified by the traumatic development <strong>of</strong> its<br />

strongest moment <strong>of</strong> viewer/character empathy.<br />

Between history and nostalgia<br />

The narrative sequence where Anna Quadri advises Giulia regarding fashion, jewellery and<br />

Parisian entertainment supplements Anna's femmefatale attributes by giving the character an<br />

alluring, worldly knowledge, but it also endows sections <strong>of</strong> the film with a glamorous<br />

elegance and sensual pleasure, as displayed in the dancing sequence. The Paris sequence,<br />

together with other elements <strong>of</strong> the film's mise-en-scene, was instrumental in it being<br />

categorized as a nostalgia film in the sense used by Fredric Jameson in his analysis <strong>of</strong> the<br />

dialectic between political films and mass culture. Jameson argues that the element that<br />

makes historical films inauthentic and therefore turns them into nostalgia films is 'the cult <strong>of</strong><br />

the glossy image, as a whole new technology [...] has allowed its lavish indulgence in<br />

contemporary film' (Jameson, 1992: 85). He identifies in the precise (re)construction <strong>of</strong><br />

period style - above all <strong>of</strong> art deco - the formal element on which many nostalgia films<br />

depend, so much so that he actually redefines the term as 'nostalgia-deco film" (Jameson<br />

1992: 225). Jameson mentions The Conformist several times, but succinctly, so his ultimate<br />

evaluation <strong>of</strong> the film remains unclear. On the one hand he considers it as part <strong>of</strong> the 'range<br />

<strong>of</strong> contemporary nostalgia culture' deriving from the French categorization <strong>of</strong> such films as<br />

pastiche reinventing 'the style, not <strong>of</strong> an art language, but <strong>of</strong> a whole period' (Jameson 1992:<br />

84).<br />

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Bertolucci seemed aware <strong>of</strong> the film's susceptibility to criticism over its luxurious<br />

visuals and sensuality, saying that he was certain to be reproached because he had made a<br />

film which 'is beautiful to look at and because I mix dirty things like sex with a pure thing<br />

like polities', but he dismissed the criticism as 'moralistic' (Goldin, 1972: 67). Also, my<br />

analysis <strong>of</strong> the film shows how its viewing experience opens up a complex network <strong>of</strong><br />

associations. Elements <strong>of</strong> the mise-en-scem related to the couples in Paris certainly deliver a<br />

glossy reconstruction <strong>of</strong> the historical narrative, evoking nostalgia for art deco and for the<br />

fashions <strong>of</strong> the time. But the film's overall mood, its reconfiguration <strong>of</strong> noir visuals and<br />

lighting, and the way it graphically relives a tragic historical event, reflecting on the moral<br />

responsibility the Italian middle class had in causing and supporting Fascism, gives The<br />

Conformist an intellectual resonance that elicits a very different viewing experience, certainly<br />

more intricate than most mainstream cinematic exercises in nostalgia.<br />

The implications <strong>of</strong> the colour schemes and lighting within the film's historical context<br />

It is essentially through the limited palette colour scheme within the cinematography and<br />

through low-key photography that Bertolucci revived the noir style to make a film that<br />

condemns Italy's Fascist period. These elements recur throughout the film, and can therefore<br />

be considered a motif that prompts cognitive inferences from viewers. These are generated by<br />

the viewer's perception <strong>of</strong> an ambience <strong>of</strong> pervading menace which induces narrative<br />

expectations <strong>of</strong> oppressive and destructive outcomes. At the same time these stylistic<br />

elements create a mood <strong>of</strong> anxiety and unease which foreshadows the emotions <strong>of</strong> fear and<br />

disgust cued by the Quadris' double murder and Clerici's betrayal <strong>of</strong> Italo. These scenes<br />

represent 'emotion markers' within the context <strong>of</strong> feature films (Smith G., 1999: 117-118).<br />

Commenting on these elements <strong>of</strong> the mise-en-scene Bertolucci asserted that the lighting was<br />

'like a 1930s studio film', (Goldin, 1972: 64) with the colours and light intended to be<br />

impressionistic as in 'the interior <strong>of</strong> the dancing school', and expressionistic as occurs in the<br />

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school's adjoining room where Anna <strong>of</strong>fers herself to Clerici, a stylistic effect related to the<br />

fact that 'she is going to the slaughterhouse> (Goldin, 1972: 65). In general, reiterating the<br />

auteurist influence that Bertolucci considers himself to have on his work, a notion to which<br />

this study generally subscribes while also highlighting the assistance <strong>of</strong> other pr<strong>of</strong>essionals in<br />

certain productions, the director unambiguously declared his involvement in controlling the<br />

lighting <strong>of</strong> The Conformist 'in the old, truly pr<strong>of</strong>essional classical sense' (Goldin, 1972: 65).<br />

A good example <strong>of</strong> the colour scheme and lighting is featured in the sequence<br />

portraying a dramatic moment <strong>of</strong> truth for Clerici, during which the colour scheme is nearly<br />

reduced to black and white and the low-key noir photography is used almost didactically. Set<br />

in the kitchen <strong>of</strong> the dance hall, the take depicts Manganiello aggressively questioning<br />

Clerici's ambiguous behaviour. To free himself Clerici knocks a ceiling light which swings in<br />

front <strong>of</strong> his face, so that it is kept partly in shadow; the effect continues even when the<br />

struggle has finished. This oscillation <strong>of</strong> darkness and light arguably represents Clerici's<br />

hesitation over deciding between life and death for Quadri. The scene's closure is equally<br />

symbolic, the camera lingering on Clerici who stands against the wall in complete darkness,<br />

underlining the fact that he has failed to extricate himself from the mission, and implying that<br />

his last hope for personal salvation has gone.<br />

This symbolic use <strong>of</strong> the contrast between light and dark reaches its apex in the scene<br />

which portrays the insidiousness <strong>of</strong> the Fascist regime while also conveying Bertolucci's<br />

perspective about the responsibilities <strong>of</strong> the bourgeoisie during that period. The scene is<br />

important because it features a character and narrative events entirely invented by Bertolucci:<br />

Italo, a blind intellectual who is a political commentator at a radio station, introduces Clerici<br />

to 'II Colonnello', who works for the secret police. The spatial organization <strong>of</strong> the radio<br />

station set is emblematic with two areas separated by a glass partition; one is occupied by a<br />

female trio singing a cheerful song 'Who is happier than me?\ and it is powerfully<br />

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illuminated as if to imply the bright future that the regime promised. On the opposite side, the<br />

area in which Italo and Clerici are initially framed, and which features Clerici and 'II<br />

Colonnello' soon after, is characterized by shadows. The three men are dressed in dark<br />

colours and talk intensely, and Bertolucci occasionally cuts to a position beyond the partition<br />

so that the sound <strong>of</strong> their voices is eliminated. At other times, it is the song that is eliminated<br />

by a reverse shot framing Clerici as he gazes through<br />

the partition at the radiant trio (see image). These<br />

contrasting visual elements represent the hidden side<br />

<strong>of</strong> the regime that was very different from its<br />

propaganda and infinitely more menacing.<br />

The scenario functions as a metaphor for the period as a whole. Italo represents the<br />

intellectuals who were blinded by the idea <strong>of</strong> Italy becoming powerful again - the marble<br />

map <strong>of</strong> the Roman Empire that was, and still is, displayed on the facade <strong>of</strong> the Ahare della<br />

Patria in Rome is emblematic <strong>of</strong> the references to the Roman period made by Fascism.<br />

Italo's blindness is emphasized by the speech that he delivers at the radio station, entitled<br />

'Mystique <strong>of</strong> an Alliance' which refers to the alliance between Germany and Italy. The title<br />

implies something sacred to be revealed only to enlightened minds, and indeed the sacred,<br />

applied to the Party, was typical <strong>of</strong> the regime's rhetoric. In this context, there is a significant<br />

moment when, in the darker area <strong>of</strong> the radio station set, only the lower part <strong>of</strong> Italo's face is<br />

illuminated by a lamp. This lighting casts shadows <strong>of</strong> his hands and papers and adds an extra,<br />

ethereal dimension to his visual representation, making Italo a minister <strong>of</strong> the regime in a<br />

spiritual as well as a political sense. This scene, elaborated by Bertolucci, emphasizes the<br />

inability <strong>of</strong> intellectuals - such as Italo and not Clerici as Kolker assumes (Kolker, 1985: 96)<br />

- to 'see' the insidiousness <strong>of</strong> a political system that manipulated people's perspectives, a<br />

regime that plotted murders under cover <strong>of</strong> the superficially harmonious social order,<br />

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symbolized here by the glass partition, and by the alluring idea <strong>of</strong> a brighter future, evoked by<br />

the escapism <strong>of</strong> the trio's song.<br />

By contrast, through Clerici, Bertolucci represents a different kind <strong>of</strong> politically aware<br />

individual, the type that supported Fascism although fully conscious <strong>of</strong> the socio-political<br />

reality, his behaviour guided by cynicism, scepticism or by opportunism. Clerici "s awareness<br />

<strong>of</strong> the regime's violence is represented in another piece <strong>of</strong> narrative invented by Bertolucci,<br />

where he makes Clerici question his father - a former Party <strong>of</strong>ficial now shut in a lunatic<br />

asylum - about his responsibility in ordering assassinations. To avoid answering, the father<br />

calls for a strait-jacket while muttering the words 'slaughter and mercy' This implicit<br />

confirmation <strong>of</strong> Clerici's suspicions does not prevent him from going ahead with his criminal<br />

purpose. From a cognitive perspective therefore, and particularly in terms <strong>of</strong> the hierarchies<br />

<strong>of</strong> preference into which viewers place screen characters while watching films (Smith, 1995:<br />

84-85) the breed <strong>of</strong> individual to which Clerici belongs will be regarded as more<br />

reprehensible than that to which Italo belongs, and the mise-en-scene <strong>of</strong> the radio station<br />

sequence was arguably conceived to strengthen the negative evaluation <strong>of</strong> Clerici"s<br />

personality.<br />

Using colour and lighting to blur the film's reality status<br />

Colour schemes and lighting are also used to blur the reality status <strong>of</strong> some sequences,<br />

sometimes enhancing their beauty while problematizing the viewer's cognitive evaluation <strong>of</strong><br />

whether they constitute reality in the world <strong>of</strong> the film, or a subjective image <strong>of</strong> an<br />

individual's state <strong>of</strong> mind. Paris is rendered in bluish-grey tones, being depicted at night or at<br />

dawn, and dimly illuminated by street lamps. The images are <strong>of</strong>ten characterized by the lack<br />

<strong>of</strong> a human presence - apart from stealthy appearances by Clerici and Manganiello - and by a<br />

misty atmosphere, so that they cue a sense <strong>of</strong> mystery and a dreamlike ambience. Gloomier<br />

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hues <strong>of</strong> bluish-grey colouring are deployed to depict Rome at night, again cueing a sense <strong>of</strong><br />

the unreal, but this time conditioned by anxiety, hi the Rome scene, viewers are manoeuvred<br />

into a POV shot from the perspective <strong>of</strong> Clerici and Italo to witness the destruction <strong>of</strong> a statue<br />

<strong>of</strong> Mussolini which is illuminated by a flashing light normally used during air raids, the<br />

statue's huge head being dragged along by a car like a horrible trophy. This lighting effect<br />

transforms Rome's streets into a theatrical stage, diffusing a sense <strong>of</strong> ritualism and implying<br />

that something sinister may happen at any moment. In this regard Bertolucci remembers how,<br />

with Storaro, he sought to perfect a cold form <strong>of</strong> lighting for Rome, almost in a 'fascist' style,<br />

and a s<strong>of</strong>ter illumination for Paris, effects which derived from the research on blue light that<br />

the director started in Stratagem (Ungari, 1982: 117).<br />

The depiction <strong>of</strong> Manganiello's car is also used to create a dreamlike (or nightmarish)<br />

ambience; the interior is always dark, with weak light entering from the windows, while only<br />

fog is visible in the background. When the car is shot from the outside, its headlights, cutting<br />

through the night or the fog, are its main features. This visual approach evokes the oneiric<br />

qualities <strong>of</strong> noir, although Bertolucci moves the action away from the labyrinthine cityscapes<br />

that form noirs traditional backdrop (Place, 1998: 41; Vincendeau 2007: 26) to uninhabited<br />

country locations. The road to Savoia is immersed in fog, and as it passes a bleak forest, the<br />

surrounding landscape is eerie with the brushwood, whitened by the snow, contrasting with<br />

the grey-black <strong>of</strong> the leafless trees. Therefore, although using a rural setting, Bertolucci elicits<br />

a similar sense <strong>of</strong> time suspension, an effect that induces within viewers a temporary blur<br />

between reality and dreams.<br />

The dominance <strong>of</strong> procedural schemata<br />

The viewer's perception <strong>of</strong> time is further complicated by the many shots <strong>of</strong> Clerici within<br />

the interior <strong>of</strong> a car, being transported around as a child by the chauffeur Lino, and as an adult<br />

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y Manganiello. The car fuses Clerici's past and present, and at a certain point Lino's car,<br />

shown in one <strong>of</strong> the flashbacks, and the one driven by Manganiello, become interchangeable<br />

in the same sequence. A close-up <strong>of</strong> Clerici as a child, seated on the back seat while the <strong>of</strong>f<br />

screen voice <strong>of</strong> Lino tells him about a gun he has at home, is followed by a cut to Clerici as<br />

an adult, still in the same position, while Manganiello informs him <strong>of</strong> recent events. At other<br />

times sequences echo each other despite their temporal distance, for instance, in a flashback<br />

to Clerici's childhood, Lino traps the boy by driving alongside him as he walks along a street<br />

and entices him into the car. The scenario is repeated in another flashback, with Manganiello<br />

this time as the chauffeur and Clerici, now an adult, still indulging in the same avoidance <strong>of</strong><br />

his pursuer. The car's constant presence is logical since the narrative unfolds during Clerici's<br />

journey to Savoia to pursue Anna Quadri. Clerici sits in the back while Manganiello drives,<br />

and close ups <strong>of</strong> Clerici's face function as the point <strong>of</strong> departure and return <strong>of</strong> every flashback<br />

and narrative revelation, sometimes accompanied by Manganiello's <strong>of</strong>f screen narration.<br />

Structurally, the effects create a repetitive sense <strong>of</strong> paratelic procedure, weakening the story's<br />

telic impetus towards the Quadri assassination (Grodal, 1999: 133-34). Emotionally, the<br />

effect <strong>of</strong> replacing the narrative's onward telic momentum, and the anxiety that this brings,<br />

with recurring paratelic scenarios that move the action backwards chronologically, is that a<br />

different mood, <strong>of</strong> despondent melancholy, is created.<br />

Flashbacks and unexpected narrative revelations are hallmarks <strong>of</strong> American noir, and<br />

they are idiosyncratically re-elaborated in Tfie Confonnist. The flashbacks follow no<br />

chronological sequence and therefore the plot revelations do not emerge through logic, but<br />

through free associations <strong>of</strong> memories. This cognitive schema, besides arousing curiosity, has<br />

a significant consequence: it stimulates viewers to seek motivations for narrative events and<br />

coherence between time and space in the world <strong>of</strong> the film, a process complicated by the<br />

film's narrative retardation and distributed exposition. In addition, the use <strong>of</strong> a car interior as<br />

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a narrative focus means that the developing action is perceived as something stationary yet<br />

simultaneously mobile, thereby increasing the viewers' sense <strong>of</strong> cognitive uncertainty<br />

regarding where and when actions are happening, and what could result.<br />

Extended alignment without allegiance<br />

The viewer's intellectual engagement with the social, political, and moral issues raised by<br />

Bertolucci is sustained by the fact that The Conformist has few mechanisms to induce close<br />

emotional identification and empathy between viewers and characters, apart from the scene<br />

<strong>of</strong> Anna Quadri's death. If the narration guides viewers to recognize the characters' traits and<br />

allows them access to the characters' thoughts and actions, it impedes the formation <strong>of</strong><br />

allegiance. Besides, viewers are prevented from establishing Smith's notion <strong>of</strong> hierarchies <strong>of</strong><br />

preference, since all the film's characters are represented as ambiguous to some extent, the<br />

only exception being Manganiello who represents a class <strong>of</strong> individual destined to follow and<br />

obey. The lack <strong>of</strong> allegiance and emotional attachment towards Marcello Clerici - from<br />

whom viewers are estranged almost in an act <strong>of</strong> self defence - enhances the possibility <strong>of</strong><br />

reflecting on the socio-political issues raised by the film, given that viewers have already<br />

been positioned in a specific reception situation by a narrative that presupposes an existing<br />

knowledge <strong>of</strong> the film's historical subject.<br />

Conclusion<br />

This analysis <strong>of</strong> the film has illustrated how it articulates a discourse on the importance <strong>of</strong><br />

individual responsibility, which appears more complex than merely connecting 'reactionary<br />

brutality' and 'repressed homosexuality' as some critics have done (Jameson, 1992: 146).<br />

Individual responsibility and the extent to which external determinants can be held<br />

responsible for people's actions arise in several elements that Bertolucci introduced into the<br />

film; the invention <strong>of</strong> Italo, whose blindness is metaphorically extended to the entire<br />

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population by the scene depicting the ball for the blind, where a gigantic flag surrounded by<br />

Fascist symbols dominates from the back wall; the appearance in the narrative <strong>of</strong> Clerici's<br />

father as a former Fascist <strong>of</strong>ficer, a character not mentioned in Moravia's novel; the<br />

replacement <strong>of</strong> Moravia's Christian ethics with ethics <strong>of</strong> laicism, typified by the reference to<br />

Plato's discourse on the blindness <strong>of</strong> cave dwellers; and finally the way in which Clerici is<br />

given dialogue that overtly criticizes Pr<strong>of</strong>. Quadri for abandoning Italy and blames him for<br />

Clerici becoming a Fascist, all open up a range <strong>of</strong> questions requiring intellectual evaluation.<br />

However, the peculiarity <strong>of</strong> The Conformist lies in the way that its activation <strong>of</strong><br />

associations, based on history, psychology, philosophy, and art, is embedded in a stylish, noir<br />

framework, which gives the film pr<strong>of</strong>undity at both intellectual and affective levels. With The<br />

Conformist, Bertolucci explored an artistic direction that could satisfy his auteurist<br />

aspirations while remaining aesthetically and narratively accessible for mainstream film<br />

viewers. A fundamental contribution to this goal was made by Franco Arcalli whom - as the<br />

director recalls - Bertolucci's cousin Giovanni forced the director to accept in the role <strong>of</strong> film<br />

editor (Ungari, 1982: 72). Bertolucci credits Arcalli with helping him discover that in the<br />

editing phase there is still room for improvisation, and admits that Arcalli helped him to<br />

conceive <strong>of</strong> editing not as the negation <strong>of</strong> creativity, but as a moment <strong>of</strong> enhancement<br />

(Ungari, 1982: 72-73). Intellectually consistent and emotionally intense throughout, The<br />

Conformist constitutes the most successful attempt by Bertolucci to combine a subjective<br />

auteurist perspective with the visual and technological verve <strong>of</strong> commercial Hollywood<br />

production. However, this theoretical amalgamation, that might be termed "the third way',<br />

would be less effectively achieved in Bertolucci's subsequent works, many <strong>of</strong> which did not<br />

attain the same equilibrium between intellectual pr<strong>of</strong>undity and cinematic spectacle.<br />

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Notes<br />

1. They Live by Night (1948) RKO Pictures; In a Lonely Place (1950) Santana Productions; On<br />

Dangerous Ground (1952) RKO Pictures.<br />

References<br />

Bachmann, G. (1973) 'Every Sexual Relationship Is Condemned: An Interview with<br />

Bernardo Bertolucci', in Gerard, F.S., Kline, T.J. and Sklarew, B. (ed.) (2000)<br />

Bernardo Bertolucci Inteniews, Jackson: <strong>University</strong> Press <strong>of</strong> Mississippi.<br />

Creed, B. (1993) 'From Here to Modernity: Feminism and Postmodernism', in Natoli, J. and<br />

Hutcheon, L. (ed.) A Postmodern Reader, Albany: State <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> New York<br />

Press.<br />

Goldin, M. (1972) 'Bertolucci on Tire Conformist', in Gerard, F.S., Kline. T.J. and Sklarew,<br />

B. (ed.) (2000) Bernardo Bertolucci Interviews, Jackson: <strong>University</strong> Press <strong>of</strong><br />

Mississippi.<br />

Grodal, T. (1997) Moving Pictures, Oxford: Oxford <strong>University</strong> Press.<br />

Harvey, S. (1998) 'The absent family <strong>of</strong> film noir', in Kaplan, A. (ed.) Women in Film Noir,<br />

London: BFI Publishing.<br />

Jameson, F. (1992) Signatures <strong>of</strong> the Invisible, London and New York: Routledge.<br />

Kolker, R. P. (1985) Bernardo Bertolucci, London: BFI Publishing.<br />

Mirabella, JC. and Pitiot, P. (1991) Inten'ista a Bernardo Bertolucci, Rome: Gremese<br />

Editore.<br />

Naremore, J. (1998) More Than Night: Film Noir in its Contexts, Berkely: <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong><br />

California Press.<br />

Place, J. (1998) 'Women in Film Noir', in Kaplan, E.A. (ed.) Women in Film Noir, London:<br />

BFI Publishing.<br />

Smith, G. M. (1999) 'Local Emotions, Global Mood, and Film Structure', in Plantinga, C.<br />

and Smith, G. (ed.) Passionate Views, Baltimore: The John Hopkins <strong>University</strong> Press.<br />

Socci, S. (1996) Bernardo Bertolucci, Milan: II Castoro Cinema.<br />

Ungari, E. (1982) Scene Madri di Bernardo Bertolucci (2nd Ed. 1987), Milan: Ubulibri.<br />

Vincendeau, G. (2007) 'French Film Noir', in Spicer, A. (ed.) European Film Noir,<br />

Manchester: Manchester <strong>University</strong> Press.<br />

Wood, M.P. (2007) 'Italian Film Noir'. in Spicer, A. (ed.) European Film Noir, Manchester:<br />

Manchester <strong>University</strong> Press.<br />

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Novecento/1900: Reflection and Nostalgia<br />

When asked what idea had brought him from Last Tango in Paris to 1900 Bertolucci replied<br />

that he had worked on the screenplay <strong>of</strong> 1900 with Franco Arcalli and his brother Giuseppe<br />

before Tango, but he had to put the project aside because he was not able to finance it;<br />

however this opportunity materialized after Tango's, success (Georgakas-Rubenstein 1984:<br />

139). Bertolucci recounts that he intended to make a sort <strong>of</strong> 'film-ponte / a bridge-movie'<br />

connecting Hollywood and Soviet cinema; he confessed that the film was the result <strong>of</strong> a<br />

period in which he had become a megalomaniac, as a consequence <strong>of</strong> finding himself in the<br />

position <strong>of</strong> being able to do anything he wanted. On this subject he remembers how, in<br />

presenting Vittorio Storaro to Francis Ford Coppola for the shooting <strong>of</strong> Apocalypse Now, the<br />

American had commented: "I will make a film one minute longer than yours" (which he did<br />

not) (Mirabella-Pitiot 1991: 46-47). Ambitious is certainly an applicable term for Bertolucci's<br />

intention to introduce the tenets <strong>of</strong> Communist ideology across the USA with a single film<br />

(Georgakas-Rubenstein 1984: 143). In fact, any historical reconstruction <strong>of</strong> the 1900<br />

distribution saga revolves around these two issues: the film's length and its theme. Regarding<br />

the first question, there is a key point that is little known: the Italian producer Alberto<br />

Grimaldi was aware <strong>of</strong> the filnf s length, and the idea <strong>of</strong> dividing it into two parts was his<br />

(Ungari 1982: 129); therefore it is unclear what information had been exchanged between<br />

Italy and the USA during the making and editing <strong>of</strong> the film. Regarding the film's theme,<br />

Bertolucci indicates that the American distributors invested in the film 'in blind faith' based<br />

on the figures generated by Tango, that they saw it for the first time only at the Cannes Film<br />

Festival, and that they were 'rather upset; it was really scandalous for them, all that<br />

unexpected waving <strong>of</strong> red flags'(Georgakas-Rubenstein 1984: 141). hi the light <strong>of</strong> this,<br />

Kolker's suggestion <strong>of</strong> 'naivete' on Bertolucci's part during the whole situation (Kolker<br />

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1985: 73) should be contextualized by the consideration that an exceptional degree <strong>of</strong><br />

misinterpretation had occurred between the parties.<br />

Nevertheless, this study is mainly interested in Bertolucci's declaration that he<br />

worked in his own way 'in the folds <strong>of</strong> this system's contradictions' (Georgakas-Rubenstein<br />

1984: 141) and that he intentionally used the lever <strong>of</strong> emotions to convey to a public<br />

unfamiliar with Italian history the struggle <strong>of</strong> the Italian working class (Georgakas-<br />

Rubenstein 1984: 143). These assertions are important because they underpin this chapter's<br />

examination <strong>of</strong> how intellectual stratification and emotional intention run in parallel within<br />

1900. The film's first intellectual reference, addressing mainly Italian viewers, is made as the<br />

opening credits are superimposed on the famous tableau Quarto Stato (The Fourth Estate) by<br />

Giuseppe Pellizza da Volpedo (1868-1970). hi Italy the painting is an icon <strong>of</strong> class struggle,<br />

because it had been used by the Communist Party for a long time as a logo. Therefore the<br />

association <strong>of</strong> the tableau with the film functions as an immediate indication <strong>of</strong> the film's<br />

political orientation and remit; but it also points to the director's artistic intention to depict<br />

the historical period <strong>of</strong> the twentieth century as a lyrical fresco. Intended to celebrate the<br />

resolve <strong>of</strong> rural workers as a social class, the painting depicts a crowd <strong>of</strong> peasants advancing<br />

with intent, the group being led by three people; two men and a woman carrying a baby,<br />

whom the viewers will subsequently relate to the characters <strong>of</strong> Leo Dalco, Olmo and Anita.<br />

Plot summary<br />

The film opens with a gun battle between partisans and Fascists in a rural landscape, and the<br />

caption '25 aprile 1945' situates it in the closing months <strong>of</strong> the war. There is a cut to inside a<br />

manor house to show Alfredo Berlinghieri being captured by Olmo's son Leonida; this<br />

sequence is a framing mechanism for the rest <strong>of</strong> the film, which is an extended flashback <strong>of</strong><br />

past events starting from the day on which Alfredo - the landowner's son - and Olmo - the<br />

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peasants' leader-to-be - are born. The film depicts the story <strong>of</strong> three generations <strong>of</strong> the<br />

Berlinghieri family, landed gentry from Parma, interlinked with that <strong>of</strong> the Dalco family, who<br />

are the leaders <strong>of</strong> the peasants who work for the Berlinghieris. While Alfredo grows up with a<br />

great love for his grandfather, and contempt for his arrogant father Giovanni, Olmo does not<br />

suffer from being the illegitimate son <strong>of</strong> the peasant Rosina, as his charismatic grandfather<br />

Leo Dalco is devoted to him and appoints him as his heir as the peasants' leader. Despite<br />

belonging to different social classes, the boys establish a friendship which continues despite<br />

their contrasting political views. After the First World War, Olmo forms a relationship with<br />

Anita, and together they lead the peasants' fight for civil rights. Alfredo falls in love with the<br />

sophisticated Ada, but their marriage is troubled because while she feels disturbed by Fascist<br />

violence, Alfredo takes on an ambiguous, opportunistic attitude, even when Olmo is unjustly<br />

accused <strong>of</strong> murder. In the meantime, Attila, originally the chief <strong>of</strong> an illegal paramilitary<br />

group set up by Alfredo's father to suppress the peasants, has become a feared Fascist<br />

<strong>of</strong>ficial. He forms a relationship with Regina, Alfredo's impoverished and immoral cousin<br />

who wants to take revenge on her family for their disrespectful treatment <strong>of</strong> her. The two are<br />

compatible in their opportunism and cruelty which escalate into a mixture <strong>of</strong> sex and<br />

violence. With the fall <strong>of</strong> Fascism, Attila and Regina are killed by the peasants, while Alfredo<br />

is brought to trial and ultimately saved by Olmo. The final sequence shows Alfredo and<br />

Olmo, now elderly, but still inhabiting the same rural environments; Olmo sits near a railway<br />

line, whereas Alfredo lies on the track itself, just as he and Olmo used to do in one <strong>of</strong> their<br />

childhood dares. But this time, instead <strong>of</strong> lying inside the tracks, he lies across them, so that<br />

the train will kill him as it passes. The train's approach is an iconic representation <strong>of</strong> the<br />

peasants' victory, but the image <strong>of</strong> the elderly Alfredo is replaced by one <strong>of</strong> Alfredo as a<br />

child lying inside the track.<br />

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The film's cognitive structure and the question <strong>of</strong> nostalgia<br />

The film's structure resembles French realist novels such as the works that form Honore de<br />

Balzac's La Comedie Humaine, (1799/1850) where detailed descriptions <strong>of</strong> the characters'<br />

milieu link with the narration <strong>of</strong> their individual struggles during a particular epoch, hi the<br />

case <strong>of</strong> 1900, the narrative depicts the contrast between different social classes but, unlike the<br />

pattern <strong>of</strong> literary narratives in which different classes rarely interact, the essence <strong>of</strong> the<br />

narrative ambiguity <strong>of</strong> 1900 evolves as the key figures embodying class difference, Alfredo<br />

and Olmo, establish a friendship which is perceived as ever more incomprehensible as<br />

Alfredo's ambiguity evolves into an opportunistic, tacit backing <strong>of</strong> Fascist violence. This<br />

element creates disorientation in the viewers' attempt to reconstruct the story, as the linear<br />

chain <strong>of</strong> cause and effect underlying the narration is disturbed by this unconventional position<br />

given to characters who, by representing conflicting social forces, would be unlikely maintain<br />

their friendship.<br />

The film depicts the lives <strong>of</strong> different classes through a narrative whose focus shifts<br />

from one grouping to the other with a perspective that constitutes an evocative and outwardly<br />

objective description <strong>of</strong> the socioeconomic milieu <strong>of</strong> the time. However, the film's visual<br />

arrangement <strong>of</strong> these elements is marked by an aestheticized beauty in the representation <strong>of</strong><br />

both social classes, an effect consolidated by the way in which the opulent mise-en-scene is<br />

symmetrically distributed, though in different forms. The refinement <strong>of</strong> the landowners'<br />

costumes and the decor <strong>of</strong> their living environments are counterbalanced by framings which<br />

give an almost sculptural representation <strong>of</strong> the physicality <strong>of</strong> the labourers, and which<br />

accentuate the natural beauty <strong>of</strong> their rural houses, a landscape where the master's manor<br />

house also stands. This representation points to an aesthetic problem arising from the mise-<br />

en-scene <strong>of</strong> 1900, as it implies an uneasy interplay between an aestheticized, personal<br />

evocation on Bertolucci's part, and an attempt to develop a more distanced historical<br />

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econstruction. Despite the director's eye for detail, his idiosyncratically bold, visual<br />

articulation <strong>of</strong> the material results in a representation that is evidently an artistic evocation <strong>of</strong><br />

reality than a direct reflection <strong>of</strong> it.<br />

Bertolucci's intention to privilege the lyrical form <strong>of</strong> the image over the socio­<br />

political significance <strong>of</strong> its content can be found in many camera framings which appear to be<br />

based on paintings rather than on more objective historical sources. The film contains visual<br />

references to paintings originating from the period <strong>of</strong> Italian realism in general and to works<br />

by Giovanni Segantini (1858-1899) and Giovanni Fartori (1825-1908) in particular. Segantini<br />

and Fattori diffused within Italy their interpretations <strong>of</strong> the French realist movement's<br />

increasingly politicized - and sensitive - themes.(l) Both French and Italian realism centre<br />

on a technique which uses dark colours to define shapes, and a chiaroscuro effect to contrast<br />

the foreground and background planes. A similar technique emerges in the mise-en-scene <strong>of</strong><br />

1900, and when certain sequences relate specifically to labourers working in the fields or in<br />

the stables, the frame composition, particularly Bertolucci's use <strong>of</strong> colour and lighting,<br />

evokes tableaux such as La raccolta delle patate/Tlie Harvesting <strong>of</strong> Potatoes (1890), Alia<br />

Stanga/At the Bar (1886), Le due madri/The Two Mothers (1889) by Segantini, and // Riposo<br />

(II Can-o Rosso)/The Rest(The Red Chariot) (1887), and Aratura/Ploughing by Fattori. In<br />

addition, Fattori's depictions <strong>of</strong> military life, works such as // Campo Italiano dopo la<br />

battaglia di Magenta/The Italian Field after the Magenta Battle (1861} are analogous with<br />

Bertolucci's representation <strong>of</strong> the state cavalry in the sequence depicting the eviction <strong>of</strong> the<br />

peasants, particularly with regard to the soldiers' diagonal positioning. On the subject <strong>of</strong> the<br />

director s assimilation <strong>of</strong> artworks, Stefano Socci has also identified similarities from both<br />

versions <strong>of</strong> Le dejeuner sur I 'herbe by Pierre-Auguste Renoir and Eduard Manet in the scene<br />

<strong>of</strong> the peasants' country fair (Socci, 1996: 60-61).<br />

The aesthetic experience generated by this painterly reconstruction <strong>of</strong> landscapes and<br />

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daily life elicits nostalgia for a world that has all but disappeared. In this sense 1900 reflects<br />

Fredric Jameson's observation that in nostalgia films a 'new form <strong>of</strong> visual "verisimilitude"<br />

prevails', <strong>of</strong> which 'a series <strong>of</strong> simulacra <strong>of</strong> romantic paintings <strong>of</strong> the period is an instructive<br />

and emblematic gesture' (Jameson, 1992: 222). Bertolucci's rearticulation <strong>of</strong> artworks<br />

produces landscapes, colour, and lighting that evoke the past rather than re-enacting it, thus<br />

positioning characters and viewers in 'a relatively more contemplative relationship to the<br />

events' (Jameson, 1992: 222-223). Besides, the notion that the representation <strong>of</strong> history in<br />

1900 might be connected to what Jameson terms nostalgia for 'the lost object <strong>of</strong> desire'<br />

(Jameson, 1992: 139) is confirmed by one <strong>of</strong> Bertolucci's assertions related to the inclusion<br />

in the film <strong>of</strong> collective and personal memories: 'My adolescence used to be the lost paradise<br />

and I created again my adolescence, my childhood in 1900. And I created a copy <strong>of</strong> the lost<br />

paradise' (Quinn, 1977: 105). Yet the film's extensive description <strong>of</strong> Italy thirty years before<br />

the rise <strong>of</strong> Fascism arguably serves the purpose <strong>of</strong> assisting Italian and non-Italian viewers,<br />

American in this case, with little knowledge <strong>of</strong> the film's events. In this regard Bertolucci<br />

unambiguously announced that 1900 would be a film 'concerned with the rediscovery <strong>of</strong> the<br />

roots', dedicated to 'the young generations', made for 'all those <strong>of</strong> the great mass who know<br />

nothing at all about these values' (Bachmann, 1973: 100-101). It is precisely for its extended<br />

narration <strong>of</strong> almost half a century <strong>of</strong> Italian history, representing the political changes through<br />

three generations, that 1900 retains some value as a historical film for present day<br />

generations. Consequently Grodal's concept <strong>of</strong> contextual frames reflects the position into<br />

which viewers <strong>of</strong> 1900 are guided, (Grodal, 1997: 178) as they identify their own position as<br />

detached viewers <strong>of</strong> a film that exemplifies both the historical epic and art cinema. It is in this<br />

sense that the initial image <strong>of</strong> the painting Quarto Stato states the dual artistic and historical<br />

mode <strong>of</strong> the ensuing filmic representation.<br />

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The cognitive and affective functions <strong>of</strong> the theatrical mise-en-scene<br />

The use <strong>of</strong> tableaux-style framings in 1900 casts an aura <strong>of</strong> temporal remoteness over the film<br />

which generates in viewers a sense <strong>of</strong> distance from the unfolding events; the feeling is<br />

reinforced by the director's preference for theatrical modes <strong>of</strong> presentation rather than those<br />

<strong>of</strong> realism. The mise-en-scene is largely centred on symbolic uses <strong>of</strong> space, on iconic uses <strong>of</strong><br />

costumes to establish identity, and on declamatory acting performances; these elements also<br />

engage viewers intellectually, as they reduce the concrete immediacy <strong>of</strong> the film's events and<br />

endow them with a figurative significance through which reflections on concepts such as<br />

social oppression may be elicited. The theatricality <strong>of</strong> 1900 reflects the characteristics defined<br />

by Bernard Beckerman in his discussion about what is termed 'iconic presentation', this<br />

dealing with being rather than with doing and is a representational mode during which<br />

'characters appear subordinated to ritual-like activity' (Beckerman, 1990: 49). 1900 is a film<br />

in which space is more important than time, reflecting certain forms <strong>of</strong> theatre where 'one is<br />

conscious <strong>of</strong> an unfolding display rather than the release <strong>of</strong> suspense' (Beckerman, 1990: 55).<br />

The film's iconic treatment <strong>of</strong> its characters also emerges in its mise-en-scene, which reflects<br />

the way theatre 'creates an illusion <strong>of</strong> stasis" (Beckerman, 1990: 61), being essentially<br />

concerned with 'eternal principles' (Beckerman, 1990: 63) - these being the socio-political<br />

order in the case <strong>of</strong> 1900. One early indication <strong>of</strong> Bertolucci's preference for a theatrical<br />

aesthetic emerges during the first sequence <strong>of</strong> the initial flashback. A hunchbacked man,<br />

dressed as the character Rigoletto from Verdi's opera, runs along a country path shouting that<br />

Verdi is dead and that a child has been born to the Dalco family. This device, besides<br />

defining the time <strong>of</strong> the action (January 27th 1901), activates the viewer's awareness <strong>of</strong> the<br />

'staging' <strong>of</strong> the film's events.<br />

This sense <strong>of</strong> artifice is confirmed by the film's declamatory acting style, a technique<br />

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that periodically distances viewers from the narrative and minimizes the likelihood <strong>of</strong><br />

empathic emotional attachments forming between viewers and characters. More subtly,<br />

Bertolucci frames some <strong>of</strong> the film's images with secondary characters <strong>of</strong>ten positioned in<br />

front <strong>of</strong> the main speakers, or in a semi-circle before them; this underlines the characters'<br />

function as an 'internal audience' which mirrors the extra-diegetic spectator's presence. In<br />

this regard, it is significant that Gerard Depardieu/Olmo also seems to address the film<br />

viewers themselves on several occasions, by looking straight into the camera while<br />

completing his speeches. In one case, he attempts to rouse his comrades - who are standing<br />

silently in a semi-circle - exhorting them to stand firm in the face <strong>of</strong> Fascist oppression.<br />

Then, he turns directly towards the camera to affirm that the Left will live on as long as<br />

people make their presences felt on an individual basis. The concept <strong>of</strong> personal<br />

responsibility appears to be important to Bertolucci; it emerges in Tlie Conformist, in the<br />

second part <strong>of</strong> The Last Emperor, in Little Buddha, and influences the social perspective<br />

presented in Stealing Beauty. The stylized quality <strong>of</strong> such sequences points to a didactic<br />

intent <strong>of</strong> Brechtian derivation, as the resulting sense <strong>of</strong> distance aims - to some extent to<br />

divert the viewers' focus <strong>of</strong> attention from the ongoing story to a reflection on the socio­<br />

political meaning implied by the sequences.<br />

The theatrical importance <strong>of</strong> a performer's entrance which, as Gay McAuley observes,<br />

constitutes 'a new event within the fiction' is frequently combined with metaphorical or<br />

symbolic uses <strong>of</strong> diegetic space to create meaning (McAuley, 1999: 100). One example is the<br />

scene where Alfredo advances into the manor courtyard to show himself wearing his dead<br />

father's fur coat to his relatives who are returning<br />

from the funeral, and who stop when they see him (see<br />

image). Besides being a theatrical set piece which is<br />

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attached to the filmic narrative in an overdetermined fashion to elicit an intellectual<br />

consideration <strong>of</strong> the implications <strong>of</strong> Alfredo's gesture, the mise-en-scene uses diegetic space<br />

to establish a principle <strong>of</strong> confrontation. Consequently Alfredo's entrance introduces a new<br />

narrative event, that <strong>of</strong> his assumption <strong>of</strong> power, and it also emblemizes the sense <strong>of</strong><br />

continuity with his father's domineering role in the relationships that he is going to establish,<br />

despite his earlier repugnance to it. Another example <strong>of</strong> Bertolucci's metaphorical use <strong>of</strong><br />

space can be seen in the sequence in which the young Fabrizio Pioppi enters a cottage where<br />

Attila and Regina are having an intimate encounter. The boy is disoriented and stands<br />

immobile hoping not to be seen. But Attila, perceiving a presence, drags him in. The use <strong>of</strong><br />

space symbolizes the danger <strong>of</strong> being drawn in too close to the true face <strong>of</strong> Fascism and its<br />

brutality; the boy's fateful entrance causes Attila's warped consciousness to plumb new<br />

depths, and the 'new event", in theatrical terms, is a horrific escalation <strong>of</strong> violence which sets<br />

the tone for the rest <strong>of</strong> the film. The staged presentation guides viewers beyond cognitive<br />

anticipations <strong>of</strong> the subsequent plot developments, inviting them to perceive the three<br />

characters as embodiments <strong>of</strong> social forces (the impressionable citizen, the violent, ambitious<br />

Fascist and sections <strong>of</strong> the landowning class) that interacted in that historical period.<br />

Affective, cognitive and intellectual implications <strong>of</strong> the theatrical performances<br />

The significance that can be derived from Bertolucci's stylized closed camera framings in<br />

terms <strong>of</strong> conveying political reflections also extends to the actors' delivery <strong>of</strong> their lines. The<br />

artifice in the performances <strong>of</strong> Dominique Sanda (Ada) and Donald Sutherland (Attila) is<br />

light years away from Brando's intense method acting in Last Tango in Paris, and its<br />

emphatic nature appears designed to distance viewers emotionally from the screen events.<br />

Regarding the character <strong>of</strong> Ada, Alfredo's wife, Sanda's theatricality echoes the style <strong>of</strong> an<br />

early 20th century Italian actress, Eleonora Duse, and it connotes the kind <strong>of</strong> bourgeois<br />

individual who was educated (Ada is well aware <strong>of</strong> the crude ignorance <strong>of</strong> Fascism and its<br />

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followers), sensitive (she relates to the peasants' hardships), yet unable to take any<br />

confrontational initiative.<br />

However, the most politically significant examples <strong>of</strong> the film's theatrical recitation are<br />

arguably two key monologues. The first one, performed by Romolo Valli as Giovanni<br />

(Alfredo's father), establishes the landowners as the cause <strong>of</strong> the escalating violence that<br />

propelled the Fascists into power. The sequence featuring his monologue depicts a political<br />

meeting being held in a church, a dramatic staging which is reminiscent <strong>of</strong> T.S. Eliot's<br />

Murder in the Cathedral (1934) given the nature <strong>of</strong> the environment and the immoral nature<br />

<strong>of</strong> the activities occurring there. Other aspects <strong>of</strong> the mise-en-scene condition the scene's<br />

political significance. Giovanni wears a fur coat which gives him an aura <strong>of</strong> affluent<br />

dominance; he stands before the landowners who are seated, and encourages them to set up<br />

an illegal force to punish the rebellious peasants. Valli's low, sibilant deliver}' evokes the idea<br />

<strong>of</strong> a devil or snake, the character's poisonous thoughts infecting the audience. The menacing<br />

ambience is heightened by low-key lighting to create areas <strong>of</strong> shadow, a technique that also<br />

emphasizes Attila's unsettling appearance from behind a pillar, a manifestation <strong>of</strong> the evil<br />

forces that Giovanni has been awakening with his speech. The film unequivocally points to<br />

the landowners as the group with the primary moral and political responsibility for<br />

unleashing Fascist violence on an unwary local population, and this perspective is reiterated<br />

by the second monologue, assigned to Donald Sutherland/Attila. Its significance is underlined<br />

by the way Bertolucci cues anticipation <strong>of</strong> it from viewers; first, the camera gradually moves<br />

closer to the actor, framing his face in close-up, and then it lingers on his empty gaze. At this<br />

point, Sutherland's delivery conditions the content <strong>of</strong> his monologue, as, with a resonant<br />

whisper, Attila reflects on the relationship between the greedy, cynical landowners and the<br />

Fascist squad members whom Attila likens to dogs to which the landowners throw leftovers.<br />

Then, laughing contemptuously at the bourgeoisie's inability to understand the hatred that<br />

211


they are fuelling, he threatens an implacable revenge that begins later with the violent murder<br />

<strong>of</strong> young Fabrizio Pioppi. The dark, amoral side <strong>of</strong> society is thus metaphorically represented<br />

by the way Giovanni and Attila utter their words.<br />

The content <strong>of</strong> the monologues is designed to elicit an intellectual engagement from<br />

viewers that emerges through the affective charge generated by the sinister delivery <strong>of</strong> the<br />

lines. The substance <strong>of</strong> Attila's monologue enables - and encourages - viewers to elaborate a<br />

truncated hierarchy <strong>of</strong> preference within which the Fascist labourers embodied by Attila<br />

somehow seem more coherent than their unscrupulous commanders. Such distinctions had<br />

already emerged in The Conformist through Manganiello's disgust in response to Marcello<br />

Clerici's cowardice. In 1900, Bertolucci reiterates this differentiated perspective as, during<br />

his death scene, Attila stands upright and proclaims his Fascist pride in a declamatory style,<br />

while Alfredo never pays for supporting a regime whose nature he was fully aware <strong>of</strong>. In this<br />

sense, Alfredo's opportunism is a variation <strong>of</strong> that <strong>of</strong> Marcello Clerici, reflecting a<br />

divergence between political awareness and personal conduct. Interestingly, Bertolucci<br />

defines Attila and Regina as victims because they are 'completely instrumentalized' by the<br />

ruling class who make them the interface for 'all the aggression it lacks the strength, the guts,<br />

to express directly itself (Georgakas-Rubenstein, 1985:145).<br />

Shaping the mood <strong>of</strong> 1900: charting the seasons; sex and violence as emotion markers<br />

The film's narration presents different visuals which are instrumental in generating a shifting<br />

emotional climate. The stunning colour scheme and warm lighting <strong>of</strong> the sequence related to<br />

the protagonists' childhood cast a lyrical aura on the narrative, and appear designed to create<br />

a mood <strong>of</strong> enchanted fascination. By contrast the narrative related to the class struggle during<br />

the rise and rule <strong>of</strong> Fascism is emphasized by the use <strong>of</strong> dark colours and cold lighting, which<br />

contribute to create a mood <strong>of</strong> oppression and unease. Lyricism is deployed again in the last<br />

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part <strong>of</strong> the film depicting the peasants' celebration at Fascism's fall. This strategy is<br />

explained by Bertolucci as he describes how he thought <strong>of</strong> the four seasons as the most<br />

appropriate structure for a film about the countryside. Summer was attached to the<br />

protagonists' childhood; Autumn/Winter to the rise and rule <strong>of</strong> Fascism; Spring 'corresponds<br />

to the Liberation Day. April 25, 1945', which he conceived as the peasants" enactment <strong>of</strong>'the<br />

Utopia <strong>of</strong> the revolution' (Georgakas-Rubenstein, 1984: 140-141).<br />

Within this evocative framework that forms the film's 'emotional backdrop', Bertolucci<br />

periodically inserts sexual and violent scenes whose camera framings and realist mises-en-<br />

scene are designed to draw viewers more strongly into the diegesis. One sequence portrays a<br />

visit made to a prostitute by Alfredo and Olmo, and it features a POV shot as they watch a<br />

screen behind which the girl undresses. This creates alignment with the viewer, and also cues<br />

anticipation and curiosity on the part <strong>of</strong> spectators regarding the extent <strong>of</strong> visual access to the<br />

girl's body and to the ensuing action that is likely to be accorded by the director, given his<br />

visual control over diegetic space. For decades, directors had exercised self-censorship to<br />

bypass potential problems <strong>of</strong> nudity in their work, but the next shot unexpectedly raises the<br />

viewer's sexual expectations by using a closed framing <strong>of</strong> the three characters - shot frontally<br />

in medium shot - as they lie on the bed. The frame composition's symmetry, the girl<br />

functioning as the central axis, confers a sense <strong>of</strong> realist simplicity on the scene which is<br />

strengthened by the cheerful dialogue between the men. Part <strong>of</strong> the frame remains blocked <strong>of</strong>f<br />

by a bedstead which obscures the lower halves <strong>of</strong> the actors' bodies, but unexpectedly the<br />

camera tracks forward to reveal - shockingly for the mid 1970s - the girl as she masturbates<br />

Alfredo and Olmo simultaneously. Bertolucci therefore brings viewers into graphic visual<br />

contact with the characters' sexual act - the explicitness <strong>of</strong> the scene, finally divested <strong>of</strong><br />

screens and other cinematic conventions - adding a concrete starkness to the narrative, and<br />

serving to anchor it more firmly to quotidian reality. A second sexually charged sequence,<br />

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portraying Alfredo and Ada's first physical encounter, is characterized by a similar, earthy<br />

realism to counterpoint the artifice that is discernible elsewhere in 1900. The sequence also<br />

possesses a strong affective charge, initially designed to elicit arousal as viewers are aligned<br />

with Alfredo's desire, first through POV shots showing parts <strong>of</strong> Ada's body as she is rapidly<br />

undressed by him, and then by shot/reverse shot montage between Alfredo's gaze and Ada.<br />

The erotic tension is graphically maintained during the couple's sexual act through repeated<br />

rear close-ups <strong>of</strong> Alfredo's thrusts, which nonetheless give rise also to a sense <strong>of</strong> unease<br />

because <strong>of</strong> the peculiar high angle framing which endows the sequence with a voyeuristic<br />

perspective.<br />

Unlike the sexual scenes, a more complex discourse lies behind the techniques used to<br />

construct several violent scenes, as the style <strong>of</strong> realism appears enriched with horror and/or<br />

gothic aesthetics, whereas in one later sequence, influences from Soviet Cinema are visible.<br />

These different mechanisms provide an emotional charge which is nevertheless tempered by<br />

intellectual resonances, an approach which underpins Bertolucci's film-making. Horror film<br />

devices are evoked by the elaborate, ritualistic cruelty <strong>of</strong> the deaths <strong>of</strong> some <strong>of</strong> the victims - a<br />

kitten, the young Fabrizio, and his mother killed by Attila - are all crushed like insects; by<br />

the slowed down pace <strong>of</strong> each scene, so that the length <strong>of</strong> the take becomes unbearable; and<br />

finally through the way each scene elicits a rising level <strong>of</strong> affective engagement that<br />

intensifies the viewers' emotional experience until a final explosion <strong>of</strong> horror releases the<br />

accumulated tension. Some scenes, such as the murder <strong>of</strong> Fabrizio, feature a built-in, emoting<br />

diegetic audience, and this mechanism has strong resonances. A reaction shot <strong>of</strong> Regina's<br />

horror as Attila repeatedly crashes the boy's head against the wall is the sort <strong>of</strong> 'facial<br />

feedback' that will draw affective mimicry from viewers (Plantinga, 1999: 240) but there is<br />

also a strong sense <strong>of</strong> the theatrical which endows the scene with an almost didactic<br />

distancing effect. As occurred in The Conformist during Quadri's execution, the viewer's<br />

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engagement will again change from emotional concern for the boy's welfare to a more<br />

defensive, perceptual form <strong>of</strong> participation in the scene when it is clear that he is doomed<br />

(Grodal, 1997: 158).<br />

The scene depicting the mass murder <strong>of</strong> peasants by Fascists in a field moves away<br />

from a direct personification <strong>of</strong> the evil embodied by Attila - although he does appear in the<br />

scene - as it is designed to represent a broader view <strong>of</strong> the state <strong>of</strong> dehumanization reached<br />

by the Fascist regime in its late period. The graphic ferocity <strong>of</strong> the massacre evokes the visual<br />

representations <strong>of</strong> the Russian Revolution to be found in early Soviet Cinema, in particular<br />

the techniques seen in Sergei Eisenstein's Strike and Battleship Potemkin; these films contain<br />

scenes in which, according to David Gillespie, 'the violence employed by the police and<br />

army is shocking [...] but it is also highly stylized" (Gillespie, 2000: 39). The same method <strong>of</strong><br />

representation applies to the stylized way in which Bertolucci depicts the Fascists' cruelty.<br />

Aspects <strong>of</strong> Gillespie's aesthetic analysis <strong>of</strong> early Soviet films resurface in 1900, in particular<br />

the enormous disproportion between the two opposing forces - a key method <strong>of</strong> highlighting<br />

the oppressor's brutality. The murderers' faceless anonymity creates the sense <strong>of</strong> an evil that<br />

has become all-pervading and institutionalized, while the victims' individuality is<br />

accentuated by emphatic close-ups, making 'the masses become real people' (Gillespie,<br />

2000: 42), an effect which creates both alignment and allegiance with them. The viewers'<br />

empathic absorption in the events is doubtless punctuated by an occasional awareness that the<br />

real past is being enacted on screen, and this extra-diegetic knowledge will intensify the<br />

disturbing nature <strong>of</strong> the violence. Yet the peasants" execution scene is articulated differently<br />

from Eisenstein's method <strong>of</strong> cross-cutting the images <strong>of</strong> atrocities with visual metaphors,<br />

such as images <strong>of</strong> a bull having its throat cut. By contrast, Bertolucci aestheticizes the<br />

violence by an idiosyncratic use <strong>of</strong> elements <strong>of</strong> mise-en-scene. The colour scheme is<br />

characterized by an unnatural omission <strong>of</strong> the red <strong>of</strong> bloodshed; the palette is restricted to<br />

215


tones <strong>of</strong> grey and black that cast a chromatic uniformity on both landscape and characters.<br />

The characters stand motionless in the rain, demarcated by another symbolic use <strong>of</strong> space<br />

with each group positioned on opposite sides <strong>of</strong> a field ;<br />

whose fencing is reminiscent <strong>of</strong> Nazi concentration<br />

camps (see image). Certain stylized visual elements in<br />

violent movies, in Steven Prince's view, unmistakably<br />

'impose an intellectualized perspective' on sequences,<br />

and this is a perspective that can be applied to 1900, (Prince, 1998: xix) the peasants'<br />

execution occurring a scene in which the deglamourization <strong>of</strong> violence maintains continuity<br />

with the film's previous sequences <strong>of</strong> brutality in terms <strong>of</strong> the way the violence signifies 'the<br />

crippling or diminishment <strong>of</strong> human identity* (Prince, 1998: 122).<br />

Allegiance with a collective protagonist<br />

The notions <strong>of</strong> viewer allegiance and the hierarchy <strong>of</strong> preference that viewers establish when<br />

evaluating the morality <strong>of</strong> characters, can be used to discuss the different evaluations elicited<br />

from viewers via Bertolucci's character portrayals. As regards the Berlinghieri family, the<br />

film only cues brief moments <strong>of</strong> sympathetic response towards the grandfather who<br />

personifies an ancient, rural capitalism which had a personal knowledge <strong>of</strong>, and respect for,<br />

the labourers. By contrast, the film cues unadulterated repulsion towards Alfredo's father,<br />

who symbolizes a radical change in the attitude <strong>of</strong> Italian capitalism towards labour - a<br />

capitalism which facilitated and supported Fascism. As illustrated earlier, it is Alfredo's<br />

trajectory that invites an evaluation <strong>of</strong> him as the worst <strong>of</strong> the Berlinghieris. Regarding the<br />

Dalco family, the narrative creates forms <strong>of</strong> allegiance that are probably weaker than one<br />

would expect given the film's political perspective. The grandfather's charisma is evident but<br />

remains ephemeral in the context <strong>of</strong> the film's structure, due to the characters brief screen<br />

presence. Olmo's rectitude and idealistic enthusiasm never equals his grandfather's<br />

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leadership, which is arguably assumed by the character <strong>of</strong> Anita, but to a lesser degree. But<br />

these individual positive sentiments experienced by the viewer towards single characters are<br />

outweighed by the solid allegiance that evolves towards the peasants as a group. The<br />

materialization <strong>of</strong> the peasants as a collective protagonist is achieved through the descriptive<br />

quality cast on the narration by the extensive use <strong>of</strong> external focalization, (Branigan, 1992:<br />

102-104) a narration attached to none <strong>of</strong> the intra-diegetic characters. In 1900 the perspective<br />

behind the narration can be traced to the subjectivity behind the camera which powerfully<br />

cues indignation and compassion towards the peasants based on what, emotionally and<br />

cognitively, is identified as the criterion <strong>of</strong> wrongfulness, which galvanizes a spectator's<br />

solidarity when screen scenarios depict mistreatment (Carroll, 1999: 25-26). In fact when<br />

Bertolucci was asked about his personal reading <strong>of</strong> the twentieth century, he replied that<br />

when shooting 1900 he was filled with a sense <strong>of</strong> injustice, above all for the peasants' destiny<br />

(Fantoni Minnella, 2004: 233).<br />

Conclusion<br />

The film's tw<strong>of</strong>old emotional essence, based around empathy and condemnation, builds<br />

slowly and reaches an appreciable intensity in the violent scenes, which contain an intrinsic<br />

shock value, hi this context, 1900 perhaps does not cause the same degree <strong>of</strong> distress as other<br />

films on a similar subject, such as La notte di San Lorenzo (1982) by Emilio and Vittorio<br />

Taviani, the latter being a work whose sense <strong>of</strong> intense anguish - elicited by the Nazi/Fascist<br />

ferocity against a village in Central Italy - remains consistently high. What marks the<br />

difference between 1900 and related works, like La notte di San Lorenzo, is a tenser, tighter<br />

rhythm achieved by the Taviani brothers by limiting the length <strong>of</strong> their narrative. By contrast,<br />

the form <strong>of</strong> 1900, with its extended narrative and emotional ebbs and flows, contains a more<br />

intellectual ambition to encourage meditation on the causes and the consequences <strong>of</strong> the<br />

historical events. The mise-en-scene appears designed to reflect symbolic elements: the<br />

217


settings express the stratification <strong>of</strong> centuries <strong>of</strong> economic differences; the costumes define<br />

engrained identities and attitudes; the declamatory acting performances convey the vulgarity<br />

<strong>of</strong> the oppressors and the pride <strong>of</strong> the oppressed; the use <strong>of</strong> space emblemizes the<br />

relationships between the different social strata. However, Bertolucci's visual representation<br />

<strong>of</strong> the landscape also emphasizes its potential role as a natural, unifying force, where social<br />

cohesion and co-operation should be possible. It conveys a sense <strong>of</strong> harmony and community<br />

which, with the advent <strong>of</strong> mass production, has disappeared leaving individuals alienated<br />

from their environments and from other people. Consequently, it can be inferred that 1900<br />

encourages reflection on the way human greed underpins social conflict and generates<br />

violence, and the film enables viewers - especially the younger generations - to understand<br />

the nature <strong>of</strong> history in the making. Bearing in mind George Santayana's famous idiom,<br />

'Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it', it is arguable that if films<br />

like 1900 had been aired in Italy in the recent past, then perhaps the nation would have<br />

avoided having to re-experience a quasi regime, again generated by an alliance between<br />

unrestrained capitalism headed by a ruthless individual, and endorsed by the Church. In terms<br />

<strong>of</strong> Bertolucci's career, 1900 represents the first <strong>of</strong> several films in which the emotional<br />

component <strong>of</strong> the narration is amplified, and distanciation effects were achieved through<br />

mechanisms that no longer included unveiling the presence <strong>of</strong> the cinematic medium, an<br />

effect that would only begin to recur in the director's work with lo ballo da sola/Stealing<br />

Beauty.<br />

Notes<br />

1. Issues such as the increasing presence <strong>of</strong> the proletariat as a political force, and their nobility in<br />

moral terms, emerged in the French realists' depictions <strong>of</strong> scenes <strong>of</strong> working class life. The<br />

painting The Stonebreakers (1849) by Gustave Courbet (1819-1877), which focuses on the simple<br />

dignity <strong>of</strong> a labourer s existence, constituted a model for Segantini and Fattori who also<br />

highlighted the socioeconomic conditions typifying the lives <strong>of</strong> the rural peasantry. In De Vecchi<br />

P. and Cerchiari E. (1991-1992) Arte ml tempo, Vol.3,1 Tomo, Milan: Bompiani Editore.<br />

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References<br />

Bachmann, G. (1973) 'Every Sexual Relationship Is Condemned: An Interview with<br />

Bemardo Bertolucci', in Gerard, F.S., Kline, T.J. and Sklarew, B. (ed.) (2000)<br />

Bernardo Bertolucci Interviews, Jackson: <strong>University</strong> Press <strong>of</strong> Mississippi.<br />

Beckerman, B. (1990) The Theatrical Presentation, Performer, Audience and Act,<br />

Beckerman G.B. and Coco W. (ed.). New York and London: Routledge.<br />

Branigan, E. (1992) Narrative Comprehension and Film, London and New York: Routledge.<br />

Carroll, N. (1999) 'Film, Emotion and Genre', in Plantinga, C. and Smith, G. (ed.)<br />

Passionate Views, Baltimore: The John Hopkins <strong>University</strong> Press.<br />

De Vecchi, P. and Cerchiari, E. (1991-1992) Arte nel tempo, Vol.3,1 Tomo, Milan: Bompiani<br />

Editore.<br />

Eliot, T. S. (1934) Murder in the Cathedral, (ed.1976), London: Faber and Faber.<br />

Fantoni Minnella, M. (2004) Non riconciliati, Turin: UTET Diffusione S.r.l.<br />

Georgakas, D. and Rubenstein, L. (ed.) (1985) Art Politics Cinema: the Cineaste Interviews,<br />

London and Sydney: Pluto Press.<br />

Gillespie, D. (2000) Early Soviet Cinema: Innovation, Ideology and Propaganda, London:<br />

Wallflower Publishing Ltd.<br />

Grodal, T. (1997) Moving Pictures, Oxford: Oxford <strong>University</strong> Press.<br />

Jameson, F. (1992) Signatures <strong>of</strong> the Invisible, London and New York: Routledge.<br />

Kolker, R. P. (1985) Bernardo Bertolucci, London: BFI Publishing.<br />

McAuley, G. (1999) Space in Performance: Making Meaning in Tlieatre, Michigan: The<br />

<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Michigan Press.<br />

Mirabella, JC. and Pitiot, P. (1991) Inter\>ista a Bernardo Bertolucci, Rome: Gremese<br />

Editore.<br />

Plantinga, C. (1999) 'The Scene <strong>of</strong> Empathy and the Human Face on Film', in Plantinga C.<br />

and Smith, G. (ed.) Passionate Views, Baltimore: The John Hopkins <strong>University</strong> Press<br />

Prince, S. (1998) Savage Cinema: Sam Peckinpah and the Rise <strong>of</strong> Ultraviolent Movies,<br />

London: The Athlone Press.<br />

Quinn, S. (1977) '1900 Has Taken Its Toll on Bernardo Bertolucci', in Gerard, F.S., Kline,<br />

T.J., and Sklarew, B. (ed.) (2000) Bemardo Bertolucci Interviews, Jackson:<br />

<strong>University</strong> Press <strong>of</strong> Mississippi.<br />

Socci, S. (1996) Bemardo Bertolucci, Milan: II Castoro Cinema.<br />

Ungari, E. (1982) Scene Madri di Bemardo Bertolucci (2nd Ed. 1987), Milan: Ubulibri.<br />

219


Section 4: The Pinnacle <strong>of</strong> the Tilm-spettacolo'<br />

L 'ultimo imperatore/The Last Emperor (1987); // te nel deserto/The Sheltering Sky (1990); //<br />

piccolo Budda/Little Buddha (1993).<br />

The negative response to The Tragedy <strong>of</strong> a Ridiculous Man (1981) marked the definitive<br />

breakdown in relations between Bertolucci and the Italian critics, and led to the director<br />

abandoning Italy.(l) The fact that the first subsequent film to be shot abroad was The Last<br />

Emperor suggests that the director had returned to his idea <strong>of</strong> making film-spectacles,<br />

(Bachman, 1973: 96) and that the experience <strong>of</strong> 1900 had nevertheless convinced producers<br />

<strong>of</strong> Bertolucci's ability to plan and deliver ambitious projects. In terms <strong>of</strong> links with 1900, the<br />

film embeds a historical theme in an enchanting evocation <strong>of</strong> a world long gone, that <strong>of</strong> the<br />

millenary culture <strong>of</strong> the Qing dynasty. With a larger number <strong>of</strong> extras than in 1900, almost<br />

the same number <strong>of</strong> red flags, and a lesson learned about film length, Tlie Last Emperor was<br />

a work which did make an impact on America. The fact that a fifty year period similar to the<br />

one depicted in 1900 was represented, this time, within a 'safer' duration <strong>of</strong> one hour and<br />

fifty-eight minutes, might be connected to the influence <strong>of</strong> Mark Peploe who co-wrote the<br />

screenplay with Bertolucci. According to the director, Peploe managed to change<br />

Bertolucci's attitude towards screenplays, which he did not always follow during shooting as<br />

he was convinced that creativity should be linked to instinctiveness. For The Last Emperor,<br />

Peploe made him accept a strict adherence to the screenplay, by showing him that it was<br />

possible to be rational without jeopardizing creativity (Ranvaud 1987: 264). Therefore Mark<br />

Peploe and Franco Arcalli - who changed Bertolucci's rapport with editing - might be<br />

considered the collaborators who most influenced Bertolucci's mode <strong>of</strong> film-making after the<br />

experiences <strong>of</strong> the 1960s.<br />

220


The success <strong>of</strong> The Last Emperor enabled Peploe - who in the past had attempted to<br />

adapt Paul Bowles" novel The Sheltering Sky as a road movie - to obtain approval from<br />

William Aldrich, who owned the cinematic rights, for the film to be made by Bertolucci, who<br />

again collaborated with Vittorio Storaro and with the English producer Jeremy Thomas<br />

(Peploe, 1990: 84-85). In this film the element <strong>of</strong> visual enchantment is 'acted out' by the<br />

beauty <strong>of</strong> the Sahara desert, which is arguably the protagonist <strong>of</strong> the second part <strong>of</strong> the film.<br />

The subsequent shooting <strong>of</strong> Little Buddha appears to be the apex <strong>of</strong> the phase <strong>of</strong> Bertolucci's<br />

film-making characterized by the intent <strong>of</strong> overwhelming viewers' senses. At the same time it<br />

can also be read as a sign <strong>of</strong> the director's reconciliation with his personal anxieties; an<br />

interpretation confirmed by the fact that after Little Buddha he returned to film in Italy for<br />

Stealing Beauty. The three films elicit homogenous viewing experiences by privileging what<br />

Branigan terms a bottom-up process, (Branigan, 1992: 37) to indicate the viewer's<br />

engagement with the perception <strong>of</strong> the images and sounds on screen. In these films, the<br />

viewer's cognitive activity is reduced in favour <strong>of</strong> pure contemplation <strong>of</strong> the aural-visual<br />

elements. Bertolucci's tendency to construct ambiguous screen characters is maintained,<br />

together with the recurring effect in his films whereby the formation <strong>of</strong> viewer allegiance<br />

with characters, despite prolonged alignment with them, is improbable. The only exception to<br />

this is represented by the character <strong>of</strong> Jesse's father in Little Buddha, as the narration guides<br />

viewers to share his existential concerns.<br />

Although the affective component dominates the films' organization, their cognitive<br />

structures remain complex. In Tlie Last Emperor, spectators need to follow the shifts between<br />

the present time narrative and flashbacks; in Tlie Sheltering Sky, a suppressive narration<br />

making extended use <strong>of</strong> time-space ellipses creates demands on the viewer; in Little Buddha<br />

the real world narrative intersects with that <strong>of</strong> the telling <strong>of</strong> Siddhartha's story and merges<br />

with it at certain points. These strategies act as a constant reminder that the subjectivity<br />

221


ehind the films is that <strong>of</strong> the director as the implied author, hi addition, the presence <strong>of</strong><br />

macro-frames for all three films - centred on historicity, la mode retro, and Buddhism<br />

respectively - ensures that there is an intellectual foundation to each narration that elicits<br />

from viewers that 'judgement upon modern life and la condition humaine" that typifies art<br />

films (Bordwell, 1995: 207). On this point, the following chapters will also consider whether<br />

the intellectual elements within the narrations are sufficient to protect Bertolucci from the<br />

accusation that he has been assimilated into Hollywood mainstream cinema (Loshitsky, 1995:<br />

201).<br />

Notes<br />

1. 'I no longer wished to shoot in Italy after The Ridiculous Man. On the contrary I wished to go as far<br />

away as possible' (Ungari-Ranvaud,1982: 238).<br />

References<br />

Bachmann, G. (1973) 'Every Sexual Relationship Is Condemned: An Interview with<br />

Bernardo Bertolucci', in Gerard, F.S., Kline, T.J. and Sklarew, B. (ed.) (2000)<br />

Bernardo Bertolucci Interviews, Jackson: <strong>University</strong> Press <strong>of</strong> Mississippi.<br />

Bordwell, D. (1995) Narration in the Fiction Film, London: Routledge.<br />

Peploe, M. (1990) 'Life as a Road Movie', in Negri, L. and Gerard, F.S. Bertolucci. Bowles<br />

TJie Sheltering Sky, London and Sydney: Scribners a Division <strong>of</strong> Macdonald & Co.<br />

(Publishers).<br />

Ranvaud, D. (1987) 'Z 'Ultimo Imperatore di Bernardo Bertolucci', in Ungari E. (1982) Scene<br />

Madri di Bemardo Bertolucci, (2nd Ed. 1987) Milan: Ubulibri.<br />

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L 'ultimo imperatore/The Last Emperor: Wonder and Disenchantment<br />

The film's narration <strong>of</strong> the life <strong>of</strong> Pu Yi as the last emperor <strong>of</strong> China is based on the<br />

emperor's autobiography, in which the details are rendered in a rather arid list <strong>of</strong> names and<br />

places.(l) Therefore it is understandable that Bertolucci mentioned the book Twilights in the<br />

Forbidden City (1934) by Reginald F. Johnston - who was Pu Yi's tutor from 1919 to 1924 -<br />

as a particularly useful source (Ranvaud, 1987: 281). The film is a meticulous reconstruction<br />

<strong>of</strong> life in the Forbidden City during Pu Yi's childhood, adolescence and adulthood, and this<br />

chapter will focus on how Bertolucci establishes a non-linear narrative structure that<br />

alternates an opulent, colourful mise-en-scene for the Forbidden City, with a stark,<br />

monochromatic mise-en-scene during the film's depictions <strong>of</strong> Maoist China. The result is a<br />

contrast that elicits diverse emotional responses, while also fostering an intellectual form <strong>of</strong><br />

viewer engagement with regard to the artistic and historical associations that the contrast<br />

triggers.<br />

Plot summary<br />

The narration <strong>of</strong> Pu Yi's life begins with a caption, 'Manchuria 1950, Chinese-Russian<br />

border 7 , which indicates the place and time <strong>of</strong> the emperor's imprisonment by Maoist forces.<br />

Pu Yi attempts suicide by slashing his wrists, the red <strong>of</strong> the blood running into a washbasin<br />

and giving way to the first <strong>of</strong> several flashbacks representing his memories. The red filter<br />

used in the filming links 1950s Manchuria with Peking in 1908, depicting the young Pu Yi's<br />

traumatic separation from his mother. Brought to the Forbidden City, he spends his childhood<br />

surrounded by the beauty <strong>of</strong> the place and by the obedience <strong>of</strong> hundreds <strong>of</strong> people who look<br />

after him. When he is fourteen, China becomes a republic with an <strong>of</strong>ficial President, who has<br />

a wall added to the Forbidden City perimeter to demarcate Pu Yi's symbolic role in Chinese<br />

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life. A cut brings viewers back to Manchuria where the governor is reading a biography <strong>of</strong> Pu<br />

Yi written by his former English tutor. Another flashback narrates the encounter between the<br />

two, and the influence the tutor had on the young emperor, until they were forced to abandon<br />

the Forbidden City by the Communist revolution that had overthrown the republican<br />

government. Back in the prison, Pu Yi denies the biography's allegation that he acquiesced<br />

with regard to the Japanese invasion <strong>of</strong> Manchuria. But a flashback re-enacting the events<br />

confirms the tutor's assertions, while the emperor's resistance breaks down only after<br />

watching a newsreel showing images <strong>of</strong> Japanese atrocities in Manchuria. During his ten year<br />

sentence he takes up gardening as part <strong>of</strong> a re-education programme, and acquires a job at<br />

Peking's botanical garden. One day, he sees youngsters in the streets, brandishing a small red<br />

book, and aggressively surrounding a group <strong>of</strong> prisoners among whom he recognizes his<br />

former prison governor. In trying to convince the youngsters that he is a good citizen, he<br />

makes the governor's situation worse. The last sequence <strong>of</strong> the film depicts Pu Yi's visit in<br />

1967 to the Forbidden City - now bare and empty - where he experiences a tender sense <strong>of</strong><br />

nostalgia and proves his past identity to the caretaker's child by taking from behind the<br />

throne a box containing a cricket, miraculously still alive, that he received on his coronation<br />

day. He gives it to the boy and disappears as a group <strong>of</strong> tourists approach the throne. The film<br />

ends with the tourist guide summing up Pu Yi's life in a single, banal sentence which also<br />

makes reference to his death that same year.<br />

Chromatic contrasts and personal evolution; the effect on the viewer<br />

The film immediately activates affective responses with images showing the arrival <strong>of</strong> a train<br />

<strong>of</strong> prisoners who are herded into a huge bare room. This is rendered in a monochrome green<br />

that quickly fades into a greyish hue which blends into everything - the sets, the decor, and<br />

both the soldiers' and prisoners' uniforms; it is a palette that cues a sense <strong>of</strong> oppression and,<br />

in narrative terms, bleak expectations. In this monochromatic scheme, two elements stand<br />

224


out; the red <strong>of</strong> a notice on the wall <strong>of</strong> the prison courtyard written in imposing Chinese<br />

characters, and <strong>of</strong> a small red star - the symbol <strong>of</strong> the Communist Party - which decorates the<br />

huge wall from where the governor delivers speeches. This arrangement endows these two<br />

components with an authoritarian strength, and it adds a sense <strong>of</strong> subjugation to the deictic<br />

space because the two red elements evoke a sense <strong>of</strong> command. As it becomes clear that the<br />

monochrome colour scheme is a recurrent feature in the depiction <strong>of</strong> the Maoist events, the<br />

use <strong>of</strong> a single colour drains the mise-en-scene <strong>of</strong> any sense <strong>of</strong> life and it effaces every trace<br />

<strong>of</strong> individuality, thus reducing hundreds <strong>of</strong> people to a mass <strong>of</strong> undistinguishable, inert<br />

human forms.<br />

The monochrome mise-en-scene lends itself to comparisons with the aesthetic beauty<br />

contained in the flashback images <strong>of</strong> Pu Yi's memories. The stunning polychrome colour<br />

scheme that characterizes the depiction <strong>of</strong> Pu Yi's life prior to his imprisonment elicits and<br />

focuses emotion in different ways. This is because the flashback narrative divides the<br />

character's past into three phases: his magical childhood, his disillusioned youth, and his<br />

troubled adulthood, each period drawing diverse affective responses towards the protagonist,<br />

while cueing aesthetic fascination. After the first phase, a pleasurable period <strong>of</strong> Pu Yi's life<br />

eliciting curiosity and enthralment, the second phase is characterized by a sense <strong>of</strong> impotence<br />

at not being allowed to shape his future - a period that cues moments <strong>of</strong> viewer empathy. The<br />

third phase is characterized by a sense <strong>of</strong> reproach over the emperor's reprehensible conduct,<br />

a sequence that leads to viewer estrangement.<br />

The overwhelming effect <strong>of</strong> decor, costume and scenery<br />

The aesthetic charm and emotional intensity created by the portrayal <strong>of</strong> the emperor's<br />

childhood partly originates from the fact that it represents a fascinated, Western gaze on<br />

Chinese civilization with its long-established traditions based upon a ruler's absolute power.<br />

225


This is articulated in the scene depicting the young Pu Yi being dragged from the family<br />

home and taken to the Forbidden City. Viewers are introduced to this mythical environment<br />

through dramatic nocturnal images blurred by the use <strong>of</strong> filters that bathe the scene in red<br />

light. With the visual field partially obscured, the viewers' comprehension <strong>of</strong> events is<br />

restricted, (Branigan, 1992: 76) and their perceptions become sensitized to interpret the<br />

turmoil that characterizes the sequence, thus mirroring the disquiet occurring in the fictive<br />

world. At the same time, the refined decor and the sensuous colours <strong>of</strong> the costumes <strong>of</strong> all the<br />

social classes involved in the scene - for example the close-ups <strong>of</strong> Pu Yi's family's<br />

embroidered velvet clothes, the imperial soldiers' elegant uniforms, and the sedan-bearers'<br />

bright silk clothing - engage the viewer's senses while inducing reflections on the aesthetic<br />

difference created by multiform expressions <strong>of</strong> human creativity.<br />

The sense <strong>of</strong> amazement increases as young Pu Yi is brought into the presence <strong>of</strong> the<br />

dying empress. In the throne room, the magnificent interiors with their gold and red patterns<br />

give the scene an aura <strong>of</strong> fantasy. But the polichromy reaches its peak in the long take <strong>of</strong> the<br />

coronation day. In this sequence, the grandiose nature <strong>of</strong> the Chinese empire is displayed<br />

through a massive, stylized display <strong>of</strong> all Pu Yi's subjects - portrayed in their colourful<br />

costumes - who kneel before the child emperor who himself evokes a beautifully decorated<br />

doll. To achieve maximum impact, Bertolucci initially uses a tracking shot to follow Pu Yi as<br />

he runs outside, and then the camera displays a<br />

POV shot from the child's perspective, so that<br />

when a curtain waving in the wind slowly lifts<br />

up (see image), the disclosure <strong>of</strong> the grandiose<br />

spectacle is experienced by viewers with the<br />

same sense <strong>of</strong> overwhelming wonder felt by<br />

the child.<br />

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The intellectual implications <strong>of</strong> the film's colour motifs<br />

The polychrome patterns also form part <strong>of</strong> an intellectual symbolism which is discernible<br />

beneath the film's visuals. The colour motif <strong>of</strong> red, black and gold points to the ancient<br />

Chinese system according to which each colour had a cosmological meaning. The most<br />

important elements are the principles <strong>of</strong> Yin and Yang, which, in Chinese philosophy,<br />

represent two complementary aspects <strong>of</strong> life in terms <strong>of</strong> interior and exterior existence. In her<br />

study <strong>of</strong> Chinese theatre, Jo Riley (1997) explains that the black - representing the Yin<br />

principle - symbolizes the moon and the element <strong>of</strong> water, whereas the red represents the<br />

Yang and symbolizes the sun and the element <strong>of</strong> light. Hence, opposites such as water and<br />

fire, or death and life are represented in a diagram <strong>of</strong> continuous exchange and flow. Riley<br />

also explains how the importance <strong>of</strong> the colour red resides in its 'exorcist function during the<br />

dangerous passage <strong>of</strong> transition between states', primarily those <strong>of</strong> life and death, but also<br />

between the status <strong>of</strong> being unmarried to becoming wed (Riley, 1997: 64-65). In The Last<br />

Emperor, the dying empress wears a sumptuous red dress, and similarly the wedding dresses<br />

<strong>of</strong> Pu Yi's wives are red. Moreover, the use <strong>of</strong> red filters during the first flashback might be<br />

interpreted as marking the transition from Pu Yi's state <strong>of</strong> being a 'normal' child to that <strong>of</strong><br />

becoming a child emperor. According to Riley, the link between the opposites <strong>of</strong> red and<br />

black was identified in the colour gold that represents a 'deity, the power <strong>of</strong> one who controls<br />

and recreates the cosmos' (Riley, 1997: 65). Therefore it is no coincidence that the sequence<br />

portraying the disillusionment <strong>of</strong> Pu Yi's youthful years is introduced by the use <strong>of</strong> this<br />

symbolism. It is, in fact, by reproaching his cousin for wearing a gold shirt, 'Gold is the<br />

emperor's colour , that Pu Yi discovers that China had become a republic with a president. In<br />

this regard, the ironic images <strong>of</strong> the president getting out <strong>of</strong> his sports car, surrounded by<br />

aides who ceremoniously hold a red and gold parasol for him, convey the idea that a simple<br />

transfer <strong>of</strong> power has occurred, with no tangible effect on the lives <strong>of</strong> the common people.<br />

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These are examples <strong>of</strong> the way in which the mise-en-scene and cinematography <strong>of</strong> The Last<br />

Emperor generate a viewing experience characterized by interplay between the affective and<br />

the intellectual.<br />

From the sublime to intimate empathic phenomena<br />

To depict Pu Yi's increasing melancholy caused by his isolation, the film's lighting and<br />

colour scheme is toned down. In this regard Bertolucci asserted that Storaro conceived <strong>of</strong> the<br />

'forbidden city" as preventing Pu Yi from experiencing the fullness <strong>of</strong> light and the fullness<br />

<strong>of</strong> colour, and that Storaro managed to transform this into visual terms (Ranvaud, 1987: 277).<br />

Hence there is a predominant use <strong>of</strong> dark blue and black for the costumes, and <strong>of</strong> brown and<br />

ochre for both the interiors and the landscape, with ochre also used to create a more<br />

overwhelming and unique emotional effect. It is arguable that at certain moments, a sense <strong>of</strong><br />

the sublime is induced in terms <strong>of</strong> the effect upon characters, an effect also perceived<br />

indirectly by viewers, hi the context <strong>of</strong> the body <strong>of</strong> writing on the subject, it is arguably<br />

Edmund Burke's concept <strong>of</strong> the sublime that is evoked in The Last Emperor, what Burke<br />

considered to be the product <strong>of</strong> three elements; terror, obscurity, and power, because each<br />

component is related to our deep fears <strong>of</strong> pain and death. According to Burke, terror is our<br />

emotional response to 'ideas <strong>of</strong> pain and danger', and it is indivisible from the idea <strong>of</strong> power,<br />

whether concrete or abstract, because this represents the enormous strength' that can inflict<br />

pain and death (Burke, 1759: 131-137).<br />

The mise-en-scene symbolizes the infliction <strong>of</strong> pain and socio-political death upon Pu<br />

Yi by turning the same vastness, which had earlier played an integral role in the spectacle <strong>of</strong><br />

his socio-political affirmation, into an emblem <strong>of</strong> his new status as a socio-political non­<br />

entity. To place the greatest dramatic emphasis on this transition, a monochromatic colour<br />

scheme is adopted to heighten the sense <strong>of</strong> immense void created by the size <strong>of</strong> a courtyard in<br />

228


the Forbidden City. This, combined with an<br />

extreme long shot that further dwarfs the<br />

emperor's frame, makes the spatial emptiness<br />

overwhelming (see image). The spiritual<br />

annihilation resulting from this visual<br />

juxtaposition is conveyed through repeated<br />

reaction shots <strong>of</strong> Pu Yi's face. Eventually the<br />

emperor manifests his terror by running desperately across the empty space, crying in<br />

dismay. The depiction <strong>of</strong> the Forbidden City, evolving from an imperial residence to that <strong>of</strong> a<br />

barren, desolate prison, is symbolized by the way actions tend to take place in the set's<br />

recesses, and by repeated shots <strong>of</strong> gates closing in front <strong>of</strong> Pu Yrs face which accentuate the<br />

sense <strong>of</strong> segregation. The importance <strong>of</strong> the use <strong>of</strong> space in 7?7e Last Emperor appears<br />

corroborated by Bertolucci's admiration for Ferdinando Scarfiotti in charge <strong>of</strong> the film's set<br />

design - whom he refers to as 'the genius <strong>of</strong> the dramaturgical spaces, <strong>of</strong> emptiness and <strong>of</strong><br />

fullness' (Ranvaud, 1987: 277).<br />

The transformation <strong>of</strong> Pu Yi from the maximum embodiment <strong>of</strong> power to that <strong>of</strong> a<br />

simulacrum <strong>of</strong> China's historical past increases a sense <strong>of</strong> sorrow at being isolated from his<br />

loved ones. Since the camera extensively focuses on Pu Yi's face and posture, it creates what<br />

Berys Gaut terms an 'imaginative identification' eliciting an empathic response, since 'if we<br />

are confronted with visual evidence <strong>of</strong> an individual suffering, we have a strong tendency to<br />

empathize and sympathize with her' (Gaut, 1999: 210). The viewer's imaginative<br />

identification with Pu Yi is secured by Bertolucci's repeated construction <strong>of</strong> scenes <strong>of</strong><br />

empathy, where the narrative slows and a character's emotions become the locus <strong>of</strong> attention<br />

(Plantinga, 1999: 239-240). This differs from a face-reaction shot either for its longer<br />

duration or because it is inserted in a POV structure alternating shots <strong>of</strong> the character's face<br />

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and shots <strong>of</strong> what s/he sees. In The Last Emperor, the alternating technique is used in the<br />

scenes depicting the emperor's desperation at being separated from his loved ones, and his<br />

attempts to escape. The device ensures that viewers share Pu Yi's emotional angst, as well as<br />

his longing for freedom and frustration at having to submit to an undeserved fate. The<br />

viewer's alignment and affective connection with Pu Yi's sadness and with his unfortunate<br />

situation, is made explicit when, on the soundtrack, Johnston voices viewers' thinking by<br />

commenting that 'the emperor is the loneliest boy in the world'.<br />

The stylization <strong>of</strong> decadence and sexuality<br />

When the sequence related to Pu Yi's troubled adulthood begins, the colour scheme changes<br />

again and becomes dualist; it is composed <strong>of</strong> a uniform bluish grey (reminiscent <strong>of</strong> the<br />

exterior lighting in The Conformist) and also a vibrant polychromy, which arguably functions<br />

as a metaphor for the co-existence in this phase <strong>of</strong> Pu Yi's life <strong>of</strong> the harsh reality that he is<br />

unable to acknowledge, and the dreamlike lifestyle he recklessly pursues. The external shots<br />

<strong>of</strong> Manchuria, a wild landscape, are rendered in a gloomy bluish grey, a tone with which the<br />

emperor's new headquarters (a stone palace), and the characters' military uniforms, blend<br />

perfectly. The colour uniformity, further emphasized by a metallic-hued light, cues an<br />

impression <strong>of</strong> perilous detachment which invites grim expectations regarding the outcome <strong>of</strong><br />

the narrative events. By contrast, life inside the palace exudes the elegance <strong>of</strong> 1930s Western<br />

aesthetics which is reproduced in the decor and costumes. The refined colour scheme creates<br />

fascination towards the beauty <strong>of</strong> whole compositions and individual details, positioning<br />

viewers alongside characters in experiencing intense aesthetic pleasure. Pu Yi's luxurious<br />

Western lifestyle experienced in a period <strong>of</strong> war, in a place which - as one <strong>of</strong> the recurring<br />

themes <strong>of</strong> Bertolucci's cinema - constitutes another secluded dwelling, highlights how his<br />

discontent has led him to pursue sensuous gratification rather than virtuous action. This<br />

reveals the moral void that prevents him from admitting that he has been a hostage <strong>of</strong> the<br />

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Japanese.<br />

His personality fits the definition <strong>of</strong> decadent individuals outlined by John Reed: The<br />

Decadent recognizes a nothingness at the centre <strong>of</strong> existence and dreads the emptiness within<br />

himself (Reed, 1985:15). To fill this emptiness, Pu Yi deludes himself that he occupies the<br />

role <strong>of</strong> emperor once more, his narcissism becoming a nihilism that destroys the only people<br />

who care for him. This particularly affects his first wife - now called Elizabeth - who, deeply<br />

aware <strong>of</strong> their humiliating situation and <strong>of</strong> her impotence, slowly assumes decadent<br />

perspectives, such as attitudes <strong>of</strong> self-destruction and a tendency towards sexual perversity<br />

(Reed, 1985: 19). She is challenged by another female character, the emperor's cousin<br />

Gioiello d'Oriente, whose androgyny evokes what 'was a peculiar but pervasive variation' <strong>of</strong><br />

decadent sexuality (Reed, 1985: 227). However, as regards the representation <strong>of</strong> sexuality in<br />

The Last Emperor, I would suggest that it is so stylized that it appears designed not to cue<br />

arousal, but to fuse with the overall sense <strong>of</strong> aesthetic allure, reaching its peak in the sequence<br />

depicting Pu Yi's wedding night. The sexual encounter between the spouses is shot through a<br />

voile curtain; they are framed sitting on a bed by a fixed camera positioned so that only the<br />

upper half <strong>of</strong> their bodies are visible and their faces are mostly in pr<strong>of</strong>ile; the red filters<br />

envelop the red <strong>of</strong> the bride's dress and <strong>of</strong> the bed linen, whereas the gold <strong>of</strong> the jewellery<br />

appears to melt in the suffused light. This strategy elicits a perception <strong>of</strong> the sequence that is<br />

more similar to the contemplation <strong>of</strong> rich embroidered silk, typical <strong>of</strong> Chinese artworks, than<br />

to the realistic, intimate human encounters typical <strong>of</strong> Bertolucci, who would return to his<br />

more characteristic depictions <strong>of</strong> sexuality in The Sheltering Sky.<br />

Melodramatic style and the estrangement <strong>of</strong> viewers<br />

The decadent aesthetic used to depict Pu Yi's weakness - and the consequent moral decay <strong>of</strong><br />

his wife's lifestyle - results in a visual intensity that heightens the melodramatic tone with<br />

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which the narrative represents the opposition between the ingenuous Pu Yi and the villainous<br />

Japanese character Amakasu, in charge <strong>of</strong> the Japanese invasion <strong>of</strong> Manchuria which is<br />

facilitated by using Pu Yi as a puppet ruler. The escalating cruelty with which Amakasu<br />

responds to Pu Yi's naive claim that his role is that <strong>of</strong> a real emperor is portrayed through<br />

forms <strong>of</strong> dramatization which reflect what Peter Brooks terms 'the melodramatic mode' as<br />

established by Balzac, Henry James and Dostoevsky. Discussing philosophical aspects <strong>of</strong><br />

melodrama with regard to the above writers, Brooks observes that their awareness <strong>of</strong> losing<br />

"any specific religious belief did not prevent them from continuing to believe 'that what is<br />

most important in a man's life is his ethical drama and the ethical implications <strong>of</strong> his psychic<br />

drama" (Brooks, 1976: 21). In The Last Emperor this is articulated through Pu Yi's denial <strong>of</strong><br />

reality, a perspective that increases his responsibility for the war in Manchuria, as well as for<br />

the ill fate <strong>of</strong> his closest collaborators and his wife, hi this regard, Noel Carroll's examination<br />

<strong>of</strong> film genres through their principal focuses <strong>of</strong> emotion is useful in identifying how<br />

Bertolucci deviates from cinematic codes. Carroll discusses the way melodrama is based on<br />

the combined criteria <strong>of</strong> misfortune and virtue; this <strong>of</strong>ten draws a compound emotion<br />

comprising pity and admiration, (Carroll, 1999: 36). However, the form <strong>of</strong> melodrama used<br />

in The Last Emperor lacks the virtue criterion, which explains why the eliciting <strong>of</strong> pity is<br />

only occasional at best, with little admiration being cued towards the protagonist.<br />

Regarding style, the film does utilize an important feature <strong>of</strong> the melodramatic mode,<br />

muteness, which consists <strong>of</strong> gestures instead <strong>of</strong> verbal expression; Brooks traces this feature<br />

back to Diderot's 'dramaturgy <strong>of</strong> gesture', through which he attempted to redevelop French<br />

theatre by developing the use <strong>of</strong> a tableau vivant to represent emotional reactions (Brooks,<br />

1976: 64-65). Melodramatic muteness is ultimately Diderot's effort to recover on stage [...]<br />

the mythical primal language' (Brooks, 1976: 66) whose importance is stressed by Brooks<br />

when he affirms that 'our very phrases "facial expression" and "bodily expression" suggest<br />

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the belief that whereas language may have been given to man to dissimulate his thought,<br />

physical signs can only reveal' (Brooks, 1976: 79). This stylistic form peaks in the scene <strong>of</strong><br />

the coronation ball, where a striking sequence combines three sets <strong>of</strong> images: Elizabeth eating<br />

flowers from a vase as her eyes fill with tears<br />

(see image), Amakasu peering from behind a<br />

pillar and glancing menacingly at her, and Pu<br />

Yi angrily approaching her, and rigidly sitting<br />

beside her. This triangulation also reflects the<br />

notion that in melodramatic modes <strong>of</strong> acting,<br />

the meanings contained in gestures represent a 'metaphorical approach to what cannot be<br />

said' (Brooks, 1976: 10). In the aforementioned sequence Elizabeth's gesture conveys her<br />

acknowledgment that the situation has reached the point <strong>of</strong> no return; Amakasu's behaviour<br />

implies his intention to repress the threat posed by Elizabeth's awareness; Pu Yi's stiffness<br />

communicates his refusal to confront reality.<br />

Nevertheless, while the camera positions allow viewers omniscience in respect to all<br />

the characters, they are also responsible for the fact that, despite the emotional display <strong>of</strong> this<br />

and other sequences, moments <strong>of</strong> empathy are largely surpassed by a sense <strong>of</strong> distance. It is a<br />

process described by John Gibbs (2002) who notes how such framings put the spectator 'in a<br />

position <strong>of</strong> seeing and evaluating contrasting attitudes within a given thematic framework'<br />

thus creating a distanciation effect; Gibbs considers this to be a product <strong>of</strong> Brechtian<br />

perspectives on mise-en-scene, which, 'rather than involving the audience in the emotional<br />

experience <strong>of</strong> the characters, instead encourage the spectator to become aware <strong>of</strong> the social<br />

forces that shape their behaviour' (Gibbs, 2002: 73-75). hi addition, as regards the concepts<br />

<strong>of</strong> alignment and allegiance, the sequence portraying Pu Yi's unsatisfying adulthood appears<br />

designed to interrupt viewers' attachment to the main character, as it extends their access to<br />

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Elizabeth's suffering on account <strong>of</strong> her husband's socio-political blindness. This<br />

circumstance indicates that Yosefa Loshitzky's evaluation <strong>of</strong> women in Bertolucci's films as<br />

not having any intellectual interests and living by 'animalistic instincts and for sensual<br />

pleasure' is insufficiently nuanced, since it can be argued that in The Last Emperor it is not<br />

'the Bertoluccian male to suffer at length, and to prolong his suffering through conscious<br />

intellectualization <strong>of</strong> his problems' (Loshitsky, 1995: 186) but the female. In this respect, my<br />

overview <strong>of</strong> Bertolucci's films illustrates how the most important female characters (Gina,<br />

Anna, Jeanne, Ada, Elizabeth, Kit) suffer because <strong>of</strong> their existential awareness, besides<br />

being portrayed as well educated and sometimes economically independent. However, by<br />

dissolving Elizabeth's rectitude into degenerate behaviour, the narrative <strong>of</strong> Ttie Last Emperor<br />

ultimately alienates viewers who are therefore prevented from feeling allegiance towards any<br />

<strong>of</strong> the characters.<br />

History as contextual frame and the 'melodrama <strong>of</strong> passive position'<br />

The film's a priori reference to Pu Yi's autobiography affects its viewing experience by<br />

drawing from spectators a constant evaluation <strong>of</strong> the way the film's narrative shifts between<br />

fiction and nonfiction; a form <strong>of</strong> representation that Lars Ole Samerberg has identified in<br />

texts that draw on a 'verifiable reality to various extents, but invariably in such a way as to<br />

call attention explicitly or implicitly to the difference between the fictional and the factual'<br />

(Samerberg, 1991: 6). This oscillation between the elaborated and the real characterizes the<br />

viewing experience provided by The Last Emperor, as the aesthetically detailed depictions <strong>of</strong><br />

elements <strong>of</strong> Pu Yi's life undoubtedly merge Bertolucci's fascination with the emperor's life<br />

with the historical truth <strong>of</strong> his existence. This form <strong>of</strong> representation can elicit diverse<br />

responses, ranging from an acceptance <strong>of</strong> 'the text as a unity' to reactions ranging from<br />

admiration to irritation at 'the author's playful manipulation <strong>of</strong> fiction and facts'. (Samerberg,<br />

1991: 98) responses that have occurred for The Last Emperor.(T)<br />

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In addition, the presence <strong>of</strong> a historical macro-frame combined with a melodramatic<br />

style takes The Last Emperor close to the genre <strong>of</strong> the 'melodrama <strong>of</strong> passive position' as<br />

outlined by Grodal; this genre regards fictions <strong>of</strong> a melodramatic type which foreground a<br />

passive actant controlled by forces which may be represented by a social occurrence that<br />

negates "an active position' (Grodal, 1997: 170). In Bertolucci's film viewers are also<br />

positioned at a historical distance from the narrative whose "authoritative form' inhibits their<br />

construction <strong>of</strong> the film events as situations that can be altered by voluntary acts; this is<br />

because the outcome is already known, and the time represented in the film is one in which<br />

'human beings are objects <strong>of</strong> major forces' (Grodal, 1997: 255). In The Last Emperor the<br />

reduction <strong>of</strong> viewers' cognitive processes is further decreased by the non-linear narration<br />

which, by switching between two contrasting historical situations, ultimately diverts viewers'<br />

mental activity towards reflections on the socio-historical implications <strong>of</strong> the different epochs<br />

represented. In addition, the denouement depicting Pu Yi's nostalgia for his previous life, and<br />

his eagerness to prove his past identity, leaves viewers uncertain as to whether he has really<br />

changed; behind it is a discernible authorial presence creating an ending which blocks the<br />

viewer's cognitive expectation <strong>of</strong> evolution on the protagonist's part.<br />

Conclusion<br />

Despite Bertolucci's intention <strong>of</strong> creating a film depicting a human journey from darkness to<br />

light, (Ranvaud, 1987: 277) Pu Yi's transformation from emperor to citizen evokes Socci's<br />

description <strong>of</strong> him resembling not a new man but someone discharged from a lunatic asylum,<br />

reduced to a mere shell <strong>of</strong> a man cultivating chrysanthemums at a botanical garden (Socci,<br />

1996: 75). But the film's depiction <strong>of</strong> Maoist China in terms <strong>of</strong> a social order which - in<br />

pursuing equality - had come to conceive <strong>of</strong> life as a monochrome reality where any<br />

possibility for diversity was suppressed is substantially faithful. Bertolucci confirms this<br />

interpretation, admitting that he had felt 'the absence <strong>of</strong> the ghost <strong>of</strong> freedom' (Ranvaud,<br />

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1987: 237). So, considering the film's depiction <strong>of</strong> Pu Yi's quest for aesthetic beauty, one<br />

might consider his choice <strong>of</strong> horticulture as a way <strong>of</strong> continuing to enjoy multiple colours and<br />

forms. However, the luxurious atmosphere in the Forbidden City is always associated with<br />

the absolute power that the Emperors had; similarly, a cruel regime is embedded in the<br />

aesthetic beauty <strong>of</strong> the Manchurian court. In this respect the mise-en-scene indirectly<br />

highlights an issue related to independent and creative human thought, in terms <strong>of</strong> it being<br />

either subjected to exploitation in a capitalist social order, or a source <strong>of</strong> suspicion in an<br />

egalitarian social order; the issue is further complicated by the unexpected socio-political<br />

disgrace <strong>of</strong> the prison governor. This occurs after viewer alignment with the character's<br />

thought processes and his sense <strong>of</strong> justice and humanity, and his humiliation is compounded<br />

because it occurs at the hands <strong>of</strong> youngsters whose fanatical mistreatment <strong>of</strong> their fellow<br />

Communists is disconcerting on all levels. Therefore sympathy is generated towards the<br />

governor because his disgrace is perceived by the viewer as unjustified. The sequence also<br />

induces intellectual reflection as it implies that power ultimately reproduces its oppressive,<br />

negative facets, regardless <strong>of</strong> the forms that it assumes according to historical circumstances.<br />

The presence <strong>of</strong> these socio-political elements, although only implied, prevents the<br />

film from resulting in catharsis, as they create a narration that does not cloud viewers'<br />

judgment <strong>of</strong> reality, (Benjamin, 1966: 18) but which induces reflection on the portrayed<br />

events. Consequently, I have reservations about Yosefa Loshitzky's assessment <strong>of</strong> this stage<br />

<strong>of</strong> Bertolucci's career as a 'capitulation to Hollywood-style spectacle', with the Oscars as<br />

pro<strong>of</strong> <strong>of</strong> his 'total assimilation into mainstream cinema and the ultimate recognition <strong>of</strong> his<br />

conformism by the film industry' (Loshitsky, 1995: 201). In my view the Hollywood-style<br />

spectacle frequently features variants <strong>of</strong> the 'arrival <strong>of</strong> the cavalry' or the 'idealistic<br />

sentiment' - expressed either directly or metaphorically - as embodiments <strong>of</strong> the military or<br />

moral supremacy <strong>of</strong> the USA and/or the Western world. These values, <strong>of</strong> which Avatar<br />

236


(2009) is one recent, successful expression,(3) are absent in Bertolucci's work. Regarding the<br />

dichotomy between intellectual films and mainstream films, it is arguable that a balanced<br />

judgment must take into account the long debated notions that intellectual arthouse films are<br />

frequently received by limited audiences who already share the films' perspective or<br />

sensibility, and that 'popular' films are not necessarily politically conservative. Arguably, a<br />

progressive society needs both: the avant-garde as the intellectual beacon indicating new<br />

perspectives, and the popular as the vehicle to spread socio-political awareness. In the history<br />

<strong>of</strong> the Oscars, films such as Dr. Strangelove, (1964) Guess VWw 's Coming to Dinner, (1967)<br />

and Philadelphia (1993) have stimulated worldwide reflection on issues such as nuclear<br />

armaments, racism and homosexuality. Consideration should also be given to the effect that<br />

mainstream distribution and publicity can have on intelligent, low budget films after Oscar<br />

recognition, enabling them to reach global audiences as occurred with The Full Monty<br />

(1997).<br />

Loshitzky's evaluation stems from continuing to compare Bertolucci to Godard, but<br />

on closer scrutiny, the debate on Tfre Last Emperor and Bertolucci's subsequent films can no<br />

longer take place in an avant-garde context since Bertolucci departed from Godard's view on<br />

film-making decades earlier, with The Conformist. The Last Emperor indisputably initiated a<br />

phase in Bertolucci's work characterized by an emphasis on visual spectacle, his projects<br />

being supported by big budgets. But because none <strong>of</strong> these later films feature elements such<br />

as cathartic narratives or a direct identification with the screen protagonists, instead<br />

maintaining complex narrations <strong>of</strong>ten characterized by open endings and by a range <strong>of</strong><br />

intellectual resonances, arguably they do not conform to mainstream cinema codes. As<br />

discussed in the conclusion to Last Tango in Paris, I think that many <strong>of</strong> Bertolucci's post-<br />

Conformist films attempt to combine cinematic spectacle with components <strong>of</strong> auteur cinema,<br />

an approach which ultimately left the avant-garde connoisseur and the multiplex cinemagoer<br />

237


oth dissatisfied. When asked about Bertolucci, Italian mainstream cinemagoers <strong>of</strong>ten know<br />

his name, and might mention one or two titles from The Conformist onwards, but they always<br />

comment about the difficulty in understanding his films. By contrast, the viewers who take<br />

pleasure in the cognitive and intellectual activity required by the allusions and cross-<br />

references in the films will invariably be disappointed by the predominance <strong>of</strong> visual<br />

spectacle in Bertolucci's later work.<br />

Notes<br />

References<br />

Aisin Gioro Pu Yi, (1965,) From Emperor to Citizen: Autobiography <strong>of</strong> Aisin Gioro Pu Yi , transl. by<br />

W.J.F. Jenner, Peking: Foreign Languages Press.<br />

'A real dramaturgical synthesis to balance the uncertain relationship between history and metaphor is<br />

missing, but the direction <strong>of</strong> the film clearly stresses the second aspect, and therefore any negative<br />

remark on the factual plausibility <strong>of</strong> the mise-en-scene becomes futile'. Tullio Kezich, La Repubblica,<br />

October 1987, as re-presented in Inten>ista a Bernardo Bertolucci by Jean-Claude Mirabella, Pierre<br />

Pitiot (Rome: Gremese Editore, 1999) p. 106.<br />

Although Avatar narrates the struggle <strong>of</strong> a native population against an imperialist nation, the<br />

protagonist is a paraplegic former marine, who changes sides because he is in love with the daughter <strong>of</strong><br />

the indigenous chief. He predictably becomes their hero as they fight back, and their possible future<br />

leader. This narrative scheme, which is nonetheless supported by a glamorous depiction <strong>of</strong> the<br />

imperialist power, is effective in enabling audiences to leave the theatre in a mood <strong>of</strong> feelgood serenity,<br />

oblivious that the various real world Pandoras are facing a very different destiny from the fictive one.<br />

Aisin Gioro, Pu Yi (1965) From Emperor to Citizen: Autobiography <strong>of</strong> Aisin Gioro Pu Yi,<br />

translation from Chinese by Jenner, W.J.F., Peking: Foreign Languages Press.<br />

Benjamin, W. (1966) Understanding Brecht, translated from German by Bostock A., (ed.<br />

1973), London: NLB.<br />

Brooks, P. (1976) The Melodramatic Imagination: Balzac, Henry James, Melodrama, and the<br />

Mode <strong>of</strong> Excess, New Haven and London: Yale <strong>University</strong> Press.<br />

Burke, E. (1759) 'A Philosophical Enquiry into the Origin <strong>of</strong> Our Ideas <strong>of</strong> the Sublime and<br />

' Beautiful', in Ashfield, A. and de Bolla, P. (ed.) (1996) The Sublime: A Reader In<br />

British Eighteenth-Century Aesthetic Theory, Cambridge: Cambridge <strong>University</strong><br />

Press.<br />

Carroll, N. (1999) 'Film, Emotion and Genre', in Plantinga, C. and Smith, G. (ed.)<br />

Passionate Views, Baltimore: The John Hopkins <strong>University</strong> Press.<br />

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Gaut, B. (1999) 'Identification and Emotion in Narrative Films', in Plantinga, C. and Smith<br />

G. (ed.) Passionate Views, Baltimore: The John Hopkins <strong>University</strong> Press.<br />

Gibbs, J. (2002) Mise-en-scene: Film Style and Interpretation, London: Wallflower.<br />

Grodal, T. (1997) Moving Pictures, Oxford: Oxford <strong>University</strong> Press.<br />

Loshitzky, Y. (1995) The Radical Faces <strong>of</strong>GodardandBertolucci, Detroit: Wayne<br />

<strong>University</strong> Press.<br />

Mirabella, J.C. and Pitiot, P (1991) Intervista a Bemardo Bertolucci, Rome: Gremese<br />

Editore.<br />

Plantinga, C. (1999) 'The Scene <strong>of</strong> Empathy and the Human Face on Film', in Plantinga C.<br />

and Smith, G. (ed.) Passionate Views, Baltimore: The John Hopkins <strong>University</strong> Press.<br />

Ranvaud, D. (1987) 'Z 'Ultimo Imperatore di Bernardo Bertolucci', in Ungari E. (1982)<br />

Scene Madri di Bernardo Bertolucci, 2nd ed. 1987, Milan: Ubulibri.<br />

Reed, J.R. (1985) Decadent Style, Ohio: Ohio <strong>University</strong> Press.<br />

Riley, J. (1997) Chinese Theatre and the Actor in Performance, Cambridge: Cambridge<br />

<strong>University</strong> Press.<br />

Samerberg, L.O. (1991) Fact into Fiction: Documentary Realism in the Contemporary Novel,<br />

London: MacMillan Academic and Pr<strong>of</strong>essional Ltd.<br />

Socci, S. (1996) Bemardo Bertolucci, Milan: II Castoro Cinema.<br />

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te nel deserto/The Sheltering Sky: Time and Memory<br />

Bertolucci declared that after The Last Emperor he was looking for a subject that would<br />

allow him to 'put the soul under a microscope' and that in reading Paul Bowles's novel he<br />

was 'fascinated by the idea <strong>of</strong> these "figures in a landscape" so like the paintings <strong>of</strong> Caspar<br />

David Friederich' (Leys, 1990: 53). This declaration is pertinent to the following analysis,<br />

which outlines how Bertolucci uses the impact <strong>of</strong> the desert landscape on the protagonists'<br />

lives to represent the problems affecting human relationships in contemporary Western<br />

society. It will be argued that the film's approach is to highlight the diminishing importance<br />

<strong>of</strong> the memory <strong>of</strong> original human needs and desires in Western society, due to a radical<br />

change in the perception <strong>of</strong> time. In fact, the film is centred on its protagonists' gradual<br />

awareness <strong>of</strong> having lived their lives oblivious to the crucial meaning <strong>of</strong> existence, an<br />

awareness that leads to death or to a sense <strong>of</strong> perdition both in the individual's inner and<br />

outer worlds, hi studying the ways in which Bertolucci conveys the complex, cognitive<br />

experiences and also the intense, affective experiences <strong>of</strong> the subject, my analysis divides the<br />

film into three main conceptual elements: the representation <strong>of</strong> time, the representation <strong>of</strong> the<br />

sublime, and the representation <strong>of</strong> lyrical forms. The analysis also highlights how the film's<br />

montage and the retro quality <strong>of</strong> the mise-en-scene sustain and intertwine these theoretical<br />

facets throughout the film.<br />

Plot summary<br />

During the film's opening credits, clues emerge about the narrative's themes; time and<br />

memory. The credits roll against a background <strong>of</strong> black and white images, depicting a ship<br />

preparing for a transoceanic journey, which are given a sepia tone. It has been noted that the<br />

sepia tones invoke 'the nostalgic look <strong>of</strong> old 1950s postcards' (Loshitzky, 1995: 2). However,<br />

any interpretation <strong>of</strong> this aesthetic as an indication <strong>of</strong> nostalgia is somewhat simplistic, as the<br />

240


working class people depicted in these images evoke the mass emigration from Italy to the<br />

USA that occurred during periods <strong>of</strong> economic hardship. The brown colour is a device which<br />

immediately shapes viewers 5 cognitive and affective engagement, by positioning them at a<br />

temporal distance from the fictive world.<br />

The narrative, based on Bowles's novel, is set at the beginning <strong>of</strong> 1900 and concerns a<br />

tour <strong>of</strong> Africa - a place historically and mythically linked to man's birthplace - made by<br />

three Americans. There is a married couple, Port (John Malkovich) and Kit Moresby (Debra<br />

Winger), (a composer and writer respectively), and their entrepreneur friend George Tunner.<br />

They are intermittently joined by a British woman, Mrs Lyle, and her adult son Eric who has<br />

no apparent job. Port and Kit's marriage has lost much <strong>of</strong> its enthusiasm, and their present<br />

rapport, essentially a friendship, is clearly unsatisfactory for both. Port's contact with a<br />

different culture and immersion in a fascinating yet wild environment brings him to realize<br />

that he loves his wife deeply, although this realization arrives belatedly and he dies <strong>of</strong><br />

malaria. Kit feigns intellectual detachment and enjoys Tunner's amiable company, the latter<br />

clearly in love with her. But her impression <strong>of</strong> having everything under control is mistaken;<br />

after drinking too much, she allows herself to be seduced by Tunner. Later, she also belatedly<br />

declares her love to her dying husband. In shock, Kit runs away from the situation and,<br />

having joined a group <strong>of</strong> Tuareg, she passively becomes the sultan Belquassim's lover, until<br />

his wives banish her. Kit is rescued and returned to Western society but her rescue is<br />

incomplete, as she ultimately rejects being reunited with Tunner because she feels<br />

psychologically lost.<br />

The representation <strong>of</strong> time through subjective narration<br />

The two poles around which Bertolucci represents time are an intense subjectivity and a<br />

detachment from what Deleuze terms 'sensory-motor situations', (Deleuze 1989: 126)<br />

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intended as the conventional link between images and movement that accentuates an action,<br />

against which Deleuze posits the notion <strong>of</strong> a purely optical image to emphasize the concept <strong>of</strong><br />

time and elicit reflection. With regard to subjectivity, during the first part <strong>of</strong> the film, viewers<br />

experience the diegetic world and the landscape mainly through Port's POV, and,<br />

significantly, the shot that starts the film is a close-up <strong>of</strong> Port's feverish face framed from a<br />

high angle and upside down, as he opens his eyes and looks into the camera, as if to bring<br />

viewers inside his mind to follow what appears to be a flashback narration. The narration then<br />

adopts a slow pace to portray Port's adaptation to the different African concept <strong>of</strong> time,<br />

which revolves around the simple alternation <strong>of</strong> night and day. Additionally, the intellectual<br />

distance that Port puts between himself and the unfolding events creates a lack <strong>of</strong> immediacy<br />

and involvement which, in temporal terms, adds a vagueness to the passing <strong>of</strong> time, to the<br />

extent that in some sequences the boundary between reality and imagination is blurred.<br />

These characteristics reflect Grodal's theories regarding the effects <strong>of</strong> the passing <strong>of</strong><br />

time upon human subjectivity, Grodal asserting that temporal experiences are subjective and<br />

that they provide modal tones to visual fiction. He also observes that the elaboration <strong>of</strong><br />

subjectivity in film is <strong>of</strong>ten linked to restrictions; mise-en-scene, particularly lighting, can<br />

combine with camera angles to restrict the viewers' ability to see, thereby reducing their<br />

overall perception, and the outcome is that the constraints may trigger an emotional build-up<br />

that provides the subjective feeling (Grodal, 1977: 129). The visual restrictions that emerge<br />

from Port's POV generally originate from camera angles which, by revealing only a small<br />

portion at a time <strong>of</strong> the set, prevent a complete view <strong>of</strong> its space and content. Interior scenes<br />

are <strong>of</strong>ten weakly lit, and composed <strong>of</strong> dark shades <strong>of</strong> brown and green to contrast with<br />

intense orange and red rays <strong>of</strong> light which stream through <strong>of</strong>fscreen windows. This technique<br />

<strong>of</strong> a restricted perspective, combined with the peculiar lighting and slow paced sequences, is<br />

used to represent situations in which the protagonist is not in control <strong>of</strong> events, thus<br />

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strengthening viewers' alignment with Port's passive position.<br />

The film's use <strong>of</strong> slow paced sequences - based on long takes and minimal montage -<br />

is extensive, and this device alters the way a narrative event is experienced. Grodal outlines<br />

how 'temporal slowdown relocates the experience <strong>of</strong> the same images from an exterior to an<br />

interior space', which he terms the 'body-mind location* (Grodal, 1997: 130). Through this<br />

process, termed 'introjection'. the viewer's evaluation <strong>of</strong> narrative events shifts from an<br />

exterior space to a body-mind location so that physical phenomena are felt as mental states.<br />

As an example Grodal indicates the dark, wet streets in film noir that are experienced not as<br />

real but as representing mental states (Grodal 1997: 130). In The Sheltering Sky this process<br />

occurs in several sequences featuring Port, one <strong>of</strong> which conveys his spatial disorientation in<br />

an unknown city as dusk falls, while another portrays his encounter with a prostitute in the<br />

spatially indistinct environment <strong>of</strong> her tent, a dreamlike effect being created by glowing red<br />

light sources and the use <strong>of</strong> slow motion.<br />

A similar effect occurs when Port is in a state <strong>of</strong> delirium, lying on a stone platform;<br />

whether this is an interior or exterior shot remains unclear. He is encircled by musicians<br />

playing raucous music; the camera switches from a low angle representing Port's <strong>of</strong>ten<br />

blurred POV, to a straight-on angle not attributable to any diegetic character, a view<br />

restricting the viewer's perception <strong>of</strong> the space. Panning further left, the camera repeatedly<br />

frames a group <strong>of</strong> shepherds sitting with their sheep at their feet, observing the scene with<br />

silent detachment. The limited spatial perspectives, the bizarre frame compositions and the<br />

loud music all cue a nightmarish numbness to enhance Port's subjective viewpoint which is<br />

shared by viewers. The relentless African rhythms on the film's soundtrack during these<br />

sequences also evoke an otherworldly condition, a sensation which enables the scenes to be<br />

perceived as mental states rather than as real events. Therefore, while these sequences are<br />

emotionally keyed to Port's perspective, the lengthy takes and indistinct, unfamiliar<br />

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environments do not arouse tension, the latter also making it difficult for viewers to orient<br />

themselves cognitively and anticipate events.<br />

Representing time; self-conscious narration<br />

The sensation <strong>of</strong> sharing the characters' subjectivities is combined with a progressive sense<br />

<strong>of</strong> detachment caused by sensory-motor movement, Bertolucci eliciting this effect by using<br />

images that are characterized by minimum physical movement, and by using montage based<br />

on simple cuts. This strategy is described by Deleuze in his writing on the time-image in<br />

cinema, in which he distinguishes between the 'indirect representation <strong>of</strong> Time", which is<br />

conveyed by movement images through the intermediary <strong>of</strong> montage - this including the<br />

existence <strong>of</strong> a centre whether in spatial or narrative terms - and the 'direct representation <strong>of</strong><br />

Time' which is conveyed by static images that draw the eye in, images linked by false<br />

continuity shots that do not feature a centre <strong>of</strong> any sort. In the latter case, the 'image no<br />

longer has space and movement as its primary characteristics, but topology and time'<br />

(Deleuze, 1989: 128). The narrative <strong>of</strong> The Sheltering Sky is without a centre, this absence<br />

being confirmed at the start when Port and Kit admit the vagueness <strong>of</strong> their plans, consisting<br />

<strong>of</strong> travelling around for a year or two, without excluding the possibility <strong>of</strong> never returning<br />

home. The visual narration <strong>of</strong> the journey is based on a descriptive scheme that reduces a<br />

sense <strong>of</strong> impetus on the characters' part, especially so in the case <strong>of</strong> Port and Kit. Static,<br />

tableau-style images are constructed by the continual visual restrictions placed on the<br />

camera's POV by Bertolucci, up to a point where his framings <strong>of</strong>ten 'send' sections <strong>of</strong> the<br />

shot <strong>of</strong>fscreen, a technique which tends to draw attention to itself.<br />

These techniques, relative to a direct representation <strong>of</strong> time, serve to emphasize small<br />

details in the mise-en-scene and also the vastness <strong>of</strong> landscapes. The sense <strong>of</strong> fascination<br />

exerted by these panoramas upon viewers may be strong enough to induce an emotional<br />

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experience <strong>of</strong> being out <strong>of</strong> clock time. As Deleuze observes in commenting on Ozu's<br />

cinematic style, slow movements combined with a prolonged length <strong>of</strong> shot create moments<br />

<strong>of</strong> 'contemplation' that 'immediately bring about the mental and the physical, the real and the<br />

imaginary' (Deleuze, 1989: 16). Two effective examples <strong>of</strong> the real and imaginary fusing<br />

together occur in the film, shots where 'the action image disappears in favour <strong>of</strong> the purely<br />

visual image' (Deleuze 1989: 13). The first example is the quasi freeze frame that closes the<br />

opening credits and which shows a ship, shot from a high angle, as it enters the open sea with<br />

Port and Kit on board. Later there is an actual freeze frame <strong>of</strong> the train on which Kit and<br />

Tunner are sipping champagne; the train is suddenly framed from the outside, on a diagonal<br />

axis. It stands motionless like a relic in the middle <strong>of</strong> nowhere, surrounded by a still, silent<br />

landscape <strong>of</strong> white sand which forms a blurred horizon with the sea. The freeze frames,<br />

especially the latter, cue an intense aesthetic experience, yet they also increase viewers'<br />

awareness <strong>of</strong> the cinematic artifice involved - an awareness also elicited by several facial<br />

close-ups <strong>of</strong> Africans <strong>of</strong> different ages, sitting and silently looking into the camera. The shots<br />

introduce fragments <strong>of</strong> a documentary-style form into the film, perhaps with the aim <strong>of</strong><br />

eliciting reflection on the uncontaminated beauty that emerges from the gaze <strong>of</strong> these human<br />

portraits. The freeze frames and the portrait shots are undoubtedly detached from the story,<br />

and are therefore directly addressed to the audience as examples <strong>of</strong> self-conscious narration.<br />

Representing time through time-space ellipses<br />

Together with the absence <strong>of</strong> a centre and a predominantly non-action narrative, the third<br />

element constituting the direct representation <strong>of</strong> time, the false continuity shot, emerges<br />

frequently too. It takes the form <strong>of</strong> elliptical montage based on spatial and temporal gaps,<br />

indicating the omission <strong>of</strong> a 'discrete segment <strong>of</strong> fabula time' (Bordwell 1997: 82). The most<br />

substantial ellipse relates to the ship's journey from New York to Morocco, which is<br />

completely omitted. A simple cut shows a little boat being rowed ashore; a subsequent cut<br />

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introduces an image <strong>of</strong> Kit and Tunner in medium shot, as they emerge from nowhere and<br />

pause to contemplate the deserted place. When Port appears, Bertolucci reframes the scene<br />

from a distance to capture his movement. This longer shot is taken on an empty quayside<br />

which features a gigantic, rusting crane, evoking a past <strong>of</strong> industrial enterprise. There is no<br />

other human presence and no sound but their voices. Deleuze discusses film sequences in<br />

which characters 'literally emerge from time rather than coming from another place',<br />

(Deleuze, 1989: 39) and this observation is relevant here. Two long journeys made across the<br />

country's arid terrain, by train and car, are also fragmented by montage and by restricted<br />

camera views, thereby increasing the abstractness <strong>of</strong> the spatial reference and also the sense<br />

<strong>of</strong> temporal indefiniteness. Similarly, the long duration <strong>of</strong> the Tuareg journey is constructed<br />

through the simple alternation <strong>of</strong> night and day images. With this kind <strong>of</strong> editing and nuanced<br />

narrative structure, Bertolucci constructs a suppressive narration which inhibits viewer<br />

engagement with the characters, and this viewer passivity is accentuated by not disclosing<br />

information about the motivations behind the protagonists' conduct (the reasons for the<br />

couple's unsatisfactory marriage, the thoughts driving Kit to abandon her husband's body).<br />

Representations <strong>of</strong> the sublime and its emotional impact<br />

The desert is the most significant reference point for the film*s representation <strong>of</strong> time, and it<br />

also serves to divide the narrative into two parts on account <strong>of</strong> the different aesthetic<br />

meanings conferred upon it by Bertolucci. In the first part <strong>of</strong> the film, the desert is used to<br />

evoke a sense <strong>of</strong> the sublime. Viewers are guided to this experience through the framings <strong>of</strong><br />

Port's intense facial expressions and bodily postures that relay the impact <strong>of</strong> experiencing a<br />

different temporal effect. This novel sense <strong>of</strong> time triggers thoughts <strong>of</strong> mortality -<br />

substantially suppressed by Western culture - which make Port realize that he has lost<br />

direction in his life and it also facilitates the re-emergence <strong>of</strong> sentiment towards Kit. The<br />

narrative culmination <strong>of</strong> this discovery is reached when Port takes Kit out into the desert,<br />

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where the contemplation <strong>of</strong> this infinite, timeless landscape provokes nostalgia for what<br />

might be termed the lost purity <strong>of</strong> purpose, a sensation so intense that it overwhelms Port and<br />

brings the couple's lovemaking to a halt.<br />

In this key sequence Bertolucci's camera set-up maximizes the visual impact <strong>of</strong><br />

contemplating the desert. It frames both characters from the back and pauses with Kit while<br />

Port reaches the edge <strong>of</strong> a promontory and turns to call her to join him. In positioning the<br />

camera behind Kit, slightly to her right, Bertolucci creates only a partial identification with<br />

her POV. This slightly more objective perspective enables viewers to feel like they are<br />

glimpsing the desert for themselves at first hand, rather than experiencing a scene through the<br />

eyes <strong>of</strong> another. Hence, the amazement elicited by the extreme long shot <strong>of</strong> the stunning,<br />

monochromatic, motionless vastness that forms a horizon together with the luminous sky,<br />

gains in intensity as Kit and the camera draw closer to the rock. Silently contemplating the<br />

landscape with feelings <strong>of</strong> bewilderment and grief, they couple begin to make love, Port<br />

indicating the sky as a solid shelter protecting them from what lies beyond - death - which he<br />

suggests they are perhaps both afraid <strong>of</strong>. This provokes a liberating outburst from Kit, whose<br />

resentment reveals that her physical detachment was ultimately meant to punish him. Port's<br />

reply that perhaps they are both afraid <strong>of</strong> loving too much, betrays a Western cultural attitude<br />

<strong>of</strong> choosing the safety <strong>of</strong> intellectual relationships to avoid the risk <strong>of</strong> emotional pain (a<br />

theme further explored in Stealing Beauty). The sequence ends with Port and Kit weeping<br />

desolately, both lying on the ground as if lifeless.<br />

Storaro confirmed that this sequence signified the core moment in the representation<br />

<strong>of</strong> Port and Kit's relationship. The director <strong>of</strong> photography explained that in dealing with the<br />

film's two-part structure - corresponding to the alternate predominance <strong>of</strong> the protagonists -<br />

he conceived <strong>of</strong> Port as the sun and Kit as the moon, which motivated his use <strong>of</strong> reds and<br />

oranges in the first part and then indigos and blues in the second. He affirmed: 'Perhaps it is<br />

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significant that as a couple, they only come to terms with their relationship as they sit and<br />

watch the sun go down, over a vast plain, at the time when the two lights pass each other. It is<br />

only then that they find their truth/ (Storaro, 1990: 88). The dialogue, the acting, the lighting<br />

and the use <strong>of</strong> different framings ranging from extreme long shots highlighting the<br />

insignificant vulnerability <strong>of</strong> Port and Kit in the desert - at times their act <strong>of</strong> lovemaking<br />

almost dissolves into the landscape - to extreme close-ups, are used to indicate that the<br />

characters' response to the desert's overwhelming natural presence is a form <strong>of</strong> emotional<br />

annihilation.<br />

The affective experience <strong>of</strong> the characters could be termed sublime. William Hope's<br />

cinematic contextualization <strong>of</strong> the sublime is relevant to this analysis <strong>of</strong> The Sheltering Sky,<br />

clarifying the concepts underpinning this sequence's emotional structure (Hope, 2002: 134).<br />

The aspects <strong>of</strong> the sublime relevant here include the overwhelming affective impact that<br />

natural entities can have on humans, and the link between experiences <strong>of</strong> the sublime and<br />

ethical aspirations, particularly the longing for an ideal life. Among natural entities as sources<br />

<strong>of</strong> the sublime, Dionysius Longinus indicated large rivers like the Nile and immense oceans<br />

as having awe-inspiring properties (Longinus, 1819: 28). In later debates on the concept,<br />

Longinus's indications were extended, and references to landscapes such as that featured in<br />

The Sheltering Sky can be found in Joseph Priestly's references to 'extensive plains' (Priestly,<br />

1777: 119-123), and Joseph Addison's observation that 'a vast uncultivated desert' can<br />

possess sublime qualities (Addison, 1712: 62). Philosophers agree that the inherent qualities<br />

<strong>of</strong> objects which elicit the sublime are those <strong>of</strong> vastness and uniformity, perspectives<br />

summarized by John Baillie: 'Where an object is vast and at the same time uniform, there is<br />

to the imagination no limits <strong>of</strong> its vastness, and the mind runs out into infinity (Baillie, 1747:<br />

90). These concepts are perfectly represented by the desert, since its size and uniformity <strong>of</strong><br />

colour, together with the idea <strong>of</strong> its origins going beyond human memory, elicit a sense <strong>of</strong> the<br />

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infinite.<br />

In his discussion <strong>of</strong> sources <strong>of</strong> the sublime, Edmund Burke stated that it must elicit a<br />

sense <strong>of</strong> pain and danger, from which 'the passions which belong to self-preservation' are<br />

triggered. Among these passions Burke identified sentiments connected with love,<br />

particularly 'a mode <strong>of</strong> uneasiness that is when an idea <strong>of</strong> its object is excited in the mind<br />

with an idea at the same time <strong>of</strong> having irretrievably lost it' (Burke, 1759: 132). Their<br />

experience <strong>of</strong> the sublime affects Port and Kit pr<strong>of</strong>oundly, and their pain arises from an<br />

awareness <strong>of</strong> having lost each other's love. Moreover, by inspiring a more expansive idea <strong>of</strong><br />

existence, the sublime generates in both characters a sense <strong>of</strong> defeat for having lost the initial<br />

idealism <strong>of</strong> their marriage, and this leads to their emotional collapse. In this context, it is<br />

arguable that a concept that Bertolucci used to describe the rapport between the protagonists<br />

<strong>of</strong> Last Tango in Paris, the notion that 'every relationship is condemned to change" in terms<br />

<strong>of</strong> there always being 'a sense <strong>of</strong> loss', (Bachmann, 1973: 99) is also embodied by Port and<br />

Kit. By representing so intensely the infinite through the desert's timeless and<br />

uncontaminated beauty, the long takes cue a perception <strong>of</strong> the Sahara as the catalyst for this<br />

moment <strong>of</strong> true communication between the protagonists (the last one occurring at the dying<br />

Port's bedside) as well as the consequent sense <strong>of</strong> melancholia felt by them. In the film's<br />

subsequent sequences, the viewer's hypothesis about a possible change in the couple's<br />

relationship after the desert excursion is confirmed by the narrative depicting a revival <strong>of</strong><br />

Port's aspirations. He starts writing music again, he sends Tunner away with a stratagem, and<br />

behaves more appropriately towards Kit to revitalize his marriage.<br />

The representation <strong>of</strong> lyrical forms<br />

In the second part <strong>of</strong> the film, which mainly depicts the journey <strong>of</strong> the Tuareg people across<br />

the desert, the aesthetic meaning cast on the desert is that <strong>of</strong> an enchanting beauty that moves<br />

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viewers towards a state <strong>of</strong> psychological abandon as regards time. This narrative strand<br />

depicts the splendour <strong>of</strong> sunsets and dawns in the desert in such a way that a timeless<br />

experience is created, fused with an allegorical impression <strong>of</strong> an original, unadulterated,<br />

terrestrial existence. Apart from the extensive use <strong>of</strong> long shots, the underlying aesthetic in<br />

these sequences is related to the construction <strong>of</strong> lyrical forms; drawing on Grodal's research,<br />

two lyrical elements can be identified: light and rhythmic phenomena. Grodal explains that<br />

when light is deployed to draw attention to itself, the evaluation <strong>of</strong> a film's reality status and<br />

its temporal status is affected because the reality <strong>of</strong> the diegesis dissolves and the viewing<br />

experience becomes more achronic (Grodal, 1997: 153). The spectacular light <strong>of</strong> the sunsets<br />

and dawns on the desert's red sand removes corporeality from life forms - such as humans<br />

and camels - within this landscape; in the intense daylight, they seem made <strong>of</strong> paper, and at<br />

night, their movements resemble a theatre <strong>of</strong> shadows. The result is that these images elicit<br />

pure contemplation from the film's viewers, a form <strong>of</strong> engagement that cancels the temporal<br />

and the spatial dimensions <strong>of</strong> the sequences. On the impact <strong>of</strong> light upon viewers, Storaro<br />

affirms:<br />

Light is a physical thing. It enters the eye, and therefore the brains <strong>of</strong> the people who are looking at it.<br />

The wavelengths <strong>of</strong> the various tones impart particular psychological signals, which the audience<br />

absorbs. It alters their blood pressure, their metabolism, their physical input. It is my work to tell the<br />

story <strong>of</strong> the script, in this case the story <strong>of</strong> Port and Kit, carefully employing my understanding <strong>of</strong> these<br />

principles, while writing with the light (Storaro, 1990: 88).<br />

Grodal suggests that rhythmic phenomena also have lyrical potential; rhythm within<br />

films - whether in the form <strong>of</strong> beats on a soundtrack, montage patterns, or camera movement<br />

- is connected with the 'autonomic processes <strong>of</strong> the body\ The abovementioned techniques<br />

are most important for 'representing a non-telic, non-object directed activity', (Grodal, 1997:<br />

153) because they can change how time is perceived, hi The Sheltering Sky, rhythm is created<br />

by camera movement reproducing the swaying motion <strong>of</strong> the camels during the Tuareg<br />

journey. Given that the camera is also the viewers' perceptual outlet into the filmic space, the<br />

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camera's 'symbiotic fusion' with the camels is shared by them. Viewers are also closely<br />

aligned with Kit during the journey through repeated POV shots, and share her sense <strong>of</strong><br />

abandon, becoming oblivious to the cultural world to which she belongs.<br />

Femininity and the destiny <strong>of</strong> female fulfilment<br />

To portray Kit's devastation at Port's death, especially after having reached a mutual<br />

understanding, Debra Winger portrays the character extremely passively - she never really<br />

speaks - to convey estrangement from her past life. Her intense sexual relationship with<br />

Belquassim is linked to the issue <strong>of</strong> identity, as its origins can be found in a concept that<br />

Bertolucci explored in Last Tango in Pans, with the addition that here the use <strong>of</strong> verbal<br />

language is erased altogether. By having Kit and Belquassim re-enact the sexual experience<br />

<strong>of</strong> Paul and Jeanne who also met in seclusion, ignorant <strong>of</strong> each other's identity, Bertolucci<br />

confirms his idea that only the annulment <strong>of</strong> memory, and consequently <strong>of</strong> one's own<br />

identity, can temporarily allow a fusion with the Other and a free joyful sexuality. Like Paul<br />

in the Paris apartment. Kit finds in this sensual seclusion a sort <strong>of</strong> limbo in which pressing<br />

questions disappear. Between the two films there is also some similarity in the mise-en-scene;<br />

Kit stands half undressed in a washtub while Belquassim playfully washes black paint <strong>of</strong>f<br />

her, and this is reminiscent <strong>of</strong> Jeanne being sponged down by Paul.<br />

Nonetheless Kit's destiny is almost as sad as Port's, given that she must live with the<br />

impossibility <strong>of</strong> being happy. Kit rejects traditional concepts <strong>of</strong> matrimony, with its<br />

established passive female roles that lead to psychological frustration, a mode <strong>of</strong> being that<br />

also affects long term sensual gratification. She also refuses more modern, pragmatic ways <strong>of</strong><br />

conducting relationships as typified by Tunner's perspective, because she knows the<br />

limitations <strong>of</strong> living purely for the moment. The pessimism implied by her situation emerges<br />

in Kit's admission that she is lost; it is an open ending that will find an attempted solution in<br />

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Stealing Beauty, where Kit's implied perspectives re-surface and are developed through<br />

characters - Lucy and Miranda - who are no longer afraid <strong>of</strong> declaring that their<br />

independence does not contradict their need for romance. Therefore, in The Sheltering Sky,<br />

although Kit's doubts and disorientation are mainly conveyed through mute expressivity, her<br />

destiny has an intellectual resonance that will induce reflection among viewers - not just<br />

female spectators - who are sensitive to the difficulties <strong>of</strong> women attaining self-realization in<br />

modern society, regardless <strong>of</strong> the laws and cultures in a given social order.<br />

La mode retro as the film's contextual frame<br />

In his analysis <strong>of</strong> cinema's use <strong>of</strong> metaframes which form a style or structure within which a<br />

film's action is embedded, Grodal asserts that 'the addresser establishes a complicity <strong>of</strong><br />

fascinations between himself and the spectator", the result being that 'the freedom and<br />

subjectivity <strong>of</strong> the viewer is moved from the level <strong>of</strong> fictional simulation <strong>of</strong> action to the level<br />

<strong>of</strong> perceptual and affective simulation' (Grodal, 1997: 229). He identifies in nostalgia and<br />

retro films the use <strong>of</strong> 'history and historical pattern as an embedded space for negotiating<br />

social roles and common denominators'; he differentiates the two film types by asserting that<br />

nostalgia films presuppose a mental model 'analogous to those used for memories', while 'la<br />

mode retro is a more self-conscious version <strong>of</strong> the nostalgia film\ in that 'the self-referential<br />

film highlights the fact that experience is a patterned social construction' (Grodal, 1997:<br />

230). More specifically, in the retro film, the double position <strong>of</strong> the viewer's reception<br />

situation is produced by the fact that:<br />

The retro film makes the coded character <strong>of</strong> systems <strong>of</strong> consciousness and pleasure explicit [...] so that<br />

present-day viewers know that other viewers also participate in their blend <strong>of</strong> nostalgic affect and<br />

distance, and therefore viewers share not only identification with the fiction but also the voyeuristic<br />

viewer-persona (Grodal 1997: 230).<br />

The connotation <strong>of</strong> The Sheltering Sky as a retro film centres on the fact that the film embeds<br />

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criticism <strong>of</strong> contemporary Western ideas <strong>of</strong> clock time (representing the broader frame) into<br />

the well-known pattern <strong>of</strong> romantic adventures within a colonial context, among which A<br />

Passage to India (1984) (1) seems to be its closest blueprint.<br />

In terms <strong>of</strong>mise-en-scene, many analogies emerge between the two films. Images <strong>of</strong> a<br />

transoceanic ship are used to create a sense <strong>of</strong> anticipation for extraordinary events. There is<br />

an evocation in The Sheltering Sky <strong>of</strong> Lean's glamorous colonialist decor and costumes, as<br />

opposed to the economic neglect <strong>of</strong> the local populations; both films depict the landscape<br />

through lighting and colour schemes that cue sensations <strong>of</strong> illusory enchantment; both films<br />

also exude a disquieting sense <strong>of</strong> death from the natural, exotic terrain, such as the presence<br />

<strong>of</strong> crocodiles in rivers and snakes in the desert. Similarly, hallucinations as a result <strong>of</strong> being<br />

immersed in Otherness affect the films" most fragile characters, Adele and Port.<br />

Thematically, both narratives focus on the encounter between West and East and present a<br />

dichotomy in which Western superiority complexes are juxtaposed with enlightened Western<br />

sensitivity; in The Sheltering Sky, the Lyles and Tunner (although in a different way) evoke<br />

the colonialist attitude <strong>of</strong> the British expatriates in India in Lean's film, whereas Port and Kit<br />

evoke the self-questioning attitude <strong>of</strong> Mrs. Moore and Adele.<br />

hi both films it is a tuneless natural entity - the river Ganges and the Sahara desert -<br />

that elicits in characters and viewers a sense <strong>of</strong> fragility and inadequacy, accompanied by a<br />

rediscovery <strong>of</strong> spirituality and sensuality that had been erased by a Western culture entrapped<br />

in its social patterns. Both films present a dramatic impact on their protagonists: Port and Mrs<br />

Moore die while Adele and Kit see their Western identity questioned forever. Therefore, it is<br />

arguable that the underlying significance in this scheme is not one <strong>of</strong> a 'West symbolically<br />

annihilated by the East" (Loshitzky, 1995: 132); it is more subtle. Returning to the dichotomy<br />

within the Western psyche outlined above, what occurs is an implosion <strong>of</strong> Western values<br />

within the enlightened, sensitive Western conscience in its encounter with Eastern existential<br />

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values, given that both films present Western utilitarian pragmatism - embodied by the<br />

British expatriate community in Lean's film and Tunner in The Sheltering Sky - as unaffected<br />

by such an encounter.<br />

Therefore, the retro quality <strong>of</strong> the films' settings and mises-en-scene impacts on the<br />

affective and cognitive engagement <strong>of</strong> viewers. Emotionally, it revitalizes the past fascination<br />

that Western viewers experienced in discovering the East through a range <strong>of</strong> literary and<br />

cultural media; cognitively, the films activate viewer recognition <strong>of</strong> the different character<br />

traits <strong>of</strong> Westerners immersed in other cultures and <strong>of</strong> narrative schemes related to journeys<br />

in unfamiliar locations. Additionally, the films use the viewer's renewed fascination in new<br />

cultural encounters to invite socio-political reflection; in A Passage to India, these relate to<br />

colonialism, whereas in The Sheltering Sky they concern the negative influence that the<br />

Western cultural notion <strong>of</strong> time has had on human relations. By marginalizing mortality from<br />

everyday life, Western culture has created a deceptive impression <strong>of</strong> there being endless time<br />

to fulfil one's intimate desires with the effect that these can end up being deferred indefinitely<br />

and never realized. This is a concept summarized and poetically conveyed by Bowles's final<br />

monologue.<br />

Conclusion<br />

The Sheltering Sky fills viewers' senses with colours, light and boundless space, reducing the<br />

logical flow <strong>of</strong> their thought processes as they follow the narrative's atypical temporal<br />

schemata. Nevertheless, the two main emotions cued by the mise-en-scene - fascination and<br />

melancholy - are the means with which Bertolucci stimulates reflection about human<br />

relationships in contemporary Western society. In particular, the film questions Western<br />

perceptions <strong>of</strong> time which trap individuals in a spiral <strong>of</strong> commitments that inhibits their<br />

ability to question their life choices, an existence that leads to solitude and unhappiness. This<br />

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is conveyed by Port's bleak awareness <strong>of</strong> having wasted precious time, and by Kit's<br />

realization that it is impossible to reacquire it. The subsequent release <strong>of</strong> Little Buddha also<br />

focused on the contrast between Western and Eastern concepts <strong>of</strong> time, and this confirms the<br />

issue's significance for Bertolucci. A final consideration <strong>of</strong> the film should perhaps centre on<br />

its Italian title, 77 te nel deserto (Tea in the Desert), since it represents a significant example<br />

<strong>of</strong> a misleading title. It originates from the anecdote narrated in the film by the prostitute<br />

about three girls, who, having been invited to have tea in the desert, perish there, but the<br />

reference passes largely unnoticed due to the scene's predominant sensuality. The Italian title<br />

cast an aura <strong>of</strong> superficial exoticism over the film which influenced some critics who could<br />

not resist comparing it to 'a travel agency advertisement' (Socci, 1996: 80). Again, while<br />

considering the degree <strong>of</strong> visual spectacle contained in the film, such perspectives arguably<br />

fail to recognize the film's attempt to raise questions regarding Western lifestyles and<br />

civilization. Bertolucci voiced this concern, noting that 'the isolated melancholy experienced<br />

by Port and Kit forty years ago has now assumed epidemic proportions', and that in the<br />

'renewed search for alternative values' it was not surprising that 'existentialism should once<br />

again take hold <strong>of</strong> the popular imagination' (Leys, 1990: 58-59).<br />

Notes<br />

1. Mrs. Moore and Adele, her daughter-in-law, travel from England to India to visit her son and Adele's<br />

fiance, who is a magistrate <strong>of</strong> the Empire. They are critical <strong>of</strong> colonialist attitudes and develop a sincere<br />

interest and sentiment <strong>of</strong> friendship towards the locals, which dramatically affects their lives.<br />

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References<br />

Addison, J. (1712) from 'The Spectator' n. 412, in Ashfield, A. and De Bolla, P. (ed.) (1996)<br />

The Sublime: A Reader In British Eighteenth-Century Aesthetic Theory, Cambridge:<br />

Cambridge <strong>University</strong> Press.<br />

Bachmann, G. (1973) 'Every Sexual Relationship Is Condemned: An Interview with<br />

Bernardo Bertoluccf, in Gerard, F.S., Kline, T.J. and Sklarew, B. (ed.) (2000)<br />

Bernardo Bertolucci Interviews, Jackson: <strong>University</strong> Press <strong>of</strong> Mississippi.<br />

Baillie , J. (1747) 'An Essay on the Sublime', in Ashfield, A. and De Bolla, P. (ed.) (1996)<br />

The Sublime: A Reader In British Eighteenth-Century Aesthetic Theory, Cambridge:<br />

Cambridge <strong>University</strong> Press.<br />

Bordwell, D. (1995) Narration in the Fiction Film, London: Routledge.<br />

Burke, E. (1759) 'A Philosophical Enquiry into the Origin <strong>of</strong> our Ideas <strong>of</strong> the Sublime and<br />

Beautiful', in Ashfield, A. and De Bolla, P. (ed.) (1996) Tire Sublime: A Reader In<br />

British Eighteenth-Century Aesthetic TJieory, Cambridge: Cambridge <strong>University</strong><br />

Press.<br />

Deleuze, G. (1989) Cinema 2 Tlie Time-Image, London: The Athlone Press.<br />

Grodal, T. (1997) Moving Pictures, Oxford: Oxford <strong>University</strong> Press.<br />

Hope, W. (2002) "The Cinematic Sublime in Tornatore's La Leggenda del Pianista<br />

sull 'Oceano, in Italian Studies, Volume LVII, pp. 133-150.<br />

Leys, R. (1990) 'The Physiology <strong>of</strong> Feelings \ in Negri L. And Gerard F.S. Bertolucci,<br />

Bowles: The Sheltering Sky, London and Sidney: Scribners a Division <strong>of</strong> Macdonald<br />

& Co. (Publishers).<br />

Longinus, D. (1743) 'From Dionysius Longinus on the Sublime', translated from Greek by<br />

Smith W., in Ashfield, A. and De Bolla, P. (ed.) (1996) The Sublime: A Reader In<br />

British Eighteenth-Century Aesthetic Theory, Cambridge: Cambridge <strong>University</strong><br />

Press.<br />

Loshitzky, Y. (1995) The Radical Faces <strong>of</strong> Godard and Bertolucci, Detroit: Wayne<br />

<strong>University</strong> Press.<br />

Priestly, J. (Mil} 'A Course <strong>of</strong> Lectures on Oratory and Criticism', in Ashfield, A. and De<br />

Bolla, P. (ed.) (1996) The Sublime: A Reader In British Eighteenth-Century Aesthetic<br />

Theory, Cambridge: Cambridge <strong>University</strong> Press.<br />

Socci, S. (1996) Bernardo Bertolucci, Milan: II Castoro Cinema.<br />

Storaro, V. (1990) 'Writing with Light', in Negri, L. and Gerard, F.S.,(ed.) Bertolucci,<br />

Bowles: The Sheltering Sky, London and Sidney: Scribners a Division <strong>of</strong> Macdonald<br />

& Co. (Publishers).<br />

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Piccolo Buddha /Little Buddha: A Journey into the Ethical through the Marvellous<br />

After The Last Emperor and The Sheltering Sky, which were both based on literary works,<br />

Piccolo Buddha/Little Buddha (1993) marked Bertolucci's return to developing and writing<br />

his films' scripts. This detail, together with a contemporary critical observation that<br />

recognized the value <strong>of</strong> the film's philosophical basis, (Grazzini 1999: 111-112) has<br />

prompted the following chapter to venture beyond the assumption that it centres on a<br />

simplistic opposition between West and East, in terms <strong>of</strong> unhappiness versus happiness in<br />

personal and societal contexts (Niogret 1999: 111). Hence, I will explore two themes in the<br />

film, the first represented by a mental journey into the essence <strong>of</strong> ethics, during which the<br />

West/East opposition becomes a more complex issue. This emerges from the notion that, far<br />

from denying the value <strong>of</strong> Western culture, the film warns against the distortion generated by<br />

its self-centredness.<br />

The second <strong>of</strong> the film's cornerstones is based on a visual journey during which its<br />

opulent visuals appear motivated not so much by Bertolucci's interest in making a<br />

'sumptuous work', (Socci, 1996: 83) but by an expression <strong>of</strong> his own personality through the<br />

creation <strong>of</strong> an aesthetic experience that evokes the emotional impact <strong>of</strong> wonder and<br />

amazement upon humanity and the nurturing <strong>of</strong> the human imagination. This archetypal<br />

sensation, the film implies, is dying out nowadays as a consequence <strong>of</strong> the pragmatism that<br />

dominates Western society. To clarify the nature <strong>of</strong> the film s journey theme, this chapter will<br />

analyse the two segments which compose the film, these relating to the depiction <strong>of</strong> the<br />

Buddha/Prince Siddhartha's life within the story <strong>of</strong> a young boy assumed to be the<br />

reincarnation <strong>of</strong> the Dalai Lama. As a consequence, it will be indicated how the viewer's<br />

cognitive and affective engagement is split between these two segments as they require<br />

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different positions and elicit different emotional responses, such as melancholy and wonder.<br />

Plot summary<br />

The opening credits accompany a beautiful illustrated tale narrated in voiceover, which tells<br />

the story <strong>of</strong> a priest who halts the sacrifice <strong>of</strong> a goat when the animal reveals that it had been<br />

a priest in its previous life. The narrator is revealed to be a Buddhist monk - Lama Norbu -<br />

who is reading to a class <strong>of</strong> children. Having received a letter containing a tip-<strong>of</strong>f, Lama<br />

Norbu, accompanied by a group <strong>of</strong> acolytes, leaves his monastery in Bhutan to travel to<br />

Seattle where a boy - Jesse Conrad - has been identified as the possible reincarnation <strong>of</strong> the<br />

late Dalai Lama, Lama Dorje. The monks' visit to Jesse's parents, Lisa and Dean, draws a<br />

polite but sceptical response, although when they read a book about Prince Siddhartha s life,<br />

an affinity with Buddhism begins to evolve. The book introduces the visual splendour <strong>of</strong> the<br />

Buddha's legendary birth and life; a narration that, from this point in the film, alternates with<br />

the unfolding <strong>of</strong> the present day narrative. When Jesse enquires about Lama Norbu's illness,<br />

the monk introduces him to the concept <strong>of</strong> impermanence, while Siddhartha discovers death<br />

as the ultimate human suffering, and Dean experiences grief as his business partner commits<br />

suicide after going bankrupt, Dean being briefly tempted to repeat the gesture himself.<br />

Siddhartha's decision to embrace an ascetic lifestyle, driven by the desire to find a solution to<br />

human sufferings, is mirrored by Dean's decision to accompany Jesse to Bhutan, hoping that<br />

the journey will help him to understand 'what to do with the rest <strong>of</strong> his life'.<br />

Two other possible candidates for the reincarnation emerge: Raju, from Katmandu,<br />

and Gita, a rajah's niece, whom they meet in India. During the journey, the beauty <strong>of</strong> India's<br />

landscape and the poverty <strong>of</strong> its population are witnessed, whereas the affective bond<br />

between the children is strengthened as they participate in the final confrontation between<br />

Siddhartha and the Lord <strong>of</strong> Darkness (Mara). At the monastery in Bhutan, Lama Norbu<br />

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concludes that all three children are part <strong>of</strong> Lama Dorje's reincarnation, representing the<br />

Body, the Mind, and the Speech respectively. Soon after, he passes away, and his ashes are<br />

given to the children who decide to commit them to the three natural elements <strong>of</strong> air (Raju),<br />

earth (Gita) and water (Jesse). The final sequences depict the Conrad family expecting their<br />

second child, united in assisting Jesse as he undertakes his sombre, ultimate task.<br />

A dual cognitive scheme<br />

The tw<strong>of</strong>old level <strong>of</strong> the film's narrative is established from the beginning by the appearance<br />

<strong>of</strong> a caption against the dark screen, immediately followed by the warm colours associated<br />

with the embedded tale <strong>of</strong> Siddhartha's life - narrated in a past tense voiceover. The caption<br />

reads: This film is inspired by the true life stories <strong>of</strong> several children and their extraordinary<br />

voyage <strong>of</strong> discovery'; the following colour images depict an ancient parchment being<br />

unwrapped, while the film's title appears on a bookrest and a voiceover utters the words<br />

'Once upon a time...'. In this way, viewers are informed that a double thread will run through<br />

the film, pertaining to both the worlds <strong>of</strong> reality and imagination. The real world narrative is<br />

based on the search for Lama Dorje's reincarnation, which represents the motivation<br />

providing the narrative with impetus and a forward-directed quality. It is a classic telic<br />

narration which - by being based on 'models <strong>of</strong> goals and motivations conceptualized as<br />

exterior-future-preferred states' - (Grodal, 1997: 118) provides a guide for viewers as they<br />

hypothesize about narrative developments. This linearity is envisaged by Grodal in the<br />

'interrelatedness <strong>of</strong> the forward-directed processes' <strong>of</strong> cognitive activities 'and the backward-<br />

directed influence <strong>of</strong> goals [...] which are felt as causal determinants <strong>of</strong> the narrative and the<br />

narrative actants' (Grodal, 1997: 118). The goal-structure usually implies several goals which<br />

may either be 'independent, dependent on each other or mutually conflicting' (Grodal 1997:<br />

118).<br />

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In Little Buddha the goals are initially independent: Lama Norbu aims to find the<br />

Dalai Lama's reincarnation, whereas Dean aims to find a different approach to life. The<br />

narrative remains uncomplicated through the absence <strong>of</strong> 'process-oriented' elements, (Grodal<br />

1997: 119) but the expected outcome is delayed by the revelation that, besides Jesse, there are<br />

two other individuals who are possible reincarnations <strong>of</strong> the Dalai Lama. The development is<br />

designed to create suspense and force viewers to re-orient their hypothesis-making.<br />

Bertolucci's tendency to manipulate viewers' narrative expectations is reaffirmed by Little<br />

Buddha which ultimately confounds the expected outcome by introducing the final twist <strong>of</strong><br />

none <strong>of</strong> the youngsters actually being the definitive reincarnation <strong>of</strong> Tibet's spiritual leader.<br />

The extended narration <strong>of</strong> the gratifying journey in India takes on a paratelic mode that<br />

temporarily sidelines the two telic narrations, diverting the viewer's attention to the non goal-<br />

directed aspects <strong>of</strong> the narrative segment, which are intended to induce reflections on non<br />

Western-centred ideas <strong>of</strong> life.<br />

By contrast the narration <strong>of</strong> Siddhartha's life is connoted by a dreamlike and<br />

mythological quality designed to situate viewers in a passive position, in order to achieve the<br />

maximum affective impact. In this narrative strand, elements <strong>of</strong> the mise-en-scene signal to<br />

viewers that they are transcending reality, thus facilitating the passage from one mode <strong>of</strong><br />

engagement to the other. They include a past-tense voiceover narration, changes in the colour<br />

scheme, overexposed lighting, and theatrical costumes and make-up. These are the main<br />

elements that enable viewers to determine a scene's reality status, its deviation from normal<br />

perception, and its perceptual intensity (Grodal 1997: 30-31). The past tense voiceover shifts<br />

the narration away from the vividness <strong>of</strong> the present, and the 'deviation from normal<br />

perception' that alters the viewing experience in Little Buddha stems from a vibrant golden<br />

tone that characterizes an exotic and long gone world. This colour scheme endows the<br />

aestheticized images with an unreal quality, which is further emphasized by a perceptual<br />

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intensity created by stylized lighting that fills the landscape with brightness, and at other<br />

times by a pervading mist that envelops the royal palace. The result is the creation <strong>of</strong> a<br />

dreamlike sensation as all three techniques affect normal perception by rendering characters<br />

and environments remote and weightless.<br />

The otherworldly sensation created by the combination <strong>of</strong> pastness and altered<br />

perceptual elements is not affected by the present tense dialogue between Siddhartha and the<br />

other characters, as this fails to create immediacy due to the theatrical aesthetic <strong>of</strong> the set,<br />

costumes and make-up, which emphasize the staged nature <strong>of</strong> the images. To conclude the<br />

analysis <strong>of</strong> the reality status <strong>of</strong> Little Buddha, it is worth considering Grodal's observation<br />

that when a film portrays the co-existence <strong>of</strong> real and unreal situations, 'the change <strong>of</strong> focus<br />

<strong>of</strong> attention may highlight the systems <strong>of</strong> reality-representation" (Grodal 1997: 35). This view<br />

reflects the concept that the mise-en-scene <strong>of</strong> Little Buddha is designed to make viewers<br />

switch between two levels <strong>of</strong> perception, and reinforces this chapter's argument that the<br />

gradual effacement <strong>of</strong> the boundary between the two narrations constitutes the film's essence<br />

- reflecting an intention to get viewers to re-experience and relate to the marvellous in the<br />

way that a child readily welcomes even extraordinary events as real. Consequently, viewers<br />

become accustomed to sequences in which the three children take part in Prince Siddhartha's<br />

narration, such as the scene where the children first view their reflections in a illusionary<br />

pond, are shaken by a howling wind and a sea storm, before eventually playing with a<br />

cascade <strong>of</strong> flaming arrows transmuted into a cascade <strong>of</strong> petals.<br />

A dual process <strong>of</strong> viewer identification<br />

This dual cognitive scheme is emphasized by the existence <strong>of</strong> a dual process <strong>of</strong> identification<br />

- as outlined in Murray Smith's work - which serves the tw<strong>of</strong>old purpose <strong>of</strong> the film; this<br />

consists <strong>of</strong> introducing viewers to, and arousing their interest in, Buddhist principles and<br />

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captivating them through the spellbinding narration <strong>of</strong> Siddhartha's life, hi this respect, this<br />

chapter's view is that the narrative choice <strong>of</strong> leaving undetermined the issue <strong>of</strong> reincarnation<br />

represents the film's ideological basis <strong>of</strong> promoting recognition <strong>of</strong> the universal values per se<br />

inherent in Buddhist principles, as it places an emphasis on them rather than on the religion's<br />

central belief in reincarnation. This interpretation is supported by the fact that the character<br />

eliciting the strongest forms <strong>of</strong> viewer attachment within the film's real world narration is not<br />

Jesse, despite his sustained screen presence, but Dean, to whom the narrative gives the role <strong>of</strong><br />

embodying Western perspectives with regard to Buddhism. A viewer's 'perception <strong>of</strong><br />

narrative action' occurs 'through identification with subject positions instantiated by<br />

characters' (Smith M., 1995: 78) and in Little Buddha, Dean's character plainly expresses a<br />

developing knowledge and respect for Buddhist traditions, concern for the oppression caused<br />

by the Chinese government in Tibet, and scepticism concerning the principle <strong>of</strong><br />

reincarnation; consequently, these cognitive and intellectual traits merge into a "person<br />

schema' that viewers can easily recognize (Smith M., 1995: 82). Besides this, close<br />

alignment with Dean is created by giving viewers access to the character s feelings in the<br />

aftermath <strong>of</strong> his colleague's suicide and to his anxiety over possible bankruptcy;<br />

consequently, viewers broadly empathize with the character's diminishing self confidence.<br />

The turning point is Lama Norbu's serene comment <strong>of</strong> 'Why should you?' at Dean's<br />

declaration <strong>of</strong> disbelief in reincarnation, because while it distances the Western culture shared<br />

by the character and by most <strong>of</strong> the film's viewers from any commitment to believe, it elicits<br />

an interest in knowing more about Buddhist principles to make an informed evaluation <strong>of</strong><br />

their worth.<br />

Dean's encounter with Buddhist culture is experienced primarily through Jesse's<br />

innocent gaze, since his curiosity about a different existential dimension becomes contagious,<br />

hi this context, the story <strong>of</strong> Siddhartha's life, which derives its momentum from the reading<br />

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<strong>of</strong> a children's book, takes on a precise meaning in terms <strong>of</strong> the way it represents Bertolucci's<br />

attempt to induce viewers to adopt the same docile attitude towards the marvellous that<br />

typifies childhood. In the film's structure, therefore, Jesse represents a second 'engaging<br />

character' with the task <strong>of</strong> embodying the metaphorical door through which viewers enter the<br />

film's imaginative segment, and then the medium through which they might cross the<br />

boundary between reality and imagination when the mise-en-scene slowly merges the two<br />

narrative segments by having the children from the film's present day narrative continuum<br />

(their position mirroring the viewer's position) become physically involved in Siddhartha's<br />

astonishing tale. Consequently, the disappearing demarcation line between the two narratives<br />

ensures that the sense <strong>of</strong> wonder and spiritual awareness elicited by Siddhartha's narrative<br />

eventually pervades the film's contemporary realism.<br />

The use <strong>of</strong> archetypes to engender intellectual inferences; Buddhism, Greek mythology<br />

and Christianity<br />

Unlike the whimsical fantasy imagery that appears in mainstream, commercial cinema, Little<br />

Buddha makes use <strong>of</strong> archetypal imagery designed to stir viewers' most intimate (though<br />

forgotten) desires and needs. An archetype, in fact, involves a deeper emotional experience<br />

through its fundamental, intercultural links to primordial images expressing human wonder<br />

about life and its phenomena. Little Buddha draws on three primary patterns: the child<br />

symbolizing a new beginning that is open to all possibilities; the hero/saviour symbolizing<br />

potential changes in world orders; and the supernatural symbolizing the divine or special<br />

nature <strong>of</strong> the hero - indicated in the film by trees spontaneously bending towards<br />

Siddhartha's mother to shelter her during the baby's birth and by a cobra that grows to giant<br />

proportions and rears its head to protect Siddhartha from the rain.<br />

The use <strong>of</strong> archetypes with their resonances might explain the mise-en-scene^<br />

effectiveness in cueing visual amazement as well as intellectual involvement. This is also due<br />

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to the film's strategy <strong>of</strong> amalgamating Buddhist themes with those deriving from two major<br />

cultural components which form the basis <strong>of</strong> Western perspectives towards individual and<br />

social suffering: Greek mythology and the figure <strong>of</strong> Christ. The implied cross-references are<br />

arguably intended to suggest why Western society continues to be trapped in existential<br />

unhappiness, and to encourage reflection on the different ways in which Western and Eastern<br />

parts <strong>of</strong> the world have come to perceive human suffering. The element <strong>of</strong> Greek myth re-<br />

elaborated in the film concerns Pandora's Box,(l) which tells the story <strong>of</strong> a woman who (like<br />

Siddhartha) is drawn by her curiosity to disobey an order and open a forbidden box. Her<br />

gesture liberates human sufferings related to old age, poverty, illness, and death that spread<br />

across the world, and it forces her to ease her guilt by spending the rest <strong>of</strong> her life trying to<br />

alleviate people's pain. In Little Buddha, Siddhartha's desire to look beyond the sanitized<br />

reality established for him by his father is comparable to the opening <strong>of</strong> Pandora's Box, the<br />

character discovering the sufferings in the same order. But as regards the sequence depicting<br />

death, the camera framing and the close-up <strong>of</strong> the dead man's feet evokes Andrea Mantegna's<br />

famous painting // Cristo morto / TJie Dead Christ, who is depicted lying on a marble c<strong>of</strong>fin,<br />

his feet positioned towards the forefront <strong>of</strong> the canvas.<br />

References to Christianity also appear at an earlier stage <strong>of</strong> the film, when baby<br />

Siddhartha is presented at the age <strong>of</strong> two already able to speak, as he says 'I have been born<br />

to save all creatures from suffering', which echoes Jesus's words as he declares that he has<br />

been sent into the world to take on his shoulders the original sin <strong>of</strong> Adam and Eve. The<br />

astronomer who asserts that Siddhartha 'will be the master <strong>of</strong> the world' resembles the Magi<br />

honouring Jesus as the future 'King <strong>of</strong> the Kings'. Later, the scene depicting Siddhartha's<br />

renunciation <strong>of</strong> his regal status draws on St. Francis's life, with the evocative rite <strong>of</strong> cutting<br />

his hair, and the slowing down <strong>of</strong> the take is intended to emphasize the gesture's symbolism.<br />

Moreover, the dialogue continues to establish parallels between Buddha and the figure <strong>of</strong><br />

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Jesus throughout Siddhartha's progressive awakening regarding the ways <strong>of</strong> the world. For<br />

instance, when he declares to his servant 'I am doing this for everyone' the words echo Jesus<br />

saying to his disciples 'My sacrifice is for everyone'. By underlining the analogies between<br />

Buddha and Jesus, the film elicits reflection on the fact that while Buddha's enlightenment<br />

leads to a personal decision and initiative against something that can be erased (expressed by<br />

Siddhartha's uttering 'I must find a remedy for suffering'), the laic ethic (passed down from<br />

Greek culture) and the Christian religion conceives suffering as a punishment people cannot<br />

escape, the latter conceiving that it can continue even after death. These cross-references<br />

strengthen this chapter's contention that Bertolucci's interest in Buddhism is a choice that<br />

leads him to imply that Buddhism is able to transcend the limits <strong>of</strong> other moral codes, which<br />

consist <strong>of</strong> variations <strong>of</strong> the notion <strong>of</strong> original sin (Pandora and Adam and Eve respectively),<br />

this entailing the individual's submissive acceptance <strong>of</strong> an unchangeable, sad reality. By<br />

contrast, the Buddhist concept <strong>of</strong> 'the present time' being the only time and reality that<br />

human beings know and can master, provides a free path to establish harmonious<br />

relationships with the inner self.<br />

The film's emotion structure and its implications regarding modern existence<br />

The film's emotional charge is not limited to the segment depicting the marvellous, but it also<br />

derives from the present day narrative through Bertolucci's depiction <strong>of</strong> the contrast between<br />

the Tibetans' serenity and the melancholy nature <strong>of</strong> Western life. Nonetheless, both cultural<br />

perspectives are characterized by a shared fascination for intellectual discoveries, as well as<br />

by a strong sense <strong>of</strong> cultural identity; the Tibetan monks recreate a multicoloured microcosm<br />

in the heart <strong>of</strong> Seattle, while Jesse travels through India and Bhutan with Western clothes,<br />

baseball cap, game-boy, and rucksack. In addition, each world is portrayed as possessing its<br />

own aesthetic beauty. This links two different strands <strong>of</strong> affective engagement into a single<br />

form within a narrative that implies equal respect towards the aesthetic and the intellectual<br />

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experiences generated by both worlds. The cinematic techniques used to obtain this result<br />

centre on the colour scheme, the acting style, and the dialogue. From the beginning <strong>of</strong> the<br />

film, viewers are presented with a strong chromatic contrast that places the warm oranges and<br />

reds <strong>of</strong> the monastery, built from natural materials and meant as a shelter from the outer<br />

environment, in contraposition with the elegant yet cold metallic blues and greys <strong>of</strong> Seattle's<br />

modem skyline and the Conrads' stylish house. The latter is built with refined materials and<br />

resembles a human aquarium overlooking the seascape through its glass walls. Although<br />

differing in style, the dwellings both represent a state <strong>of</strong> wellbeing, but the tones and colours<br />

associated with the Western world betray concerns which are also mirrored in the behaviour<br />

<strong>of</strong> Jesse's parents, who despite their apparent affective security and affluence look jaded and<br />

sombre.<br />

Lisa and Dean's disenchanted perspective characterizes the pragmatic gaze with<br />

which Western society views existence. Through their gaze the Tibetan monks' joyful<br />

tranquillity is perceived as amusing and even slightly suspicious for a modem society where<br />

people are constantly on guard. By contrast, the monks' spontaneity in appreciating Western<br />

progress without being in awe <strong>of</strong> it, elicits doubts concerning the West's confidence about its<br />

cultural supremacy. Evidence <strong>of</strong> this is contained in the sequence depicting the different<br />

approaches to astronomy shown by Lisa and the monk Sogyal. Although they both live in<br />

Seattle and teach maths, they conceive their subject differently: Sogyal links astronomy with<br />

human lives, his discipline generating endless amazement for him in terms <strong>of</strong> humanity<br />

somehow being influenced by the stars' infinite and timeless presence. By contrast Lisa<br />

simply replicates the Western concept <strong>of</strong> science as a means <strong>of</strong> expanding human knowledge<br />

to control world phenomena. The contrast between her condescending politeness and<br />

Sogyal's enthusiasm elicits the doubt that the price paid by Western society for modern<br />

thinking, which has brought abundant material comforts, has been the loss <strong>of</strong> more intimate<br />

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human feelings and desires. This interpretation is supported by the film's portrayal <strong>of</strong> suicide<br />

being perceived by Western society as a way to escape life's difficulties. The inclusion <strong>of</strong> this<br />

notion in the film implies that despite our advanced knowledge we remain unable to control<br />

our lives, and it indicates how our inner fragility remains intact regardless <strong>of</strong> technological<br />

progress.<br />

Dialogue plays a key role in concretizing the film's sense <strong>of</strong> equality between the two<br />

worlds, since the characters are all intelligent, perceptive and likeable. The monks patiently<br />

explain their culture and beliefs, serenely accepting Western scepticism. Emblematic <strong>of</strong> this<br />

is the scene in which Lama Norbu, nearing death, gives his watch to Dean while<br />

affectionately reproaching him with a smile: 'You still don't believe, do you?" Lisa and Dean,<br />

in turn, evaluate Buddhist ideas without dismissing them entirely. At Dean's concern about<br />

the possibility <strong>of</strong> being reincarnated as an ant that can be squashed, Lisa's rebuff is brusque:<br />

'People get squashed too'; Dean's sarcastic comment about Jesse's impending 'career' as a<br />

spiritual leader takes on a new meaning after his business partner's suicide, allowing him to<br />

see that an alternative, non-materialist lifepath might enable his son to avoid the stress <strong>of</strong><br />

contemporary society. Finally Dean's confession <strong>of</strong> his hope that the journey to the East<br />

might provide an answer to his existential disorientation is echoed by Lisa's sombre<br />

awareness <strong>of</strong> having been excluded from 'the adventure'.<br />

Conclusion<br />

Little Buddha is the last <strong>of</strong> three films (the other two being The Sheltering Sky (1990) and Tlie<br />

Last Emperor (1987)) that Bertolucci released after abandoning Italy as a consequence <strong>of</strong> a<br />

rift with critics about The Tragedy <strong>of</strong> a Ridiculous Man. For this reason, Italian critics<br />

designated them as la trilogia deU'altrove /the trilogy <strong>of</strong> the elsewhere, (Socci, 1996: 83)<br />

thereby implying that Bertolucci had decided to detach himself from Italian political issues. It<br />

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is curious that this accusation came after they had dismissed The Tragedy <strong>of</strong> a Ridiculous<br />

Man, a film that this study considers eligible to be included among Bertolucci's most political<br />

films, such as Before the Revolution, Partner and Tlie Spider's Stratagem. The director's<br />

interest in vast, exotic spaces might be interpreted as a need to breathe after the<br />

claustrophobic experience, in psychological terms, created in Italy by negative responses to<br />

almost all his films. On the other hand, this study has identified how all three films retain a<br />

certain socio-political significance. In this respect, Little Buddha addresses Italian audiences<br />

directly, as many contemporary viewers would remember how in the 70s and early 80s it was<br />

common among leftist sympathizers to turn to Buddhism as a philosophical answer to their<br />

political disappointment.<br />

In this regard it is interesting to remember how Bertolucci had already anticipated this<br />

particular interest in Before the Revolution (1964), through the character <strong>of</strong> Gina who narrates<br />

an apologue on the inexistence <strong>of</strong> time, this drawing on Eastern philosophy (see the earlier<br />

reference to Hesse's book Siddhartha). Certainly, as regards the beliefs circulating in the<br />

developed world during those years, the film does not express any messianic expectation<br />

about the ability <strong>of</strong> Buddhism to alleviate social problems. Yet it is rediscovered as a way to<br />

elicit reflection on how Western society has come to be oblivious <strong>of</strong>, and indifferent to, the<br />

human condition. Hence the film's socio-political perspective can be acknowledged as a<br />

warning to Western society against its harmful tendency to restrict its conception <strong>of</strong> the world<br />

to Western values only. This interpretation appears confirmed by the film's denouement (the<br />

Conrad family reunited with Lisa who is expecting a second baby) which depicts how Dean's<br />

world view has been positively changed by contact with a different culture. Similarly, the<br />

journey into the marvellous seems to represent Bertolucci's intention not only to amaze<br />

viewers, but also to pose a fundamental question linked to the abovementioned socio-political<br />

warning. It concerns the danger that human ability to experience life's wonders is<br />

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diminishing because <strong>of</strong> Western society's obsession with keeping human existence under<br />

rational control and within fixed parameters. The recourse to the archetypes and myths in the<br />

film is a way <strong>of</strong> underlining their potential - both at social and individual levels - to shape<br />

people's perspectives and hence generate possible new life perspectives. The construction <strong>of</strong><br />

the film's final images seem to reflect this notion, in that the camera first frames the Conrads'<br />

boat (a realistic image), and then slowly moves backwards until it becomes smaller against<br />

Seattle's silhouette which is enveloped in a beautiful sunset (a poetic image). This is a clear<br />

cinematic statement that we are surrounded by natural wonders, provided that we take the<br />

time to become aware <strong>of</strong> this.<br />

Notes<br />

1. The myth narrates that Pandora was created on Zeus's command to punish Perseus and mankind for<br />

having stolen the sacred fire. Zeus sent Pandora to Earth to marry Perseus's brother, and knowing her<br />

curiosity, he gave her a beautiful vase with a strong recommendation never to open it. As expected,<br />

Pandora opened the vase, thus letting out all the punishments. After days <strong>of</strong> devastation. Pandora<br />

discovered that at the bottom <strong>of</strong> the vase, only one thing was left: hope.<br />

References<br />

Grazzini, G. (1993) review in L 'Indipendente, 10th <strong>of</strong> December, in Mirabella, JC. and Pitiot,<br />

P. (ed.) (1999) Inter-vista a Bemardo Bertolucci, Rome: Gremese Editore.<br />

Grodal, T. (1997) Moving Pictures, Oxford: Oxford <strong>University</strong> Press.<br />

Niogret, H. (1993) review in Positif, n.394, December, in Mirabella, JC. and Pitiot, P. (ed)<br />

(1999) Inter-vista a Bemardo Bertolucci, Rome: Gremese Editore.<br />

Smith, M. (1995) Engaging Characters, Oxford: Oxford <strong>University</strong> Press.<br />

Socci, S. (1996) Bemardo Bertolucci, Milan: II Castoro Cinema.<br />

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Section 5; Women at the Forefront<br />

La luna (1979); lo hallo da sola/Stealing Beauty (1996); L 'assedio/Besieged (1998)<br />

Within Bertolucci's body <strong>of</strong> work, these three films are characterized by their emphasis on<br />

female characters as protagonists, namely Caterina, Lucy and Shandurai respectively. Yet,<br />

paradoxically, none <strong>of</strong> these characters are as striking and memorable as figures such as Anna<br />

Quadri, Jeanne, and Elizabeth (Pu Yi's first wife). One reason for this is perhaps that they are<br />

inserted in relatively uncomplicated and undemanding narratives, and that - fundamentally -<br />

they are cyphers through which Bertolucci identifies issues that go beyond the characters'<br />

personal circumstances in the films. In particular, Caterina in La luna seems to function as a<br />

symbolic representation <strong>of</strong> America and its film audiences, having seemingly become<br />

unreachable for Bertolucci after the debacle <strong>of</strong> 1900, as Caterina is for her son Joe. Lucy, in<br />

Stealing Beauty, represents the medium through which the film addresses the issue <strong>of</strong> the<br />

female condition in consumer society; whereas through Shandurai, in Besieged, the director<br />

returns to existentialist questions, this time linked to the human condition when estranged<br />

through living in a foreign country. These elements affect the development <strong>of</strong> the three<br />

protagonists in terms <strong>of</strong> their narrative importance; since they seem to be symbols<br />

representing other, <strong>of</strong>ten intellectual agendas, this has repercussions on the viewer's affective<br />

engagement with them, in the sense that even the empathic phenomena usually present in<br />

Bertolucci's film-making are used sparingly and with varying results. In general, all three<br />

films fail to engender much <strong>of</strong> a 'pro-attitude' towards characters, (Carroll, 1999:31)<br />

although there are different degrees <strong>of</strong> intentionality on Bertolucci's part regarding this<br />

outcome.<br />

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In all three films it is possible to observe a pervasive extra-diegetic narration that<br />

indicates the presence <strong>of</strong> an implied author. In addition, although their narratives assume a<br />

telic form, this is gradually sidetracked by their narrations which <strong>of</strong>ten activate memory<br />

associations, thus creating viewing experiences typified by a saturated modal quality (Grodal,<br />

1997: 136). Additionally, La luna, Stealing Beauty and Besieged conform to Bertolucci's<br />

stylistic tendency to <strong>of</strong>fer viewers rich aesthetic experiences through his use <strong>of</strong> landscapes,<br />

sets and cinematic techniques, an approach which, again, constitutes the focus <strong>of</strong> these films'<br />

affective charge rather than any sustained viewer/character attachments.<br />

References<br />

Carroll, N. (1999) 'Film, Emotion and Genre', in Plantinga, C. and Smith, G. (ed.)<br />

Passionate Views, Baltimore: The John Hopkins <strong>University</strong> Press.<br />

Grodal, T. (1997) Moving Pictures, Oxford: Oxford <strong>University</strong> Press.<br />

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La luna: Stylistic Incoherence and Affective/Cognitive Incongruence<br />

In 1979, three years after 7900, Bertolucci released the controversial film La luna. If the<br />

failure <strong>of</strong> Partner led him to reassess his artistic identity and to make remarkable films such<br />

as The Conformist, the problematic reception <strong>of</strong> 1900 evidently caused disorientation, as La<br />

luna features little <strong>of</strong> his ability to develop elaborately structured work and sophisticated<br />

narrations. Interviews confirm that the film originated from anomalous and stressful<br />

commercial circumstances, and they refer to the devastating effect caused by the struggle to<br />

distribute 1900 in America. In 1977 Bertolucci commented that during the negotiations for<br />

1900 he had felt Mike a spinach', unable to react, and that he had been on medication for his<br />

anxiety. He praised his partner - Clare Peploe who had been assistant director for 1900 - for<br />

her support (Quinn, 1977: 103). More intriguing is Bertolucci's assertion that in La luna<br />

Peploe went beyond her role as screenwriter to assist with the film's direction, although<br />

Bertolucci does not say which sequences were involved. Emphasizing her importance in both<br />

his artistic and personal life, he also recalls that they married after the filming <strong>of</strong> La luna had<br />

ended (Ungari, 1982: 195). These assertions shed light on the unusual conditions in which the<br />

film was elaborated and constructed, and support the idea that it represents 'a momentary loss<br />

<strong>of</strong> formal and narrative control' (Kolker, 1985: 8).<br />

Significantly, the narration <strong>of</strong> La lima is expressed through a range <strong>of</strong> registers, such<br />

as drama, comedy and lyricism, which characterize different segments <strong>of</strong> the film. However,<br />

this scheme reduces its stylistic coherence while inconsistency and a lack <strong>of</strong> lucidity in<br />

affective and cognitive terms are also arguably experienced when viewing it. In narrative<br />

terms, the protagonists <strong>of</strong> La luna have little psychological depth, making any form <strong>of</strong> viewer<br />

attachment difficult, and from a social perspective the motivation for the mother/son incest -<br />

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the film's dramatic pivot - appears inadequately grounded. Inevitably, Bertolucci's<br />

declaration that the incest theme was a development <strong>of</strong> the one presented in Before the<br />

Revolution, (Ungari, 1982: 35 and 195) immediately attached a psychoanalytical significance<br />

to the film whose durability has possibly restricted the development <strong>of</strong> alternative critical<br />

hypotheses about its meaning, hi this respect, the following analysis will interpret it<br />

differently, positing that, in emotional terms, La lima can be interpreted as the director<br />

expressing his mixed feelings towards America and its audiences - intended here as both<br />

viewers and critics.<br />

This chapter will trace a contradictory attitude <strong>of</strong> attraction and resentment in the<br />

film's framework and within a metaphorical meaning for the film that I will outline, an<br />

interpretation based on the mother figure, Caterina, embodying America and its capricious<br />

audiences, and on her son Joe embodying Bertolucci's attempts to elicit a greater<br />

understanding and appreciation <strong>of</strong> himself and his work in the States. These contrasting<br />

sentiments are responsible for the likely response <strong>of</strong> disorientation and occasional annoyance<br />

that viewers may feel while watching La luna. At a general level, a sense <strong>of</strong> attraction is<br />

evoked in the film's emotional structure, based on the viewer's fascination for opera music<br />

and performances, on a degree <strong>of</strong> enthralment at the film's daring sexual component, and on<br />

its lyrical, poetic sequences. This combination <strong>of</strong> elements implies an intention on<br />

Bertolucci's part to regain significance for American audiences through the use <strong>of</strong><br />

ingredients, such as the traditional cultural appeal <strong>of</strong> opera, and the eroticism <strong>of</strong> Tango, that<br />

had proved attractive to them.<br />

By contrast, a sense <strong>of</strong> authorial resentment emerges in the film's flat cognitive and<br />

intellectual structure, an approach that reflects Bertolucci's conviction - at the time - that the<br />

European tradition <strong>of</strong> analysing reality in political terms was extraneous to the Americans,<br />

(Ungari, 1982: 127) and he thereby attributed a limited interest in intellectual matters to<br />

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American filmgoers. The fickle, inaccessible mother Caterina - in metaphorical terms,<br />

America and its audiences - proves, affectively, to be a source <strong>of</strong> frustration and resentment<br />

for her son Joe, and if credibility is given to the notion <strong>of</strong> Joe being a cypher for Bertolucci,<br />

giving the director a narrative presence, other manifestations <strong>of</strong> his presence that alter the<br />

filnTs mood take the form <strong>of</strong> moments <strong>of</strong> self-affirmation that emerge in the virtual tour<br />

through Bertolucci's cinematic memories that occurs at certain points in the film. This seems<br />

to function primarily for Bertolucci's own benefit, and it accounts for Kolker's cutting<br />

remark that La lima is 'a film for the solitary pleasure <strong>of</strong> its maker' (Kolker, 1985: 154).<br />

In affective terms, resentment surfaces from the relationship depicted in the film,<br />

where the mother is guilty <strong>of</strong> not listening and not understanding, whereas the son's troubles<br />

reside in a teenager's typical fragility and naivety. This chapter asserts that Joe embodies<br />

elements <strong>of</strong> Bertolucci's contemporary mindset, initially reflecting his idealistic craving for<br />

the non-listening and non-understanding American audience - symbolized by Caterina and<br />

then regaining lucidity by returning his attention to his cinematic origins. This situation is<br />

reflected in the film by the slap that Joe receives from his biological father. Continuing the<br />

metaphor <strong>of</strong> the film's characters embodying the perspectives <strong>of</strong> real-life figures, it might be<br />

asserted that Joe's father brings the boy/Bertolucci back to his senses, the character evoking<br />

Pasolini's influential role in Bertolucci's cinematic career and sharing biographical<br />

similarities with Pasolini such as living in Rome with his mother. Pasolini's pedagogical role,<br />

broadening the minds <strong>of</strong> individuals regarding human existence, is reflected in the film<br />

through Joe's father's pr<strong>of</strong>ession as a teacher, echoing that <strong>of</strong> Cesare, another possible<br />

Pasolini cypher, in Before the Revolution. Consequently, the following outline <strong>of</strong> the film's<br />

cognitive and affective structures will centre on the uncomplicated scheme <strong>of</strong> the narration,<br />

the implications <strong>of</strong> the film's sketchy development <strong>of</strong> the protagonists' psychological traits<br />

and the limited narrative justification <strong>of</strong> their actions, and the incongruous deployment <strong>of</strong><br />

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different stylistic registers as the filirTs main weaknesses. It will also indicate how,<br />

emotionally, the pleasurable affective engagement created by the lyricism <strong>of</strong> some sequences<br />

is outweighed by other elements that cause a more frustrating viewing experience.<br />

Cognitive and affective functions <strong>of</strong> the prologue<br />

The film's first images are close-ups <strong>of</strong> an attractive young mother - Caterina - playfully<br />

pouring honey on the shoulder <strong>of</strong> her toddler, Joe, and licking it <strong>of</strong>f, while in turn the toddler<br />

licks honey from her finger. A backward tracking shot shows them sitting on the floor <strong>of</strong> a<br />

veranda overlooking a stunning seascape. A man enters carrying a basket <strong>of</strong> fish; under the<br />

child's disconcerted gaze, he starts cutting and cleaning them before joining Caterina to<br />

dance to a song being played loudly. Joe starts crying and ventures inside the house to seek<br />

comfort from an elderly woman; in doing so, a strand from a ball <strong>of</strong> wool twines around his<br />

neck. The opening credits start after a cut to an image <strong>of</strong> the moon shining over a country<br />

road along which Caterina is riding a bicycle with Joe seated in front <strong>of</strong> her. He is enchanted<br />

by the dual spectacle <strong>of</strong> the moon and <strong>of</strong> his mother's beautiful face. The prologue ends with<br />

a cut to the interior <strong>of</strong> a beautiful, bourgeois apartment.<br />

The prologue establishes an immediate perception <strong>of</strong> Caterina as self-absorbed,<br />

distancing viewers and their sympathies. Murray Smith has argued that viewers sometimes<br />

experience a residual 'drag' <strong>of</strong> positive emotion towards film characters even when their later<br />

behaviour becomes unattractive, (Smith M,1995: 217) but equally, as has been pointed out<br />

elsewhere, certain film protagonists never redeem themselves after viewers fail to engage<br />

with them at a film's outset (Hope, 2006: 96). While there may be little viewer attraction<br />

towards the characters, the prologue assists viewers in understanding the mother and son's<br />

feelings as the story unfolds, with particular regard to the way Joe perceives his mother as<br />

distant like the moon. Affectively it cues contrasting sensations through the aesthetic<br />

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experience engendered by the beautiful seascape, and by the unease generated by Caterina's<br />

over intimate approach to the toddler. The nocturnal bicycle ride is designed to cue a poetic,<br />

lyrical ambience, which occasionally characterizes the narration later on.<br />

Plot summary<br />

The main narrative begins with the toddler having now grown into the teenager Joe, who<br />

feels neglected by his mother Caterina, an acclaimed soprano. A trip to Rome reveals the<br />

extent <strong>of</strong> his solitude, in contrast with the way Caterina flourishes through the love <strong>of</strong> friends<br />

and fans. Joe's deviated affection for his mother emerges as he, in a delirious state as a<br />

consequence <strong>of</strong> drug withdrawal symptoms, encourages Caterina to masturbate him. Away<br />

from Rome, they visit places frequented by Caterina in her youth - which are the settings <strong>of</strong><br />

Bertolucci's previous films - and encounter a range <strong>of</strong> peculiar characters. Eventually mother<br />

and son end up in a hotel room and another sexual situation develops, but abruptly and<br />

furiously Joe withdraws from this intimacy. Caterina resolves to let him meet his real father,<br />

the man who appeared in the prologue. They meet at the beach house where everything has<br />

remained unchanged, including the basket with the wool balls. The film ends with Joe<br />

meeting and being slapped by his biological father at the Caracalla Baths where Caterina will<br />

perform. The last images are <strong>of</strong> the three characters smiling at each other, as the moon rises<br />

behind an inspired Caterina who sings in a pale, feathery dress which mirrors the moon's<br />

evanescence.<br />

Narrative linearity and cognitive engagement<br />

The narrative <strong>of</strong> La luna appears to be the most linear <strong>of</strong> Bertolucci's films, which are usually<br />

characterized by formal and structural complexity. In particular the narrative features several<br />

mainstream conventions such as instances <strong>of</strong> similarity and repetition; a circular pattern<br />

established between the opening and ending, with the ending resuming the filirfs opening to<br />

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esolve it; and a predominantly unrestricted form. In La luna, patterns <strong>of</strong> similarity emerge<br />

from physical and psychological elements, all <strong>of</strong> which are linked to Caterina's personality.<br />

Physical elements include the mise-en-scene <strong>of</strong> the house in Rome whose imposing decor<br />

evokes a theatrical backdrop rather than domestic furnishings, and Caterina's dress sense<br />

which indicates little difference between her everyday outfits and her theatrical costumes.<br />

Similar psychological elements involve a correspondence between the physical settings and<br />

the characters' stylized performances to enhance the sense <strong>of</strong> Caterina's self-referential<br />

world, in which she is perceived and treated as an idol. In cognitive terms, these identifiable<br />

thematic features facilitate the viewers' activity <strong>of</strong> hypothesis-making, while simplifying<br />

their expectations regarding the evolution <strong>of</strong> the plot.<br />

One minor variation occurring in the second half <strong>of</strong> the film, with Caterina<br />

temporarily abandoning her self-centredness to give Joe attention, does not add thematic<br />

intricacy; instead, the narrative's uniform nature is continued, as no change in Caterina's<br />

prima donna attitude is presented. These characteristics (over)simplify the viewer's task <strong>of</strong><br />

constructing the story by constantly confirming their assumptions regarding the development<br />

<strong>of</strong> plot and characters. Finally, unlike Bertolucci's prior films which do not <strong>of</strong>fer clear-cut<br />

denouements, La luna closes with every loose end tied up. This is achieved through the film s<br />

final sequences reprising the prologue, adding more contextual information regarding Joe's<br />

relations to achieve narrative circularity. Joe returns to the beach house where everything is<br />

unchanged, and the identities <strong>of</strong> the two adults - his father and grandmother - are confirmed.<br />

The viewer's uncomplicated cognitive engagement with the film is facilitated by the<br />

unrestricted narration, during which spectators constantly know more than diegetic<br />

characters. The only exception occurs in the prologue sequences which have no clear origin,<br />

but which indicate how Joe's association <strong>of</strong> his mother with the beautiful, unreachable moon<br />

evolved from his childhood.<br />

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Pasolini's Oedipus Rex revisited<br />

The opening sequences lack narrative contextualization to connect them either to an<br />

individual's dream or memory, or to define them as orthodox flashbacks. This adds a degree<br />

<strong>of</strong> uncertainty to their function in the film, unless we consider them as a kind <strong>of</strong> prologue<br />

following the conventions <strong>of</strong> Greek tragedy, according to which the first scene or monologue<br />

illustrates the action(s) preceding the portrayed events. The fragmented quality <strong>of</strong> the scenes<br />

between Caterina and young Joe, together with analogies in the mise-en-scene, evoke<br />

Pasolini's staging <strong>of</strong> the prologue <strong>of</strong> his Edipo Re/Oedipus Rex (1967), which used a format<br />

referencing the conventions <strong>of</strong> Greek tragedy. In Edipo Re the prologue is also fragmented<br />

and spread over unconnected sequences. First Pasolini shows the enchanting discovery made<br />

by baby Oedipus - as he is breastfed - and by the viewers, <strong>of</strong> Giocasta's beauty, the actress<br />

Silvana Mangano's face being shown in close up in a long duration shot. Mother and son are<br />

sitting in an idyllic country landscape, filmed on a gloriously sunny day like the seascape<br />

sequence in La luna.<br />

A few shots later Oedipus is portrayed as a toddler who frightened by deafening<br />

fireworks cries inconsolably as his parents dance happily, oblivious to him. Curiously, the<br />

role <strong>of</strong> Merope, the queen who acts as Oedipus's adoptive mother, was played by Alida Valli<br />

who plays the role <strong>of</strong> Joe's grandmother in La luna. Whether or not this is a coincidence, the<br />

parallel between the films explains the nature and function <strong>of</strong> the sequences between Caterina<br />

and Joe within the narrative scheme <strong>of</strong> La luna, since Caterina s obliviousness to the child's<br />

distress, and more importantly to the dangerous twine in which he gets caught, functions as a<br />

prologue to anticipate the hazards which ensnare Joe in his adolescence. The analogies<br />

between La luna and Edipo Re end here, as Pasolini adhered to the original unfolding <strong>of</strong> the<br />

tragedy with Oedipus unaware <strong>of</strong> Giocasta's identity, and because his casting <strong>of</strong> Franco Citti<br />

- an adult - in the role <strong>of</strong> Oedipus rendered plausible the powerful reciprocal love between<br />

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the two characters.<br />

The failure to elicit cognitive identification and pro-attitudes<br />

In La luna, the conformity <strong>of</strong> the plot and characters to traditional patterns <strong>of</strong> canonical<br />

narratives does not result in close viewer engagement with the developing action. This failure<br />

can be explained through the cognitive notion that viewers perceive narrative events not only<br />

as chains <strong>of</strong> causes and effects, but they also draw on their cultural knowledge in evaluating<br />

them, (Branigan, 1992: 27) formulating hypotheses based 'on life as experienced through the<br />

probabilities <strong>of</strong> his or her society' (Branigan, 1992: 30). In this respect the disjunction <strong>of</strong> the<br />

film's incest theme from viewers' knowledge <strong>of</strong> social interaction generates dissociation<br />

from the ongoing action; additionally, the recurring narrative patterns referred to earlier may<br />

cue uncomfortable cognitive expectations in scenes where Caterina and Joe are alone. From<br />

their initial evaluations <strong>of</strong> her character, viewers are unlikely to engage emotionally or<br />

cognitively with Caterina since the egocentricity and dubious motives <strong>of</strong> her actions will<br />

induce aversive responses, hi this context, if filmic situations are negatively evaluated by<br />

viewers, 'the cognitive activities then produce mental models for reducing the affects and<br />

emotions' (Grodal, 1997: 87). This concept illustrates why La luna short-circuits the<br />

emotional response expected from viewers who detach themselves from the proceedings, a<br />

response aggravated by the film's structure which - as will be shown - fails to generate a<br />

pro-attitude in viewers towards its protagonists and story (Carroll, 1999: 31).<br />

The short circuit between the film's content and viewers' reception <strong>of</strong> it occurs from<br />

the prologue onwards, when a discrepancy evolves between the director s sympathetic<br />

portrayal <strong>of</strong> Caterina's self-absorption, and the likelihood <strong>of</strong> viewers being more judgemental<br />

towards her. These scenes, which typify the film's ambivalent visuals and subject matter, are<br />

characterized by a light touch that viewers are unlikely to respond to. The camera's intrusive<br />

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proximity as Caterina licks honey <strong>of</strong>f her son may elicit unease, as it depicts a scenario where<br />

the characters' roles are more akin to those <strong>of</strong> adult sexual fetishism than to those <strong>of</strong> parent<br />

and child. Affectively, the film's recurring juxtapositions <strong>of</strong> inappropriate intimacy and<br />

insensitive detachment are set in motion, with a harmonious middle ground permanently out<br />

<strong>of</strong>reach.<br />

Transient empathic phenomena<br />

In contrast to Caterina, Joe is a character with whom viewers might experience partial<br />

cognitive identification, in so far as they recognize a lack <strong>of</strong> interpersonal relations and a<br />

desire for social acceptance as causing his unhappiness. This brings occasional empathic<br />

phenomena, generated by viewers 'using mental models and schemata from everyday<br />

psychology 7 that allow them to simulate 'emotions in identification with an agent <strong>of</strong> fiction'<br />

(Grodal, 1997: 87). This frequently occurs during Joe's fruitless attempts to obtain his<br />

mother's attention, and his solitude in Rome, hi this context, the concept <strong>of</strong> the disorientation<br />

<strong>of</strong> individuals who find themselves in artificial environments created by/for other people -<br />

stylized, insular habitats which induce alienation - is a recurrent theme in Bertolucci's work.<br />

It spans films ranging from The Spider s Strategem, in which Athos Magnani junior is drawn<br />

into an elaborate mise-en-scene created by the inhabitants <strong>of</strong> Tara, to The Last Emperor,<br />

which portrays Pu Yi's malaise in the Forbidden City, and it re-emerges in Bertolucci's later<br />

films as protagonists such as Shandurai and Matthew experience disorientation in the<br />

secluded, disquieting environments constructed by others in Besieged and The Dreamers, hi<br />

La luna, Joe's disorientation leads him to drug addiction, whereas the extent <strong>of</strong> the emotional<br />

distance between mother and son is emphasized during his birthday party, where Caterina<br />

appears to be the only person unaware <strong>of</strong> Joe's feelings and situation. However, this fleeting<br />

empathy with Joe is problematized by the incestuous attraction between him and his mother,<br />

behaviour which is not articulated visually or thematically to elicit emotional involvement or<br />

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even understanding from viewers and which, cognitively, does not find narrative justification<br />

within the film's scheme. If we return, however, to the earlier reading <strong>of</strong> the narrative in an<br />

autobiographical perspective, some sense can perhaps be conferred on it, at least if credibility<br />

is given to the notion <strong>of</strong> Bertolucci, consciously or otherwise, portraying through Joe his own<br />

disastrous naivete in craving the attention <strong>of</strong> America and its audiences, whose allure and<br />

self-centredness is perfectly embodied by Caterina's character.<br />

Problematic alignment and the absence <strong>of</strong> allegiance<br />

For mainstream viewers, the occasional empathic phenomena originating from Joe's solitude<br />

are too infrequent to create an attachment to the character and therefore enable a convincing<br />

treatment <strong>of</strong> a controversial narrative theme like incest. Several elements cause this effect: the<br />

viewer's alignment is split almost equally between Caterina and Joe as a consequence <strong>of</strong><br />

Bertolucci attempting to create a balanced representation <strong>of</strong> their mutual pain. The number <strong>of</strong><br />

POV shots from Joe's perspective, plus reaction shots, is limited, and this reduces his<br />

subjectivity in favour <strong>of</strong> an objective narration. The outcome <strong>of</strong> this technique is that<br />

Caterina's responsibility for the family crisis is lessened, and Bertolucci's depiction <strong>of</strong> her<br />

smiling amiability appears to be an attempt to redeem her inability to understand Joe's<br />

affective needs. This perspective implies that Bertolucci is occupying an objective position<br />

between the protagonists, a position that marks the point where the director and viewer's<br />

evaluations <strong>of</strong> the unfolding action may diverge. Spectators are less likely to sideline their<br />

sense <strong>of</strong> mature responsibility, to embrace the poetic idealization and volatility <strong>of</strong> the<br />

egocentric Caterina. This position whereby the viewer's sympathies are not marshalled<br />

against Caterina and what she represents, again supports the interpretation that despite the<br />

fate <strong>of</strong> 1900 in America, Bertolucci was finding a way <strong>of</strong> expressing his personal, unresolved<br />

feelings for America and its audiences.<br />

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The emotional neutrality <strong>of</strong> the film's opera music<br />

The film's operatic soundtrack - based mainly on arias by Verdi from works like La traviata<br />

(1853) - does not, affectively, enhance the dramatic moments in the narrative. Instead it<br />

forms a musical punctuation or motif to Caterina's life; given her pr<strong>of</strong>ession, an operatic<br />

soundtrack is an almost obligatory choice, signalling who Caterina is and what she does.<br />

There is no thematic or emotional connection between the film narrative and the<br />

music/staging <strong>of</strong> two <strong>of</strong> Verdi's operas // trovatore (1836) and Un ballo in maschera (1859),<br />

because unlike the operas in question, La lima features no tragic events. Similarly, the operas<br />

have no thematic relevance to the protagonists: Joe cannot be considered a 'lover', there are<br />

no rival contenders in love, and Caterina's troubles do not derive from any dramatic choices<br />

to be made in her love life. The use <strong>of</strong> operatic music for its general aural appeal rather than<br />

as a component to clarify the film narrative or its characters' motivations is revealed in the<br />

staging <strong>of</strong> the operas, as the construction <strong>of</strong> these sequences merely satisfies the viewer's<br />

curiosity concerning the staging <strong>of</strong> this kind <strong>of</strong> spectacle. In the staging <strong>of</strong> // trovatore, the<br />

camera gradually focuses on a waterfall which occupies the centre stage where three singers<br />

perform. Drawing closer, it reveals that there is no water involved, but plastic strips rotating<br />

around huge cylinders, then turns backstage to frame the men manually rotating the cylinders,<br />

thus revealing the artificiality <strong>of</strong> what had initially appeared to be an evocative set. In the<br />

staging <strong>of</strong> Un ballo in maschera, viewers <strong>of</strong> La lima observe a rehearsal where performers<br />

practice while wearing a single element <strong>of</strong> their stage costumes, such as the choir wearing<br />

veils over their ordinary clothes. From affective and cognitive perspectives, by depicting<br />

individual technical aspects <strong>of</strong> the mise-en-scene <strong>of</strong> opera, both sequences elicit mild interest<br />

regarding the creation <strong>of</strong> the operatic spectacle, rather than, for example, creating empathic<br />

phenomena towards the characters involved in the sequences, absorbing viewers into a<br />

complex narrative sequence, or delivering any revelations about the nature <strong>of</strong> the artistic<br />

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illusion.<br />

In search <strong>of</strong> new scandals?<br />

The film's depiction <strong>of</strong> the deviated mother/son relationship centres on inappropriate<br />

intimacy between the characters, and this is expressed by behaviour more appropriate to an<br />

adult relationship than to a parent/child rapport; this is exemplified in the scene depicting Joe<br />

preparing a candlelit dinner for his mother and himself, as if they were lovers. This detail,<br />

however, in the context <strong>of</strong> the ongoing ambivalence <strong>of</strong> the Joe/Caterina relationship, suggests<br />

that Bertolucci was drawn to include this episode in the film but without knowing how to<br />

justify and develop it in narrative terms. It is difficult to imagine the theme underlying this<br />

narrative detail - a desire for rapprochement or proximity from one party towards another -<br />

being entirely decontextualized from Bertolucci's own life and career, and again it points to a<br />

personal discourse animating the film's subtext. Returning to the notion <strong>of</strong> Joe being a cypher<br />

for Bertolucci's mindset and Caterina representing America and its public, parallels could be<br />

drawn between this dinner sequence and various phases <strong>of</strong> the 1900 distribution saga. Joe<br />

enthusiastically cooks an elaborate French recipe, elegantly sets a table, and dresses himself<br />

for the serving <strong>of</strong> his culinary masterpiece; ultimately the dish turns out to be inedible for its<br />

intended recipient, Caterina, and Joe shouts 'I fucked it up' in furious frustration. Again, for<br />

viewers whose reception mode is principally intellectual, especially those with knowledge <strong>of</strong><br />

the director's career, a pattern can be identified between the elaborate and time consuming<br />

creation <strong>of</strong> 1900 and Bertolucci's eventual frustration over its failed 'consumption' by<br />

America and its audiences, and his admission <strong>of</strong> partial responsibility for having mismanaged<br />

the situation. This reading could be extended to one <strong>of</strong> the film's sequences <strong>of</strong> intimacy<br />

between the protagonists as Caterina solicits a sexual act from Joe, the youth angrily drawing<br />

away and shouting 'You don't love me'. This could be a metaphorical representation <strong>of</strong><br />

Bertolucci's refusal to satisfy the American conditions related to 1900, airing his anger and<br />

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disappointment after sensing that he is not appreciated. Significantly, in the preceding<br />

sequence, a would-be lothario whom Caterina uses to fuel Joe's jealousy, introduces himself<br />

to her by saying 'I am a Communist', explaining to her that the relevance <strong>of</strong> this information<br />

lies in the fact that Caterina is American'. The man's affirmation leads Caterina to treat him<br />

as a fool, and their bizarre exchange, whose significance is unclear from a narrative<br />

perspective, makes more sense if interpreted as a sardonic reflection from Bertolucci about<br />

America's single minded political attitude.<br />

The film's sexual escalation begins with a situation which Bertolucci himself<br />

described as 'the ultimate, extreme maternal gesture' (Ungari, 1982: 140) when, to alleviate<br />

her son's drug withdrawal symptoms, Caterina gives in to Joe grasping her hand and moving<br />

it down his body to masturbate him. But Bertolucci's handling <strong>of</strong> the scene transforms it from<br />

an unorthodox, disturbing but practical act to relieve the boy's suffering to a scene charged<br />

with titillation. This evolves from the close-ups <strong>of</strong> the characters' hands on Joe's body, before<br />

the sexual charge is increased by close-ups <strong>of</strong> Caterina bringing Joe's mouth to her breast<br />

while masturbating him. Another such moment occurs when Caterina re-enacts former life<br />

experiences as she takes Joe to visit Emilia Romagna in central Italy. At a certain point<br />

during the journey, she reveals to Joe that his real father, who was not her late husband<br />

Douglas, had kissed her for the first time at the place where they have stopped. She kisses<br />

him playfully on the lips twice, provoking Joe into grabbing her and kissing her with more<br />

intent, to which she responds with a prolonged sensual kiss. The effect <strong>of</strong> this upon viewers<br />

may range from emotional estrangement to cognitive perplexity at behaviour justified neither<br />

by social norms nor by earlier 'evidence' in the film's own narrative scheme. This response,<br />

curiously, was shared by Bertolucci himself, who said <strong>of</strong> this sequence:<br />

It is the one I feel most uncomfortable with. Caterina kisses Joe for no apparent reason [...] And she<br />

kisses him as one kisses a lover. Earlier on it was the mother who was helping the son. But, there, I<br />

don't quite understand it myself (Roud, 1979: 141).<br />

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That this sequence was written, probably rehearsed, filmed, and made the film's final cut<br />

implies an intentionality that does not square with the director's 'incomprehension' <strong>of</strong> it.<br />

Explanations for its inclusion will remain speculative without further comment from<br />

Bertolucci or his production team, and the spectre <strong>of</strong> Clare Peploe's co-direction <strong>of</strong> the film<br />

and its uneven effect on the style <strong>of</strong> La lima may come into consideration. What are less<br />

debatable are the affective, cognitive and intellectual consequences <strong>of</strong> the inclusion <strong>of</strong> both<br />

scenes and their lack <strong>of</strong> coherence and narrative justification.<br />

Elsewhere, the film's sexuality and eroticism are, in line with Bertolucci's work,<br />

visually characterized by lingering voyeurism, ambivalence and by transgression but rarely in<br />

a progressive, liberating sense. This is a tendency already discussed in terms <strong>of</strong> Marcello<br />

Clerici's re-enactment <strong>of</strong> Giulia's seduction by her uncle in The Conformist, the visual<br />

objectification <strong>of</strong> Jeanne/Maria Schneider in Last Tango in Paris, the voyeuristic camerawork<br />

<strong>of</strong> the sex scenes in 1900, the social circumstances affecting the sexual intimacy experienced<br />

by Kit in Tire Sheltering Sky (and Shandurai in Besieged), and the ambivalence <strong>of</strong> Ttie<br />

Dreamers in all these contexts. The eroticism in La lima analysed, for example, in terms <strong>of</strong><br />

the nudity <strong>of</strong> Joe and Caterina in certain scenes, is charged with this same ambivalence which<br />

centres on the uncertain extra-diegetic motivations <strong>of</strong> the director and also those <strong>of</strong> the<br />

diegetic characters. This occurs in the sequence depicting the visit <strong>of</strong> Caterina's friend<br />

Marina whose loudness causes Caterina to urge her to speak quietly because Joe is sleeping.<br />

Bertolucci cuts to an image <strong>of</strong> him; his naked body, framed from a high angle, is slightly<br />

curled up at the centre <strong>of</strong> a bed covered with red linen. The framing is more evocative <strong>of</strong> an<br />

object <strong>of</strong> desire than <strong>of</strong> an exhausted drug addict who has overslept. This ambivalence<br />

increases in a subsequent scene portraying Marina's sexual attraction for Caterina, who<br />

undresses and takes a shower under Marina's desiring gaze. Consequently, when Marina<br />

enters the shower cubicle to console Caterina as she weeps, the scene's aftermath is steeped<br />

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in ambiguity that stems from Caterina's exhibitionism, Marina's latent motives for<br />

frequenting Caterina, and the nudity used in the sequence by Bertolucci. With these different<br />

internal tensions, the scene elicits a form <strong>of</strong> affective arousal without being coherent either in<br />

terms <strong>of</strong> human behaviour or artistic intentionality.<br />

The dramatic undermined by the comic<br />

Moments <strong>of</strong> emotional and dramatic tension in La luna are rarely fully developed, <strong>of</strong>ten<br />

being sidetracked by comic or whimsical elements. The scene depicting Joe's rapture during<br />

his mother's performance at the Opera, a scene initially marked by viewer alignment with the<br />

boy, switches to a comic register as other spectators worry about having turned the gas <strong>of</strong>f at<br />

home; similarly the framing <strong>of</strong> Caterina on stage, wearing a classical Greek costume, her<br />

right arm stretched out against a starry sky, is unlikely to elicit a sense <strong>of</strong> aesthetic beauty<br />

because it will be superseded in most viewers' minds by a recognition <strong>of</strong> its calculated<br />

similarity to the Columbia Pictures logo. A similar effect undermines the sequence where Joe<br />

is left alone to prepare to meet his real father, for the first time, at the school where he<br />

teaches. This would constitute an affective and narrative climax to most films, whether<br />

mainstream or arthouse or a fusion <strong>of</strong> the two like La luna, especially given its orthodox,<br />

linear narrative scheme. But any emotional intensity<br />

or cognitive expectation <strong>of</strong> emotional intensity is<br />

aborted. A cut to Joe crossing the playground,<br />

closely following a limping caretaker, ensures that<br />

the approach <strong>of</strong> the duo - shot frontally - evokes<br />

classic comic visuals such as the Marx Brothers'<br />

duck walk (see image).<br />

At other times, tension is cut short by interruptions, notably in the dramatic sequence<br />

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<strong>of</strong> Caterina discovering Joe's drug addiction. Their confrontation is interrupted twice, with<br />

Caterina being distracted by the unexpected presence <strong>of</strong> a decorator comically manoeuvring a<br />

large red curtain, a colour to which she takes a strong dislike. Therefore the film's<br />

exploration <strong>of</strong> the mother and son's existential reality is marginalized by the dual distraction<br />

<strong>of</strong> Caterina being sidetracked by interior decor (another mise-en-scene that highlights the<br />

mother/diva's demanding self-centredness) and by the director's inclusion <strong>of</strong> a comic<br />

moment featuring Roberto Benigni within this sequence. This dissipates much <strong>of</strong> the scene's<br />

tension, because laughter encourages a sense <strong>of</strong> relaxation and creates pleasure by 'a<br />

reduction <strong>of</strong> a tense object-world-directed [...] attitude' (Grodal, 1997: 187). The decorator's<br />

sudden appearance behind the curtain reflects Grodal's observation that 'the most basic form<br />

<strong>of</strong> comic surprise in visual fiction is the appearance <strong>of</strong> a person [...] at an unexpected time'<br />

(Grodal, 1997: 190). However, the result in viewing terms, as a result <strong>of</strong> Caterina's behaviour<br />

and the comic tone in this and in other moments <strong>of</strong> the film, is incongruousness, given the<br />

film's sensitive subject matter and <strong>of</strong> the lack <strong>of</strong> an identifiable design in Bertolucci's generic<br />

and stylistic choices.<br />

Minor characters and incongruous intellectual references<br />

Intellectually, the film lacks clarity with its perplexing inclusion <strong>of</strong> two-dimensional<br />

characters and scenarios which resemble a superficial, sub-Godardian manipulation <strong>of</strong> viewer<br />

expectations as they deconstruct the legacy <strong>of</strong> Italian cinema, notably 'committed' socio­<br />

political cinema. This occurs in the scene featuring a cynical individual who attempts a<br />

homosexual seduction <strong>of</strong> Joe by <strong>of</strong>fering him ice cream and trying to exploit his fragility.<br />

This role is played by Franco Citti who, by acting in Pasolini's films (including Oedipus<br />

Rex), had become synonymous with the director's committed film-making and tragic death.<br />

Therefore his role <strong>of</strong> an irredeemable predator in a scenario evacuated <strong>of</strong> any socio-political<br />

resonance is a disconcerting intellectual reversal which appears incongruous given Citti's<br />

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prior socio-cultural associations. Bertolucci's depiction <strong>of</strong> another minor character, the young<br />

drug dealer Mustafa and his habitat in the poor outskirts <strong>of</strong> Rome, will again draw<br />

comparisons with Pasolini's sub-proletarian youngsters, but it is little more than a cinematic<br />

citation, lacking the socio-political substance <strong>of</strong> both Pasolini's Accattone (1961) and<br />

Bertolucci's own Grim Reaper. Bertolucci gives Mustafa Accattone's line, 'I hate to work<br />

because there is no work' - in the sense <strong>of</strong> stable, respectable employment - but it is a self-<br />

conscious inclusion that lacks the original line's resonance, since the implied social<br />

accusation does not possess the impact it had two decades earlier, and because the line is<br />

uttered in a film devoid <strong>of</strong> socio-political commitment. A similar effect is created by the<br />

foolish would-be lothario from Rome who attempts to chat up Caterina by telling her a joke<br />

about the Cuban president Fidel Castro. This role is played by Renato Salvatori, who was<br />

popular in the 1950s and 60s, and whose most famous film was Poveri ma belli (1957) in<br />

which he played a brash but genuine proletarian character. To viewers familiar with<br />

Salvatori's career, his character in La lima is perceived as a miserable caricature <strong>of</strong> his most<br />

famous role, and the joke about Castro - if not read in the light <strong>of</strong> Bertolucci's sardonic view<br />

<strong>of</strong> America's fear <strong>of</strong> Communism may deepen the sense <strong>of</strong> emptiness that <strong>of</strong>ten engulfs the<br />

viewing experience <strong>of</strong>fered by La lima.<br />

The need for self-reassurance<br />

As indicated by critics, (Kolker, 1985: 154-155) La lima features many allusions to films<br />

both by Bertolucci and by others. For viewers familiar with Bertolucci's prior work, such<br />

cross references may elicit curiosity and mild intellectual gratification, but as they become<br />

pervasive, a sense <strong>of</strong> overstatement develops. This is instantiated by the scene depicting an<br />

implausible conversation about various types <strong>of</strong> ham and wine into which Joe is drawn by a<br />

bartender (see image on following page). The character clearly evokes Gaibazzi from Tlie<br />

Spider's Stratagem, who, in a similar scene, makes Athos Magnani junior taste and comment<br />

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on different types <strong>of</strong> meat. The bartender character -<br />

behaves as if he has materialized from another [<br />

I,<br />

context into the film, and because <strong>of</strong> the scene's |<br />

ambiguity, possessing hints <strong>of</strong> the comic but<br />

without developing them, and lacking any<br />

cognitive stratification (in The Spider's Strategem<br />

Gaibazzi uses the types <strong>of</strong> ham as metaphors for describing Athos Magnani senior and his<br />

opponents' personalities), no indications are given to viewers regarding an appropriate mode<br />

<strong>of</strong> reception. However, what is recognizable is that through the allusions to Bertolucci's own<br />

work in La luna, the director is revisiting his own career as if in need <strong>of</strong> reassurance about the<br />

value <strong>of</strong> his art. The epitome <strong>of</strong> this personal journey is the sequence in which Caterina and<br />

Joe pass the picturesque farm used in 1900 while farmers load hay on to tractors in a clear re-<br />

enactment <strong>of</strong> a scene from the film. The images, framed from the car window, are slightly<br />

blurred, soundless and in slow motion; the effects confer an emotional charge on the<br />

sequence. But without a narrative justification for such techniques, which cue a sense <strong>of</strong><br />

affection and melancholy, the temptation is to look beyond the diegetic world to the<br />

directors state <strong>of</strong> mind.<br />

Elements <strong>of</strong> the lyrical<br />

The film's most affectively coherent segments - in terms <strong>of</strong> the engagement elicited from<br />

viewers - centre on the lyricism <strong>of</strong> the scenes featuring Caterina and the moon, the apex <strong>of</strong><br />

this coming in the long take depicting young Joe as he compares his mother's face to the<br />

moon. It is a tender moment between the two, and is one <strong>of</strong> the rare instances where a sense<br />

<strong>of</strong> poetic visual and aural harmony evolve, the latter component being represented by the<br />

sequence's film score which is composed <strong>of</strong> a pure, simple clarinet note. Grodal has termed<br />

this kind <strong>of</strong> narrative scheme 'associative lyricism' and it is based on the 'symbiotic fusion<br />

289


etween viewer and the viewed, perceived as a saturated -metaphorical lack <strong>of</strong> [...] difference<br />

between viewer and fiction'; this effect can be achieved in different ways, and what Grodal<br />

says about certain films 'reducing a given agent's ability to act, and emphasizing the agent's<br />

perceptions and expressions <strong>of</strong> emotions', a process that reduces 'the possibilities <strong>of</strong> making<br />

an objective time-space' is applicable to this sequence (Grodal, 1997: 164-165).<br />

Symbiotic fusion occurs between the<br />

viewer's gaze and Joe's as, enchanted, they<br />

contemplate Caterina s s face and the moon (see<br />

image). Here, the mise-en-scene plays on the<br />

universal human experience <strong>of</strong> enchantment at ^J ; , *., •<br />

the fascinating spectacle <strong>of</strong> the moon, and<br />

evokes poetic traditions <strong>of</strong> comparing female<br />

beauty to it. In this way, the scene loses its time-space definition by taking on a subjective<br />

quality that shapes viewers' perception in a poetic form. As Grodal suggests, the<br />

'deformation <strong>of</strong> canonical narratives may <strong>of</strong>ten lead to felt subjectivity' in the absence <strong>of</strong> a<br />

clear link between given sequences and the rest <strong>of</strong> the narrative flow; he adds that the<br />

'schemata <strong>of</strong> acts plays a key role in felt objectivity; if they are missing, feelings <strong>of</strong><br />

subjectivity and dreaminess will be created' (Grodal, 1997: 135). Moreover, the unspecific<br />

temporal sequencing <strong>of</strong> these moments in the life <strong>of</strong> Joe and his mother is a key element<br />

creating the subjective perception, given that 'many films produce subjectivity and<br />

dreaminess by totally dissolving the objective time-structure' (Grodal, 1997: 136).<br />

Conclusion<br />

In critical terms, apart from a contemporary review praising the film's 'exceptional plastic<br />

beauty' while simultaneously criticizing its lack <strong>of</strong> complexity, (Conrad 1979: 103) La lima<br />

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was considered to be Bertolucci's return to his beloved Parma. But he replied that the<br />

screenplay merely included generic mentions <strong>of</strong> the Po countryside with no precise<br />

references. He stressed that he had been unaware <strong>of</strong> filming in the same location through<br />

which Gina had passed in Before the Revolution when she returns to Milan; it was only his<br />

fall from the dolly during filming that led him to wonder whether this was a sign <strong>of</strong> having<br />

been too daring in bringing 'the mother' to the same spot (Socci, 1996: 63). It is<br />

understandable that Bertolucci wanted to place dramatic emphasis on the incestuous<br />

relationship depicted in the film, as it was an ingredient with the potential to generate<br />

publicity after Last Tango in Paris. Nevertheless, the film fails to emulate the impact <strong>of</strong><br />

Before the Revolution or Tango, and the preceding analysis has highlighted the main<br />

weaknesses that led to this result: the lack <strong>of</strong> narrative coherence, psychological justification,<br />

and, indeed, drama in portraying the incestuous attraction between Caterina and Joe, a defect<br />

accentuated by the flimsy and ambiguous secondary storylines and characters which neither<br />

shed light on the protagonists' behaviour and existence (in the Hollywood tradition) nor draw<br />

attention to wider socio-economic circumstances (in the traditions <strong>of</strong> European cinema). The<br />

incoherent fusion <strong>of</strong> styles and moods in La lima plus the absence <strong>of</strong> any intellectual<br />

framework apart from self-referentiality and evocations <strong>of</strong> the work <strong>of</strong> directors such as<br />

Pasolini - also lead to a problematic viewing experience.<br />

Regarding the lack <strong>of</strong> coherent dramatic progression from the beginning <strong>of</strong> the story,<br />

this almost predisposes viewers to scrutinizing the motives that lead to the mother/son incest.<br />

Finding none, the film's narrative development is likely to elicit cognitive rejection and<br />

unsympathetic affective responses. If the film is setting out to represent the Oedipus complex<br />

- either as an individual drama or as a projection <strong>of</strong> a social issue - then it is missing one <strong>of</strong><br />

its key tenets; hostility towards the parent <strong>of</strong> the same sex. As far as father figures are<br />

concerned, Joe has no competition or opposition, whereas his real competition for his<br />

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mother's attentions - Caterina's singing career, which absorbs her - is inadequately<br />

addressed. As regards the weakness <strong>of</strong> the secondary characters and storylines, this chapter's<br />

analysis concurs with contemporary criticism <strong>of</strong> the film for introducing lighter moments to<br />

counterbalance the film's controversial subject matter. The view that many characters are<br />

caricatures overloading the film with their depictions' seems appropriate (Grazzini, 1979:<br />

102). This contributed to destabilize further the film's style and structure which were already<br />

lacking organization. These factors doubtless aggravated the response from viewers and<br />

critics who were familiar with Bertolucci's previous work, as La lima appeared to be<br />

insubstantial by comparison, hi the context <strong>of</strong> his career, it remains isolated in terms <strong>of</strong> being<br />

the only film featuring little <strong>of</strong> Bertolucci's technical sophistication or his habitual<br />

exploration <strong>of</strong> cinema's potentialities; nor does it provide individual or social perspectives<br />

that elicit reflection from viewers. On the other hand, if it is considered as a partly<br />

autobiographical work, La luna configures itself almost as a stream <strong>of</strong> consciousness whose<br />

articulation Bertolucci may have felt necessary in order to be able to recuperate his artistic<br />

faculties, abilities that resurfaced as the subsequent film The Tragedy <strong>of</strong> a Ridiculous Man<br />

demonstrated.<br />

References<br />

Branigan, E. (1992) Narrative Comprehension and Film, London and New York: Routledge.<br />

Carroll, N. (1999) 'Film, Emotion and Genre \ in Plantinga, C. and Smith, G. (ed.)<br />

Passionate Views, Baltimore: The John Hopkins <strong>University</strong> Press.<br />

Cornand, A. (1979) review in La Revue du Cinema, no.344, November, in Mirabella, JC. and<br />

Pitiot, P. (ed.) (1999) Intervista a Bemardo Bertolucci, Rome: Gremese Editore.<br />

Grazzini, G. (1979) review in // Corriere della Sera, 2 September, in Mirabella, JC. and<br />

Pitiot, P. (ed.) (1999) Intervista a Bemardo Bertolucci, Rome: Gremese Editore.<br />

Grodal, T. (1997) Moving Pictures, Oxford: Oxford <strong>University</strong> Press.<br />

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Hope, W. (2006) Giuseppe Tornatore, Emotion, Cognition, Cinema. Newcastle: Cambridge<br />

Scholars Press.<br />

Kolker, R. P. (1985) Bernardo Bertolucci, London: BFI Publishing.<br />

Quinn, S. (1977) '1900 Has Taken Its Toll on Bernardo Bertolucci', in Gerard, F.S., Kline,<br />

T.J. and Sklarew, B. (ed.) (2000) Bernardo Bertolucci Interviews, Jackson: <strong>University</strong><br />

Press <strong>of</strong> Mississippi.<br />

Roud, R. (1979) 'Bertolucci on LuncC, in Gerard, F.S.. Kline, T.J. and Sklarew, B. (ed.)<br />

(2000) Bernardo Bertolucci Interviews, Jackson: <strong>University</strong> Press <strong>of</strong> Mississippi.<br />

Smith, M. (1995) Engaging Characters, Oxford: Oxford <strong>University</strong> Press.<br />

Socci, S. (1996) Bernardo Bertolucci, Milan: II Castoro Cinema.<br />

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lo hallo da sola /Stealing Beauty: A Contemporary Gaze on Women<br />

After Little Buddha, Bertolucci returned to work in Italy and made lo ballo da sola/Stealing<br />

Beauty (1996), which, in common with Little Buddha, presents a narrative denouement that<br />

constitutes a satisfactory conclusion in terms <strong>of</strong> character evolution. This might be read as a<br />

sign <strong>of</strong> optimism in the work <strong>of</strong> the director, who, for this film, declared: 'I am re-<br />

experiencing the same enjoyment in making and discovering the cinema that was around in<br />

the 60s' (Socci, 1996: 15). In reality, the film marks a return to more balanced filmic<br />

structures in terms <strong>of</strong> intellectual and affective components, after the emphasis given to the<br />

sensual aspects <strong>of</strong> cinematic narration in Bertolucci's previous three films. While Stealing<br />

Beauty retains the same use <strong>of</strong> landscapes to cue the sort <strong>of</strong> intense aesthetic experiences<br />

observed in The Sheltering Sky, the similar theme <strong>of</strong> the crisis <strong>of</strong> love relationships in<br />

contemporary society is placed in a cognitive and intellectual framework closer to Last Tango<br />

in Paris. Stealing Beauty can be said to revisit Tango's denunciation <strong>of</strong> consumer society's<br />

commodification <strong>of</strong> human relationships, by articulating an idea <strong>of</strong> love relationships that<br />

differs from the prevalent value systems <strong>of</strong> the period.<br />

By the 1990s, little importance was attached to a teenager s first sexual experience,<br />

and the loss <strong>of</strong> virginity was taken for granted as an inevitability. In the same way, the <strong>of</strong>ten<br />

pragmatic, functional nature <strong>of</strong> affective relationships involving working women was<br />

accepted as part <strong>of</strong> a woman's evolving role in contemporary society, hi Stealing Beauty,<br />

Bertolucci's representation <strong>of</strong> socio-cultural reality indicates that these patterns were<br />

changing. The film implies that despite the disconcerting level reached by society's<br />

commodification <strong>of</strong> the female image, girls were endowing their 'first time' with expectation<br />

and meaning, since they had become aware <strong>of</strong> the emotional drought characterizing the lives<br />

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<strong>of</strong> their 'elder sisters'. In a broader societal context, young males - uneasy at late 20th century<br />

society's value system <strong>of</strong> success at all costs - were also realizing that their fragility was one<br />

<strong>of</strong> the qualities characterizing their identity. In this light, the film's English and Italian titles<br />

each reflect a perspective in the film: the voyeuristic perspective (Stealing Beauty) - which is<br />

articulated in different ways - and the feminist perspective (lo ballo da sola 1 1 dance 'on my<br />

own", where 'sola' refers to a female character).<br />

Plot summary<br />

Lucy Harmon (Liv Tyler) is a perceptive American teenager who is determined to shape her<br />

incipient love life beyond the models established by society. At nineteen, she is still a virgin,<br />

since she rejects the concept that one's first sexual experience is either a means <strong>of</strong> ridding<br />

oneself <strong>of</strong> virginity, as if it were a millstone, or merely a matter <strong>of</strong> curiosity. She desires to<br />

make love to Niccolo, a youth she had met during a visit to Italy, and with whom she has<br />

been exchanging letters. The opportunity to see him again occurs when, as a birthday present,<br />

she returns to Italy to have her portrait done by the painter lan Grayson, the husband <strong>of</strong><br />

Diane, the best friend <strong>of</strong> Lucy's late mother. Lucy stays at the Graysons' Tuscan country<br />

house as she seeks to make her romantic dream come true and to discover her biological<br />

father's identity. What other characters in the film - namely Diane's children from her first<br />

marriage, Christopher and Miranda, the English writer and cancer victim Alex, the French art<br />

dealer Mons. Guillaume, and Noemi, a journalist who writes an agony column - perceive as a<br />

'flaw' in Lucy's character, is a quality that makes her an object <strong>of</strong> voyeurism by two other<br />

characters, Carlo Lisca and Richard Reed. Disillusioned by Niccolo, Lucy chooses his less<br />

attractive brother Osvaldo, whom she discovers is the real author <strong>of</strong> the letters. Inspired by<br />

her Miranda ends her relationship with the cynical Richard, whereas the revelation that lan<br />

Grayson is Lucy's father remains a secret between them.<br />

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The affective and cognitive implications <strong>of</strong> the voyeuristic prologue<br />

Bertolucci's inclination to summarize his films" themes during their opening credits occurs<br />

again in Stealing Beauty. On this occasion, viewers are made aware <strong>of</strong> the film's voyeuristic<br />

perspective as the opening credits roll beneath images <strong>of</strong> Lucy, who is travelling from the<br />

USA to Italy. Stylistically, this sequence resembles an amateur home video; there are<br />

moments <strong>of</strong> camera shake which emphasize a presence behind the camera as well as its<br />

subject, plus several crude close-ups and pans that are symptomatic <strong>of</strong> inexperienced camera<br />

users who follow their instincts rather than aiming for an aesthetic smoothness in their films.<br />

This is a stylistic approach, which, given its attractive female subject, escalates into<br />

voyeurism. Confirming this interpretation, Bertolucci himself declared that these early<br />

sequences were inspired by Michael Powell's Peeping Tom, a voyeuristic cult movie that<br />

portrayed a serial killer's penchant for filming his female victims' agony (Mirabella-Pitiot,<br />

1991:73). But, unlike Peeping Tom, there is no mediation between the viewers and these<br />

images, since the character filming Lucy never comes into frame (it is only later in the film<br />

that he is identified). During the final Italian stage <strong>of</strong> her journey, the camera moves close to<br />

Lucy, taking advantage <strong>of</strong> her as she sleeps in a train compartment; her obliviousness to<br />

being observed is underlined by the camera filming a drop <strong>of</strong> saliva that falls from her<br />

slightly open mouth. This makes the filming appear as a form <strong>of</strong> intrusion on the part <strong>of</strong> the<br />

invisible cameraman, whose perspectives start fragmenting the girl's body into many details,<br />

focusing on the childlike within Lucy while also charging the images <strong>of</strong> her with a clear<br />

erotic connotation. A cut to a close-up <strong>of</strong> her plump red lips depicts them as almost asking to<br />

be kissed; a series <strong>of</strong> extreme close-ups <strong>of</strong> her hand, until just the fingers are visible, picture<br />

her fingertips resting near her inner thigh, a pose with obvious autoerotic implications. A full-<br />

length low-angle shot focused on her open legs, her bended knees, and her feet that rest on<br />

the seats opposite, is followed by a cut to high-angle shot that frames the top <strong>of</strong> her thighs as<br />

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she slowly changes position. Both shots clearly carry a heavy sexual charge.<br />

This perspective will elicit varied responses from different cross sections <strong>of</strong> viewers.<br />

It is not without an erotic, affective charge but the exploitative implications <strong>of</strong> the shots may<br />

elicit a sense <strong>of</strong> guilt for those viewers initially aroused by the images; viewers for whom the<br />

images contain no sensual titillation will be intellectually alienated by their manipulative<br />

essence. This arises from the realization that the POV shot compels viewers to directly<br />

participate in the voyeur's process <strong>of</strong> stealing Lucy's images <strong>of</strong> beauty. Bertolucci's decision<br />

to use very idiosyncratic framings confirms this interpretation, hi fact the visual frame is<br />

smaller than the dimensions <strong>of</strong> the screen, and the overall effect is <strong>of</strong> images from a hand­<br />

held video camera surrounded by a black border <strong>of</strong> blank screen. This frame-within-a-frame<br />

is also positioned at the very centre <strong>of</strong> the screen - which corresponds to the focal point <strong>of</strong> a<br />

person's vision - to accentuate the impact upon viewers. Consequently, when the close-ups<br />

<strong>of</strong> different areas <strong>of</strong> Lucy's body are filmed, it creates the impression that the frame is further<br />

narrowed, since the rest <strong>of</strong> her body, together with the background detail <strong>of</strong> the train<br />

compartment, vanish <strong>of</strong>f screen. Through these techniques, the camerawork assumes a<br />

significant role in the voyeuristic process <strong>of</strong> reducing Lucy to a sexual object, since, in Laura<br />

Mulvey's words, 'one part <strong>of</strong> a fragmented body destroys the Renaissance space, the illusion<br />

<strong>of</strong> depth demanded by the narrative, it gives flatness, the quality <strong>of</strong> a cut-out or icon rather<br />

than verisimilitude to the screen' (Mulvey, 1995: 27). Therefore, many viewers' instincts will<br />

ultimately be to distance themselves from these images which transform Lucy into a<br />

consumable object <strong>of</strong> gratification. Eventually, when the train stops at Siena, the voyeur's<br />

hand comes into frame as it caresses Lucy's face to wake her up - and also startle the viewers<br />

by suddenly giving substance to the presence behind the camera. The closure <strong>of</strong> this<br />

prologue, with the voyeur's hand emerging from the train window to give an astonished Lucy<br />

the videotape he has been making, which she drops on the rail track, reinforces the idea <strong>of</strong><br />

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Lucy as a consumable item. He gives away the videotape in the same way as he might<br />

dispose <strong>of</strong> a porn magazine after flicking through it. As well as the prologue's emotional and<br />

intellectual resonances, by withholding all narrative information except the fact that Lucy is<br />

travelling to Tuscany and that her beauty attracts unsolicited attention, the film stimulates<br />

viewers' curiosity and directs their cognitive hypotheses towards the probability that<br />

sexuality will be an important ingredient in the film.<br />

Cynical voyeurism, repulsion and social awareness<br />

Later in the film, the voyeur is identified as Carlo Lisca, a photographer who specializes in<br />

war reportage and whose involvement in war is characterized by moral detachment and by an<br />

interest in its more lurid excesses, as his cynical statement 'There is a war and I am light as a<br />

souffle' implies; Bertolucci consequently creates a further similarity with the protagonist <strong>of</strong><br />

Peeping Tom. In Lisca's second encounter with Lucy, she is lying on the grass after a game<br />

<strong>of</strong> hide-and-seek and is wrestling playfully with another character, Richard, these exertions<br />

leaving her panting. By using a high camera angle to represent Lisca's gaze, Lucy is shot in a<br />

medium close-up to enhance her neck, her open mouth, her shoulders as they rest on the<br />

grass, and the rhythmic rise and fall <strong>of</strong> her chest. Through Lisca's gaze, they all become<br />

ambiguous signs <strong>of</strong> excitement; then by using a low camera angle to render Lucy's gaze,<br />

Lisca is seen showing no reaction, he simply puts on his sunglasses and walks away. In their<br />

subsequent dialogue, focusing on the possibility that he is Lucy's biological father, his<br />

contemptuous detachment confirms that he is very much in control <strong>of</strong> himself. This is<br />

confirmed in a later sequence in which he is referred to as 'that bastard" who likes looking at<br />

women 'relieving themselves'; he dismisses the allegation with a superficial comment that<br />

does not actually deny the accusation. This depiction is effective in making Lisca's character<br />

repugnant, the viewer's emotional, antipathetic response leading to Lisca being placed at the<br />

negative end <strong>of</strong> the viewer's hierarchy <strong>of</strong> character preference as this classification starts to<br />

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evolve (M. Smith, 1995: 84-85). The sequences also guide viewers to recognize in him the<br />

embodiment <strong>of</strong> the cynicism which contemporary society increasingly uses to relate to human<br />

dignity and suffering.<br />

With his emotional alo<strong>of</strong>ness, Lisca embodies one <strong>of</strong> the two kinds <strong>of</strong> voyeurism<br />

displayed in the film, specifically the role <strong>of</strong> the detached voyeur who perceives women as<br />

commodities. In this respect his visual exploitation <strong>of</strong> Lucy, his female 'victim', reflects<br />

Griselda Pollock's analysis <strong>of</strong> women's images within mainstream magazines. She suggests<br />

that 'Notions <strong>of</strong> patriarchal ideology engendered by a recourse to psychoanalysis are on their<br />

own inadequate and insufficiently historical and the issue must be located in terms <strong>of</strong><br />

capitalism and bourgeois ideology for [...] one <strong>of</strong> the dominant significations <strong>of</strong> woman is<br />

that <strong>of</strong> sale and commodity' (Pollock, 1995: 142). Pollock considers Mulvey's interpretation<br />

<strong>of</strong> the male sexual gaze as directly connected to the Freudian formulation <strong>of</strong> the castration<br />

complex as outdated, due to the widespread 'directness <strong>of</strong> vaginal imagery' (Pollock 1995:<br />

142), a position that is partly shared by John Ellis (Ellis, 1995: 159-161). In a later work,<br />

Mulvey herself acknowledges a 'formal relation' between contemporary capitalism and the<br />

aesthetics <strong>of</strong> Post-modernism (Mulvey 1996: 14). Lisca represents the most updated version<br />

<strong>of</strong> a capitalism which, having erased the notion <strong>of</strong> the individual value <strong>of</strong> human labour, now<br />

has the impersonality <strong>of</strong> knowledge in its sights, and seeks to establish the supremacy <strong>of</strong> the<br />

mass media over all aspects <strong>of</strong> intellectual thought. The lack <strong>of</strong> consideration for the<br />

specificity <strong>of</strong> the individual has reduced people to mere marketing targets for desirable goods<br />

and services which appear in every channel <strong>of</strong> mass communication, charged with symbolic<br />

meaning, to be sold, consumed, and disposed <strong>of</strong>. This dehumanizing process results in a<br />

dramatic loss <strong>of</strong> contact between people and reality, as Lisca's cynical exploitation <strong>of</strong> Lucy s<br />

obliviousness while asleep, his indifference towards wars, to the death <strong>of</strong> Lucy's mother and<br />

people in general, indicate.<br />

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Brutal voyeurism, repulsion and social awareness<br />

Lucy's journey into voyeuristic exposure at the country house continues through the<br />

morbid gaze <strong>of</strong> Richard Reed, Miranda's lover, who embodies the second kind <strong>of</strong> voyeurism<br />

represented in the film, this being an intrusive attitude leading to aggressive behaviour. He is<br />

a personification <strong>of</strong> the kind <strong>of</strong> man that Western consumer society, with its devotion to<br />

materialistic goals, considers a winner. He is handsome and health conscious, successful in<br />

his legal career, married, and engaged in a love affair with a beautiful woman (Miranda). His<br />

first appearance on screen is calculated to leave viewers with no doubts as to his<br />

ambivalence; he flirts with Lucy at first sight, speaking poetic words, the insincerity <strong>of</strong> which<br />

is underlined by Miranda who ironically comments that she had never been aware <strong>of</strong> his<br />

poetic talents. From the moment he knows about Lucy's virginity, he becomes obsessed by it,<br />

and, through his manner, viewers are made aware <strong>of</strong> the reason. He clearly considers Lucy's<br />

virginity as a virtue that adds value to the goods, as it were, making Lucy a rare form <strong>of</strong> prey.<br />

From that moment, he is portrayed as increasingly coarse and predatory. His POV shots are<br />

characterized by 'active scopophilia and its investigative, sadistic, enquiring look' as<br />

Elizabeth Cowie terms it (Cowie, 1997: 168) a gaze that sexually objectifies women.<br />

Through his perspective, Lucy's body is framed from all angles, even from extremely low<br />

angles to catch a glimpse <strong>of</strong> her underwear as in the hide-and-seek sequence. Viewed through<br />

Richard's gaze, Lucy's young exuberance is charged with an erotic excitability, and adult<br />

viewers <strong>of</strong> film will recognize the tactics he uses in to engender situations that will lead to<br />

erotic contact with Lucy. This represents an interesting situation for the film viewers, in terms<br />

<strong>of</strong> the concepts <strong>of</strong> alignment and allegiance (M. Smith, 1995: 75). As regards cognitive<br />

alignment, (adult) viewers will be aligned with Richard because they will recognize the<br />

strategies that he uses in order to get close to Lucy, but viewers may be simultaneously<br />

repulsed as Richard's behaviour will probably be evaluated as undesirable and harmful, and<br />

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any allegiance towards the character is unlikely to develop. These cognitive and affective<br />

responses are triggered from Richard's pseudo-poetic utterances onwards, the film showing<br />

him as he removes his swimwear - in an aggressively exhibitionistic gesture - and dives into<br />

the swimming pool where Lucy is.<br />

Hints <strong>of</strong> Richard's tendency to dominate and exploit within his sexual relationships<br />

are given when the camera peeps through Miranda's bedroom window on two occasions and<br />

portrays their intercourse as an act in which he gratifies himself crudely without any care for<br />

his partner. Significantly, on the second occasion, Richard is shown fantasizing about<br />

deflowering Lucy as he sodomizes Miranda - this is evident from his distant, glazed look,<br />

which ignores his partner. Low-angle shots <strong>of</strong> his body towering over Miranda's are intercut<br />

with repeated close-ups <strong>of</strong> his hands as they grip the bed frame, his bestial panting filling the<br />

soundtrack. The scene's disturbing nature is compounded as Miranda is shot frontally, and<br />

this reaction shot <strong>of</strong> her distress, emphasized as her hands grip the bed-head to brace herself<br />

against the pain, highlights Richard's focus on his own pleasure. These two kinds <strong>of</strong><br />

voyeurism - the cynical (Carlo Lisca) and the brutal (Richard Reed) - both imply the kind <strong>of</strong><br />

rapport that Pollock identifies as existing between the 'spectator-buyer' and 'the picture <strong>of</strong><br />

woman' created by male-oriented pornography, this being one <strong>of</strong> a 'forceful intrusion or<br />

indeed possessive voyeurism inviting rape'(Pollock, 1995:142). By making Richard into a<br />

source <strong>of</strong> voyeurism, Bertolucci elicits a more general evaluation <strong>of</strong> his social behaviour; his<br />

violent attitude during the sexual act can arguably be interpreted as one <strong>of</strong> the last remaining<br />

opportunities for men who feel uneasy in their relationships with independent and successful<br />

women, to reaffirm their dominance. Richard's final dialogue with Miranda, which is<br />

discussed later in the chapter, sustains this interpretation.<br />

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Unease and gender awareness elicited by feminist perspectives<br />

If notions <strong>of</strong> voyeurism appear to have shifted from the castration complex to the more<br />

dehumanizing concept <strong>of</strong> commodity possession, feminist perspectives also present a further<br />

step in the process <strong>of</strong> representing realistically a woman's need and desire for love. Given<br />

that the screenplay is credited both to Bertolucci and to Susan Binot, it would be interesting<br />

to know to what extent Binot's female perception might have been responsible for this<br />

portrait <strong>of</strong> a 'new woman' which emerges in the representation <strong>of</strong> Lucy. First, by depicting<br />

the pressure that begins to build around Lucy, the other characters focusing on her as the<br />

gossip spreads that she is a virgin, the film represents the impossibility - even for a society as<br />

sophisticated and evolved as our own - <strong>of</strong> accepting and respecting non-conformist<br />

behaviour, and implies how this attitude conceals a measure <strong>of</strong> antipathy towards people who<br />

show independence <strong>of</strong> mind. In the film, Lucy eventually overcomes the problem by<br />

pretending to lose her virginity with a young Englishman whom she happens to meet at<br />

Niccolo's party. The power <strong>of</strong> conformism is confirmed by an exchange between Alex and<br />

Diane. Referring to Lucy's presumed sexual encounter, he asks 'Did she choose a good one?'<br />

to which Diane replies, 'She just chose the first one' Through this contrivance and its<br />

repercussions, the film indicates how private situations can become intolerable and absurd<br />

when subjected to social pressure.<br />

But the script's originality centres on its portrayal <strong>of</strong> Lucy as a teenage protagonist<br />

who has digested the experiences <strong>of</strong> two previous generations: that <strong>of</strong> Diane as a mother<br />

figure, and that <strong>of</strong> Miranda, notionally an 'elder sister' in age terms. Lucy appears to have<br />

come to a resolution that goes beyond the classic dichotomy between the bride's submission<br />

to the patriarchal order, and the independent, career-oriented, postmodern woman. The film<br />

suggests that the nurturing, motherly role embodied by women is no longer applicable, as<br />

Diane admits that she is tired <strong>of</strong> taking care <strong>of</strong> people. On the other hand, the role fulfilled by<br />

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the 'elder sister' is also unsatisfactory, as Miranda appears to pay a heavy price for achieving<br />

economic and social emancipation, given that personal relationships are increasingly loveless<br />

and functional. Through its portrayal <strong>of</strong> Miranda and Richard, the film explores the modern<br />

phenomenon <strong>of</strong> the difficulties faced by men in their relationships with independent women -<br />

in particular, their propensity to avoid responsibility or, worse, their tendency to exploit<br />

relationships to their own advantage. When Miranda finishes with Richard he paces the room<br />

in disbelief, interpreting her behaviour as characteristic <strong>of</strong> his own manipulative values, as he<br />

claims: 'You get what you want when you want'. Miranda is viewed as a commodity on to<br />

which Richard projects his values and needs, and when she shows signs <strong>of</strong> alternative,<br />

independent wishes he is unable to cope with the autonomy <strong>of</strong> this object <strong>of</strong> his desire. When<br />

Miranda rejects the functional, compartmentalized nature <strong>of</strong> their affair, Richard's angry<br />

outburst <strong>of</strong> 'What happened to "What you see is what you get?" This is not you, I know you',<br />

is characterized by the language <strong>of</strong> possession and consumerism, and betrays the confusion<br />

and disappointment <strong>of</strong> a customer when an item that was believed to have been 'broken in' to<br />

a comfortable fit, like shoes, suddenly assumes different and undesirable characteristics. This<br />

exemplifies the way the film uses dialogues, whose nature and content demand a reflection<br />

from viewers, to stimulate awareness about how modern society perceives women.<br />

Lucy appears aware <strong>of</strong> these societal positions into which women can be<br />

manoeuvred, so when she meets Niccolo again, the youth for whom she has preserved her<br />

virginity, she does not immediately surrender herself and look at her love object in a solely<br />

idealistic way. She remains aware, looking for signs <strong>of</strong> love in Niccolo's face, but she finds<br />

none. Similarly, Lucy does not accept the practical solution inadvertently <strong>of</strong>fered by the<br />

Englishman. Instead she waits, and eventually Niccolo's less attractive brother, Osvaldo, is<br />

revealed as the author <strong>of</strong> the letter that she loves and knows by heart; this situation is<br />

undoubtedly a re-elaboration <strong>of</strong> the 18th century comedy Cyrano De Bergerac.(l) But unlike<br />

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the novel's protagonist Roxanne, Lucy has grown suspicious <strong>of</strong> pretty faces and is ready to<br />

listen to her Cyrano (Osvaldo) as he opens up to her. As a result - by taking Osvaldo's words<br />

as the 'pro<strong>of</strong> <strong>of</strong> love' referred to by the French guest Mons. Guillaume ('II n'y a pas d'amour,<br />

il n'y a que des preuves d'amour') - Lucy confirms that modern day women, without giving<br />

up their independence (Lucy travels, smokes cannabis, and has total control <strong>of</strong> her sex life)<br />

want to experience real feelings in their relationships again. This is indicated in Lucy's<br />

harmonious love scene with Osvaldo, which contrasts with Niccolo's calculating and<br />

hypocritical sexual approach from which Lucy departs in tears, feeling degraded by the<br />

experience.<br />

By this realistic portrayal <strong>of</strong> a young woman who achieves a sort <strong>of</strong> third way that<br />

allows her simultaneously to avoid historical female passivity and contemporary<br />

manifestations <strong>of</strong> sex as part <strong>of</strong> consumerism, Stealing Beauty broaches the question <strong>of</strong><br />

modern day womanhood as do certain other films in which the 'problem <strong>of</strong> woman as a<br />

subject <strong>of</strong> desire and as subject to social discourses is presented' (Cowie, 1997:14). Credit<br />

should be given to Bertolucci for dealing with such issues in a way that, on the one hand,<br />

avoids the irritating aestheticism <strong>of</strong> Hollywood romantic comedies (e.g. The Runaway Bride,<br />

Carry Marshall, 1999) in which, between the two presentable male protagonists who are<br />

vying to be chosen by the female, the particularly gorgeous one, with whom the woman will<br />

naturally end up, is also more intelligent and charming. Such artificial and idealized<br />

narratives are bound to draw irony from non-mainstream female spectators. On the other<br />

hand, Stealing Beauty also avoids radical feminist perspectives that <strong>of</strong>ten alienate male<br />

spectators and make them feel misrepresented. In this respect, the film manages to align<br />

viewers <strong>of</strong> both genders with the character <strong>of</strong> Osvaldo by presenting him as the embodiment<br />

<strong>of</strong> the authenticity sought by female spectators, and by developing a cognitively and<br />

intellectually gratifying storyline in which fragile insecure men can potentially secure<br />

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omantic fulfilment.<br />

The author as omniscient narrator<br />

Despite the range <strong>of</strong> character perspectives within the narrative, Bertolucci's idiosyncratic<br />

camera in Stealing Beauty is particularly conspicuous and reflects the peculiar phenomenon<br />

that William Rothman terms the 'relationship between the camera and the author, the "I" <strong>of</strong><br />

the camera' (Rothman, 1988: x). Although Lucy is constructed as the central character, and<br />

although the narrative receives an initial impetus from her journey to Tuscany, from that<br />

point onwards, no individual character assumes the role <strong>of</strong> narrator - in novelistic terms - to<br />

drive the story forwards. In this way viewers are not aligned with any individual character to<br />

any extent, and so it is the camera - or more specifically the unseen presence behind it - that<br />

gives impetus to the narrative in temporal and spatial terms. In this respect Stealing Beauty<br />

exemplifies films based on external focalization, which occurs when camera position and<br />

movement resemble the presence <strong>of</strong> an extra diegetic narrator (Branigan, 1992: 102-104).<br />

Two types <strong>of</strong> framing become motifs that characterize the film. One type is based around<br />

close-ups <strong>of</strong> Lucy's face - not from any character s perspective - which are followed by the<br />

camera moving away from her to take in a broader picture <strong>of</strong> other characters/actions. The<br />

other type <strong>of</strong> framing uses a POV shot as a starting point, a perspective that soon turns into an<br />

objective view in which the character from whom the subjective shot originated, is, in turn,<br />

observed himself. As s/he looks at someone else, the camera's framing finally leaves him/her<br />

behind and follows the second character, thereby taking the viewers to the next scene. At<br />

other times, to portray what is happening at a given moment in a different area <strong>of</strong> the set, the<br />

camera moves ostentatiously from one area to another and back again in the manner <strong>of</strong> an<br />

omniscient narrator <strong>of</strong> a novel.<br />

This strategy emphasizes the descriptive quality <strong>of</strong> the narration and also increases the<br />

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director's presence, as no character is <strong>of</strong>fered to viewers as a screen-surrogate from whom the<br />

viewer's gaze might be projected. The outcome is the positioning <strong>of</strong> the viewers as observers,<br />

a distanciation effect reminiscent <strong>of</strong> the Brechtian lesson about inducing in viewers a critical<br />

attitude by making them look upon the characters and their situation (Willett, 1992: 91-93). In<br />

this respect the film also presents two self-conscious moments about film-making, which,<br />

although interrupting the viewers' absorption in the story, also appear designed to elicit forms<br />

<strong>of</strong> affective engagement. The first sequence depicts the verses that Lucy writes in her diary,<br />

which are initially shot in close up, with Lucy's handwriting then being superimposed on<br />

screen; this device immediately awakens the viewer's perception <strong>of</strong> the artifice <strong>of</strong> the<br />

cinematic medium, while also enhancing the scene's poeticism. The second, more complex<br />

example depicts Lucy's vitality as she starts dancing while listening to energetic music,<br />

arguably the scene from which the Italian title for the film is derived. Although Lucy listens<br />

through earphones, the music is made audible on the soundtrack, until the camera tracks<br />

backwards and the soundtrack goes completely mute. Only when two characters come into<br />

frame commenting on the carefree quality <strong>of</strong> people <strong>of</strong> Lucy's age, do viewers realize that<br />

she is now framed from outside the room, being watched through a closed window. Again the<br />

device has a tw<strong>of</strong>old aim: to showcase an ingenious directorial manipulation <strong>of</strong> the film's<br />

visuals and diegetic spaces, and to expose viewers to Lucy's absorption in the music's<br />

dynamic energy.<br />

The affective charge <strong>of</strong> the film's aesthetics<br />

In other situations, the camera's mobility - combined with a range <strong>of</strong> camera angles - creates<br />

a vivid impression in viewers <strong>of</strong> being allowed to gaze freely around the filmic location, and<br />

this technique augments the viewer's affective engagement with other aspects <strong>of</strong> the filmic<br />

experience, such as sharing the magical beauty <strong>of</strong> the landscape and setting which form the<br />

film s backdrop. These are constituted by a beautifully converted barn surrounded by a<br />

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striking garden whose colours naturally blend with the reddish soil and green vegetation <strong>of</strong><br />

the Siena countryside, these tones being intensified to cue a sense <strong>of</strong> artistic beauty.<br />

Remembering how Stealing Beauty was Bertolucci's cinematic return to Italy, his choice <strong>of</strong><br />

location can be interpreted as a tribute to the geographical beauty and artistic tradition <strong>of</strong> his<br />

country. This appears to be echoed in the praise delivered by lan Grayson early in the film,<br />

There is a great tradition <strong>of</strong> art in these hills', in response to Lucy's question about why he<br />

moved there. The notion that Bertolucci aims to encourage in viewers a prolonged<br />

enchantment with this element <strong>of</strong> the film's mise-en-scene, is reinforced by the way a colour<br />

motif based on shades <strong>of</strong> red and green is designed to enhance the natural beauty and radiate<br />

from almost every scene. The colour <strong>of</strong> Lucy's eyes and lips also perfectly match those <strong>of</strong> the<br />

settings, and because it is noticeable how every shot contains either objects or costumes that<br />

repeat the red/green colour motif, it is clear that the director used the colours as a technique to<br />

create parallels among elements <strong>of</strong> the film's settings. Here follow a few examples: life size<br />

statues, made <strong>of</strong> the local red clay known as "Terre di Siena" and positioned around the bam,<br />

mirror the red soil <strong>of</strong> the paths that run between the buildings. In the kitchen, green furniture<br />

is counterbalanced by the tiled red floor, while a green shawl covers the shoulders <strong>of</strong> a red<br />

statue resting against the wall. Each character in turn wears something red or green;<br />

particularly beautiful is Diane's green silk dressing gown with a red rose pattern, which<br />

contrasts with the monochrome <strong>of</strong> the red-clay artistic headboard <strong>of</strong> her bed. hi the sequence<br />

<strong>of</strong> the decisive encounter between Lucy and Osvaldo, her red skirt complements his red shirt,<br />

so that when they make love, their clothing underlines the forming <strong>of</strong> a bond between them.<br />

The film ends with Lucy returning to the barn, and the promising future ahead <strong>of</strong> her is<br />

symbolized by the way the frame gradually enlarges to give an aerial view <strong>of</strong> Siena, showing<br />

the familiar red <strong>of</strong> its ro<strong>of</strong>s and buildings, surrounded by green hills.<br />

Moreover, frontal lighting is adopted to take away density from the images, whereas<br />

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the hues are kept in the same tone by the use <strong>of</strong> appropriate filters, the intention being to<br />

merge the light touch <strong>of</strong> Humanistic art with the brightness <strong>of</strong> Impressionism. The filters<br />

make the hues vibrant during the day - and the effect is particularly vivid in the scene where<br />

Lucy, filmed frontally, cycles along a path which is flanked by trees curving almost to the<br />

ground and forming a stunning natural arc. Within sunsets the use <strong>of</strong> colour is dramatic, and<br />

is particularly impressive within the theatrical mise-en-scene <strong>of</strong> the party at Niccolo's 18 th<br />

century villa, where side lighting is used to create a stylized effect and to evoke the<br />

atmosphere <strong>of</strong> a Bacchanalia. This colour and lighting strategy evokes the scheme deployed<br />

in The Sheltering Sky as it succeeds in temporarily privileging an affective, sensual<br />

engagement with the film over cognitive or intellectual activity, enchanting viewers with the<br />

aesthetic beauty <strong>of</strong> the locations and mises-en-scene.<br />

Conveying meaning through film style<br />

The colour motifs that emerge through the careful combination <strong>of</strong> setting, lighting, and<br />

costume create a sense <strong>of</strong> elegant continuity, and ensure consistency in the film's visual style.<br />

But the colour motifs' function goes beyond style as it marks the contrast between the<br />

harmony implied by the film s aesthetic perspective and the discomfort implied by its social<br />

perspective. In this respect, another valuable outcome from the use <strong>of</strong> this visual technique is<br />

its contribution in creating the artistic effect <strong>of</strong> still life paintings, as Bertolucci seems to use<br />

this technique as a metaphor to represent the characters as fixed in a lifestyle that has lost its<br />

original authenticity, just as still life itself has lost its vital lymph. Lucy awakens their<br />

consciences, this being evoked in the early sequence <strong>of</strong> her arrival at the Graysons' home.<br />

Everything inside and outside the house is presented as still and immersed in silence as<br />

everyone sleeps. Lucy gently awakens Diane, who loudly announces her arrival to lan who is<br />

sleeping indoors; then, gradually, the whole house stirs into life, hi thematic terms, many<br />

characters - stirred by the issues brought to light by Lucy's arrival - will find aspects <strong>of</strong> their<br />

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life revitalized. Diane rediscovers the erotic side <strong>of</strong> a marriage overwhelmed by daily routine;<br />

lan's creativity is reinvigorated; Miranda becomes true to herself again; Noemi experiences<br />

love for a younger, more sensitive man, after years <strong>of</strong> cynically evaluating the love affairs <strong>of</strong><br />

others, whereas Alex tastes for one last time the joy <strong>of</strong> human interaction. In this light, the<br />

colour motif appears designed both to generate an aesthetic experience so intense that<br />

viewers at times feel enchanted by the harmonious beauty, and also to emphasize the<br />

descriptive quality <strong>of</strong> the narrative, which centres not on an ongoing plot but on the process<br />

<strong>of</strong> attaining awareness about the existential limits caused by the ways in which contemporary<br />

relationships are established.<br />

Conclusion<br />

The stylistic techniques used by Bertolucci in Stealing Beauty allow him to connect the<br />

affective and intellectual threads <strong>of</strong> the film to give viewers a dual experience <strong>of</strong> similar<br />

intensities. Viewers experience the vivid fascination <strong>of</strong> actually being at the Graysons' home<br />

as invisible guests and, at the same time, viewers are made constantly aware <strong>of</strong> the social<br />

discourse that is being explored. However, the film's visual approach to Lucy VLiv Tyler's<br />

face and body - with the repeated close-ups and extreme close-ups <strong>of</strong> her mouth, eyes, breast,<br />

and legs <strong>of</strong>ten not being attached to a character's point <strong>of</strong> view - can be perceived as a<br />

contradiction <strong>of</strong> the critical perspective <strong>of</strong> voyeurism implied by the narrative, because the<br />

shots are ultimately experienced as a further objectification <strong>of</strong> the actress's beautiful features.<br />

In addition, the film s narrative is markedly unconfrontational, as Lucy does not question<br />

Carlo Lisca's values, simply acknowledges Niccolo's calculating nature, and even agrees<br />

with lan that the fact that he is her real father should be kept secret. This underplayed<br />

approach possibly prevents viewers from developing a pro-attitude towards Lucy's character<br />

and situation, as she appears detached from the other characters and their circumstances.<br />

Consequently these factors ensure that the themes that this chapter has identified in Stealing<br />

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Beauty remain at a somewhat understated level within the film, without them being debated<br />

or articulated more explicitly. Therefore, the result is a film that is emotionally and<br />

intellectually subtle, beguiling but not, arguably, pr<strong>of</strong>oundly engaging.<br />

Notes<br />

1. A heroic comedy in five acts by the poet-dramatist Edmond Rostand (1869-1918). The protagonist<br />

Roxanne falls in love with a handsome youth, as she believes he is the author <strong>of</strong> romantic poems and<br />

love letters dedicated to her, whereas the real author is instead Cyrano, her ugly cousin, who is<br />

secretly in love with her and does not dare to reveal himself because <strong>of</strong> his ugliness.<br />

References<br />

Branigan, E. (1992) Narrative Comprehension and Film, London and New York: Routledge<br />

Cowie, E. (1997) Representing the Woman: Cinema and Psychoanalysis, Hampshire:<br />

MacMillan Press Ltd.<br />

Ellis, J. (1995) 'On Pornography', in Caughie, J. and Kuhn A. (ed.) The Sexual Subject: A<br />

Screen Reader in Sexuality, London: Routledge.<br />

Mirabella, JC. and Pitiot, P. (1991) Inten'ista a Bemardo Bertolucci, Rome: Gremese<br />

Edit ore.<br />

Mulvey, L. (1995) 'Visual Pleasure and Narrative Cinema', in Caughie, J. and Kuhn, A.<br />

(ed.) The Sexual Subject: A Screen Reader in Sexuality, London: Routledge.<br />

Mulvey, L. (1996) Fetishism and Curiosity, London: British Film Institute.<br />

Pollock, G. (1995) 'What's Wrong with "Images <strong>of</strong> Women"?', in Caughie, J. and Kuhn, A.<br />

(ed.) The Sexual Subject: A Screen Reader in Sexuality , London: Routledge.<br />

Rothman, W. (1988) The "I" <strong>of</strong> the Camera, Cambridge: Cambridge <strong>University</strong> Press.<br />

Smith, M. (1995) Engaging Characters, Oxford: Oxford <strong>University</strong> Press<br />

Socci, S. (1996) Bernardo Bertolucci, Milan: II Castoro Cinema.<br />

Willett, J. (ed.) (1992) Brecht on Theatre, translated from German by Willett, J., London:<br />

Methuen Drama.<br />

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L 'assedio I Besieged: A Cognitive Approach to On-Screen Emotion<br />

Three years after Stealing Beauty (1996), Bertolucci released L'assedio I Besieged, the latter<br />

film carrying over two themes from the previous film: a young female protagonist who is the<br />

subject <strong>of</strong> unsolicited male attention, and a setting in which private dramas evolve in relative<br />

seclusion. But the analogies end here, as in Besieged the director explores these elements<br />

through different perspectives, principally solitude and fetishism. In this film, the female<br />

protagonist - Shandurai - is an African immigrant, a position that makes her individually and<br />

socially fragile and therefore mostly passive. The male gaze - through the English expatriate<br />

Kinsky - appears driven by love, yet it is intrusive and is combined with behaviour that<br />

betrays signs <strong>of</strong> fetishism. The secluded set is an apartment that constitutes an oasis <strong>of</strong> calm<br />

within the metropolis <strong>of</strong> modern Rome, emphasizing the estrangement <strong>of</strong> the male<br />

protagonist from the outside world, as well as <strong>of</strong>fering Shandurai the opportunity to<br />

reconstitute fragments <strong>of</strong> her native world. The director's choice <strong>of</strong> location appears<br />

motivated to strengthen the degree <strong>of</strong> realism in the narrative. Yosefa Loshitsky (2010)<br />

asserts that the film's 'nostalgic gaze at one <strong>of</strong> Rome's most romantic and iconic historical<br />

landmarks, the Piazza di Spagna (The Spanish Steps) reveals spaces (presumably near the<br />

Termini and Piazza di Repubblica) where only nonwhite, dark foreigners can be seen',<br />

(Loshitsky, 2010: 77) but this overlooks the fact that Piazza di Spagna is historically known<br />

as having been the favourite spot <strong>of</strong> the English Romantic community in Rome. There, John<br />

Keats lived and died and nowadays his house is a museum; at the comer <strong>of</strong> the street where<br />

the apartment featured in Besieged is located, there has long been a tea room in classic<br />

English style. The space where Shandurai is framed amongst other migrants is Piazza<br />

Vittorio, one <strong>of</strong> the Rome's most famous market squares, an area where migrants do mix with<br />

Italians, this integration facilitated by the buying and selling that all the communities engage<br />

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in, as the market sequences <strong>of</strong> Besieged show. Not uncoincidentally, in 2002 a famous<br />

multiethnic band <strong>of</strong> musicians was formed there, which took its name from the square -<br />

L 'orchestra di Piazza Vittorio - and is one <strong>of</strong> the best known examples in Italy <strong>of</strong> successful<br />

multiculturalism. Therefore, at least for viewers familiar with Rome's topology, the film<br />

location has arguably been chosen to fit the criterion <strong>of</strong> verisimilitude sought by the narrative.<br />

Nevertheless, the realism evoked by the location, set and character traits is counterbalanced<br />

by a sophisticated, intellectual cinematic construction, combining stylized framings, skewed<br />

angles, varying film speeds and unconventional editing, which shape the film's style. In<br />

addition, in terms <strong>of</strong> Besieged' s narrative construction, Bertolucci resumes his habit <strong>of</strong><br />

leaving viewers with a denouement that is ambivalent, leaving the viewer's cognitive<br />

hypotheses suspended.<br />

A prologue with a cinematic citation<br />

The prologue accompanying the opening credits contains key narrative details; it is composed<br />

<strong>of</strong> African images and sounds that inform viewers about Shandurai's background. She is a<br />

nurse who witnesses the arrest <strong>of</strong> her husband, a local teacher, for political reasons, and she is<br />

forced to emigrate. The scene depicting the arrest seems designed to trigger the recognition <strong>of</strong><br />

connoisseurs <strong>of</strong> film history, as it evokes a key scene from Rossellini's Roma citta aperta I<br />

Rome Open City (1945), one <strong>of</strong> the best known Neorealist films. In Bertolucci's cinematic<br />

debut Before the Revolution, Rossellini's name is mentioned as a key exponent <strong>of</strong> art cinema,<br />

and another element <strong>of</strong> homage, here in Besieged, not only seems plausible but also<br />

indicative <strong>of</strong> a pattern <strong>of</strong> cinematic citation and homage that Bertolucci was to continue in<br />

The Dreamers. In Rossellini's take, the camera cross cuts between three images, those <strong>of</strong> a<br />

member <strong>of</strong> the Italian resistance flanked by German soldiers as he is taken away on a truck,<br />

his partner running after the truck with her right arm outstretched, shouting his name, and the<br />

local priest who tries to restrain her. Eventually a soldier shoots her down, and she falls dead<br />

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on the dusty road, while the priest arrives and kneels beside her. In Besieged the sequence<br />

presents the same composition, framings and camera movements, except that Shandurai is not<br />

killed, but falls on her knees and buries her face in her hands. Where Rossellini heightens the<br />

emotional torment <strong>of</strong> the scene via soundtrack music Bertolucci opts for a different - though<br />

equally disconcerting - effect by removing the scene's diegetic sound. Because this is a<br />

prologue and not a denouement, an African seer - who replaces the priest in approaching the<br />

woman - does not stop and attend to her, but a few steps away he resumes his litany to<br />

indicate the story's continuation. For many viewers, both Italian and also those with<br />

knowledge <strong>of</strong> world cinema, the scene indirectly draws on the affective power <strong>of</strong> one <strong>of</strong> the<br />

most traumatic scenes in the history <strong>of</strong> Italian cinema, and therefore a link between Besieged<br />

and its cinematic heritage is set up.<br />

Plot summary<br />

The film's main narrative starts with Shandurai already in Italy. She is portrayed as the object<br />

<strong>of</strong> unsolicited attention from Kinsky, an English pianist, for whom she works as a housemaid<br />

in an elegant Rome apartment that he has inherited. Shandurai's contacts with the outside<br />

world are limited to the university where she is studying medicine, and where she has only<br />

one friend, Agostino. Kinsky too leads a lonely life, only seeing a few youngsters to whom he<br />

teaches piano. In love with Shandurai, Kinsky besieges her with unsolicited attention. As a<br />

consequence <strong>of</strong> a confrontation in which Kinsky declares that he would do anything for her -<br />

Shandurai consequently challenging him to get her husband out <strong>of</strong> jail - Kinsky sells his most<br />

precious belongings to provide the money necessary to liberate the man. This act proves to be<br />

a more insidious, psychological siege on Shandurai's state <strong>of</strong> mind, and she eventually sleeps<br />

with Kinsky the night before her husband's arrival.<br />

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The affective implications <strong>of</strong> a(nother) secluded set<br />

It could be said that the film centres on two characters as co-protagonists, as the narrative<br />

shifts from Shandurai to Kinsky and vice versa, portraying their solitude in a city that is alien<br />

to them both. However, the point around which the story <strong>of</strong> these two forms <strong>of</strong> solitude<br />

unfolds is the house, which, as Bertolucci himself stated, is 'as important as the characters. It<br />

is a third character' (Mirabella-Pitiot 1999: 79). The house, in fact, seems to possess a<br />

personality; to step inside is to immediately distance oneself from the chaos <strong>of</strong> daily life and<br />

to enter an atmosphere <strong>of</strong> strange stillness. The elaborate mise-en-scene <strong>of</strong> the house, with its<br />

dust-covered artworks, antique furniture made <strong>of</strong> dark wood, and heavy curtains, all<br />

contribute to make it into a museum piece, a perfect setting for a theatrical drama, since it is<br />

immersed in silence which is broken only by the melancholy sound <strong>of</strong> the pian<strong>of</strong>orte. By<br />

considering the mise-en-scene <strong>of</strong> the house, it is possible to establish how the house itself<br />

shapes the narrative - and also the emotional states <strong>of</strong> the protagonists - in three stages. At<br />

first, it defines the characters' solitude, enclosing each <strong>of</strong> them in a specific, separate space:<br />

the lounge on the first floor for Kinsky, where he spends his time alone playing the piano<br />

almost obsessively; for Shandurai, a ground floor room that once might have been the<br />

kitchen, where she temporarily re-establishes her identity through wearing African clothes,<br />

listening to African music and eating African food. The location <strong>of</strong> the spaces serves as a<br />

setting for the second stage <strong>of</strong> the narrative, as Kinsky's intrusion in Shandurai's life unfolds.<br />

Two structural features <strong>of</strong> the house frequently emerge in the narrative, its main<br />

staircase and also a dumb waiter used by Shandurai as a temporary wardrobe. Kinsky<br />

covertly observes Shandurai's movements from vantage points on the staircase and he<br />

sometimes hauls the dumb waiter up from her room (the old kitchen) to his 'territory', an act<br />

which infuriates Shandurai as she imagines him indulging his curiosity regarding her clothes<br />

and undergarments. In portraying Kinsky's overbearing appropriation <strong>of</strong> Shandurai's<br />

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elongings, and his silent, secretive gaze on her daily routine, Bertolucci places the character<br />

on the edge <strong>of</strong> normality. The house's architectural features are therefore used within the<br />

narrative to generate emotional tension as they facilitate Kinsky's obsessive, fetishistic<br />

behaviour, a factor which also creates cognitive uncertainty for viewers regarding the lengths<br />

to which his fixation may go. Towards the end <strong>of</strong> the film, the house also possesses a<br />

significance beyond its role in the film's mise-en-scene; the divesting <strong>of</strong> the house in the final<br />

stages <strong>of</strong> the story is a visual metaphor for the way Kinsky rids himself <strong>of</strong> his past complexes<br />

and psychological 'baggage" in order to embrace new, positive life perspectives.<br />

As regards the film's sets, it is worth noting an interview in which Bertolucci warned<br />

against comparisons with the apartment set <strong>of</strong> Last Tango in Paris, emphasizing two<br />

fundamental differences between the films. In Last Tango in Paris, it is the characters who<br />

divest themselves, not the house, and the male character is characterized by a desperate<br />

sexuality, not by an intense sensuality (Mirabella-Pitiot, 1999: 79). Additionally, this chapter<br />

posits that the secluded sets <strong>of</strong> the two films hold opposite meanings. In Tango, the apartment<br />

occupied by Brando's character Paul is used as a barrier against the outside world, where<br />

society, with its web <strong>of</strong> formal and stereotypical behaviour patterns, is guilty <strong>of</strong> stifling true<br />

emotion and genuine human contact; in Besieged, Kinsky's alteration <strong>of</strong> his living<br />

environment is indicative <strong>of</strong> a man who is breaking down barriers to open himself up to the<br />

outside world. Therefore, the ensuing analysis emphasizes the links between Kinsky's<br />

gradual and positive change <strong>of</strong> perspective towards life and the progressive denudation <strong>of</strong> his<br />

house.<br />

Different forms <strong>of</strong> narration and empathic phenomena<br />

To heighten the sense <strong>of</strong> strangeness surrounding Kinsky's character, narrative information<br />

regarding his past is relatively restricted. The causal gap related to the circumstances which<br />

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have brought him to such a sense <strong>of</strong> isolation is partially revealed only towards the end <strong>of</strong> the<br />

film, and this strategy clearly aims to foster viewers' curiosity in the character in the first part<br />

<strong>of</strong> the film and engender moments <strong>of</strong> empathy when his character evolves from eccentricity<br />

to friendliness. By contrast, the narration depicting Shandurai's life is unrestricted, as clear<br />

information about her plight is given from the start to facilitate viewers' understanding <strong>of</strong> her<br />

and also to elicit empathy with her responses. The images in the film's prologue serve to<br />

establish a global sense <strong>of</strong> compassion towards her, as they summarize the situation <strong>of</strong> many<br />

African citizens, whose stunning continent (the first image is a spectacular bird's-eye view <strong>of</strong><br />

a volcano overhanging an immense lake) is abused by violent, military dictatorships. This is<br />

symbolized in the film's prologue by close-ups <strong>of</strong> political posters <strong>of</strong> an individual who<br />

embodies all the hallmarks <strong>of</strong> a dictator, the poster also depicting the shape <strong>of</strong> the African<br />

continent coloured in red in an obvious evocation <strong>of</strong> blood. Similarly, Shandurai's life in Italy<br />

is depicted with linearity and cohesion, facilitating the viewer's cognitive engagement with<br />

this particular narrative strand, and regularly confirming the viewer's hypotheses and<br />

expectations about Shandurai's objectives and feelings.<br />

To engender a steadily positive viewer attitude towards Shandurai, Bertolucci gives<br />

the character an appearance designed to elicit benevolence; she is small, fragile, her young<br />

age enhanced by a romp hairdo, and she is made to look more childlike by wearing overalls<br />

which make her resemble the little scoundrel in Chaplin's Modem Times (1936). Obviously<br />

the choice <strong>of</strong> actress, Thandie Newton, and her costume, was designed to cue a heightened<br />

receptiveness towards Shandurai's character, but it is the constant framings <strong>of</strong> her wide open<br />

eyes that communicate her unease at living in a foreign country where she experiences a<br />

'suspension' <strong>of</strong> her identity. In a scene set at an <strong>of</strong>fice where residence permits are issued,<br />

Bertolucci emphasizes how - by law - people like Shandurai only exist through their<br />

employers, from whom signed documentation is needed to legitimize the presence <strong>of</strong><br />

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individuals like Shandurai in Italy. In the same way, her wandering gaze over Kinsky's empty<br />

house, evoking a child's innocence, significantly contributes to the emotional structure <strong>of</strong> the<br />

film. Shandurai's face is <strong>of</strong>ten featured in close-ups or in 'point-<strong>of</strong>-view structures' where 'a<br />

point/glance shot is juxtaposed with a point/object shot' (Carroll, 1996: 125-138). The two<br />

techniques are further used to create scenes <strong>of</strong> empathy which occur when a facial close-up<br />

remains on screen for a prolonged duration or when the shot continually returns to it within a<br />

point-<strong>of</strong>-view structure (Plantinga, 1999: 249). Plantinga asserts that this device is not<br />

intended simply to communicate the character's inner emotion, but also to elicit empathic<br />

emotions in viewers. In Besieged the repeated recourse to scenes <strong>of</strong> empathy can be attributed<br />

to an attempt by Bertolucci to increase recognition and alignment from viewers towards<br />

Shandurai's character. This remains constant even when, in the second part <strong>of</strong> the film,<br />

Kinsky's character is incorporated into this process, because there is no real shift in the<br />

structure <strong>of</strong> the narration towards him.<br />

The viewer's privileged narrative position and intellectual engagement<br />

As the story unfolds, the narration takes on a melodramatic alignment structure in terms <strong>of</strong><br />

placing viewers in the position <strong>of</strong> knowing more than any individual character does. This<br />

strategy further explains the frequent facial reaction shots in the film, as in this particular<br />

structure, the designed mode <strong>of</strong> viewer engagement is to 'watch for characters' reaction as<br />

much as for narrative progression' (Smith M., 1995: 152-153). This strategy reflects the<br />

film's narrative strand related to Kinsky s gradual change <strong>of</strong> attitude, the motivation for<br />

which is disclosed only to viewers, and this primes spectators to watch for Shandurai "s<br />

reaction at her employer's strange behaviour. In addition, because the narration related to<br />

Kinsky continues to be restricted, the viewer's cognitive engagement is heightened by the<br />

need to infer the complete meaning <strong>of</strong> the fragmented information that the film provides.<br />

Initially Kinsky is shown in a church waiting to talk to an African priest and being struck by a<br />

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eading from the Gospel that declares that whoever tries to preserve their life will lose it,<br />

whereas those who lose their lives will be saved. So when Kinsky is shown later, taking<br />

photographs <strong>of</strong> his works <strong>of</strong> art which gradually disappear from the house to reappear in an<br />

antique shop down the road, viewers infer that, enlightened by the Gospel reading, he has<br />

decided to sell his belongings to generate the funds to release Shandurai's husband.<br />

hi this regard, the reference to the Gospel sheds light on Kinsky^s new perspective on<br />

life because at its heart are a number <strong>of</strong> concepts, reflected in his later actions, that are<br />

identifiable as originating from Christian Existentialism. For viewers able to make this link,<br />

the latter part <strong>of</strong> Besieged has a strong intellectual resonance. As opposed to the<br />

existentialism that highlighted the solitude and fragility <strong>of</strong> the human condition in the world<br />

(used by Bertolucci in Last Tango in Paris) Christian Existentialism emphasized humanity's<br />

potential to fulfil the true meaning <strong>of</strong> life by establishing honest and caring human<br />

relationships. In his work La dignite humaine, Gabriel Marcel, a proponent <strong>of</strong> the philosophy,<br />

stressed that one major step through which humans can achieve true existential fulfilment is<br />

the act <strong>of</strong> giving, which, according to him, is not a familiar or instinctive gesture, (Marcel,<br />

1964: 61-65) but which is the result <strong>of</strong> a process <strong>of</strong> self-reflection (Marcel 1964: 115).<br />

Kinsky is an example <strong>of</strong> somebody undergoing this process. His sense <strong>of</strong> inspiration after<br />

listening to the Gospel represents the phase <strong>of</strong> questioning oneself about the mystery <strong>of</strong><br />

'being'; his decision to sell his belongings represents the phase <strong>of</strong> assuming a conscious<br />

position in the face <strong>of</strong> one's own lifestyle (Marcel, 1964: 118).(1) The fact that he gives away<br />

the proceeds <strong>of</strong> the sale <strong>of</strong> these things represents his acceptance that the Christian concept <strong>of</strong><br />

property goes beyond the mere meaning <strong>of</strong> 'having' and includes broader philosophical<br />

implications (Marcel 1964:132).(2) Furthermore, in his act <strong>of</strong> giving, Kinsky gains a feeling<br />

<strong>of</strong> freedom which reflects Marcel's affirmation that during the individual's self-reflection, a<br />

phase that leads to the abandonment <strong>of</strong> one's own powers in favour <strong>of</strong> a greater trust in "the<br />

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other' as opposed to the individual him/herself as subject, freedom manifests itself (Marcel,<br />

1964:119).(3) An indication <strong>of</strong> this freedom occurs in a scene where the disoriented<br />

Shandurai surveys the house's bare walls and shelves and comments: 'There is not much to<br />

dust'. Kinsky, smiling triumphantly, replies 'Yes, I know' and in nonchalantly carries on<br />

composing, for the first time, a piece <strong>of</strong> his own music. He also appears finally able to<br />

express his uneasiness, admitting to the African priest that the reason for his isolation is<br />

rooted in his feelings <strong>of</strong> inadequacy as a pianist. It is an assertion which is greeted by the<br />

priest's reassuring, compassionate chuckle. Kinsky's sudden vitality and the change in both<br />

his gaze and behaviour (serene and confident respectively) imply that there is something<br />

more than a loving generosity behind his resolute course <strong>of</strong> action. This could arguably be<br />

identified as a realization that, by doing something to bring happiness to the person he loves -<br />

even if the gesture is unlikely to lead to a future together - it represents an opportunity to<br />

come alive again; a chance that is too important to be missed.<br />

Music's prominent role in the encounter between Europe and Africa<br />

In Besieged, soundtrack music is important because it conveys the characters' emotions<br />

which are rarely articulated in speech; this is a directorial choice aiming to avert the risk <strong>of</strong><br />

sentiment becoming banalized through overemphasis. In cognitive terms the music covers<br />

three functions: it defines and enhances the protagonists' cultural identity; it provides the<br />

terrain for the encounter between the two protagonists and their cultures; and it is also used to<br />

signify the growth <strong>of</strong> a bond between them. This latter use <strong>of</strong> music emerges in the scene<br />

depicting the first sensual interaction between the protagonists. A canted framing features<br />

Kinsky in the foreground as he composes music at the piano, this consisting <strong>of</strong> a rapid<br />

'ostinato' which evokes the idea <strong>of</strong> a predator chasing prey in the wild. In the background<br />

Shandurai hoovers the carpet, rhythmically moving her head in a way that indicates her<br />

appreciation <strong>of</strong> the hybrid aural effect. The sensuality implied by the music is enhanced by<br />

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the canted framing being repeatedly linked with close-ups <strong>of</strong> exposed parts <strong>of</strong> Shandurai's<br />

body, specifically her arms which are adorned with ethnic bracelets, and her neck. These<br />

images are also alternated with close-ups <strong>of</strong> parts <strong>of</strong> Kinsky's body, specifically his hands<br />

and his pr<strong>of</strong>ile, and these two angles <strong>of</strong> shot reproduce the protagonists' visual perspectives.<br />

The diagonal framings convey the protagonists' mutual awareness <strong>of</strong> being observed<br />

sensually, but it is the soundtrack music that creates the main emotional resonance in the<br />

sequence, functioning together with Bertolucci's visuals and the actors' subtle performances.<br />

The contradictions within the film's progressive intentions<br />

hi her work mentioned earlier, Loshitsky has analysed Besieged in the context <strong>of</strong> the<br />

problematic relationship between xenophobic Europe and the migrants who arrive there,<br />

paying particular reference to the notion <strong>of</strong> miscegenation which is perceived as a threat by<br />

the white communities. Loshitsky is aware that Besieged is not the most important Italian<br />

film on the subject, and while she examines a number <strong>of</strong> other films (Loshitsky, 2010: 174)<br />

which result in more productive analyses <strong>of</strong> racial integration as depicted in modern Italian<br />

cinema, she does not include La giusta distanza/Jlie Right Distance (2007) by Carlo<br />

Mazzacurati, whose narrative, focusing on the scapegoating <strong>of</strong> a migrant worker for the<br />

murder <strong>of</strong> female teacher in Italy's Veneto region, contains a range <strong>of</strong> socio-political and<br />

narrative elements that would have reinforced Loshitsky's arguments, given that the film is<br />

set in territory controlled by Italy's xenophobic Lega Nord party. In general terms, my view<br />

is that Bertolucci handles the migration issue in Besieged in a subjective and intimistic way,<br />

compared to the socio-political impact that the phenomenon has had in Italy. Loshitsky's<br />

analysis <strong>of</strong> Besieged would also have benefited from closer comparison between the film and<br />

James Lasdun's original novel The Siege (Loshitsky, 2010: 80) because, by identifying key<br />

differences between the two, it is possible to ascertain the thematic input <strong>of</strong> Bertolucci and<br />

his collaborators in Besieged. In intellectual terms, while Loshitsky analyses the film<br />

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(Loshitsky, 2010: 90-93) via arguments and counter arguments concerning its progressive<br />

and reactionary impulses, the conclusion that I would draw from Besieged connects it with<br />

films such as Last Tango in Paris. I will argue that Besieged is intellectually ambivalent, its<br />

progressive elements losing their clarity on account <strong>of</strong> ambiguous behaviour by characters at<br />

an intimate level and also because <strong>of</strong> a revelatory ending that privileges cinematic spectacle.<br />

Lasdun's novel, set in England, features a South American woman who does<br />

domestic work for a male English employer and landowner; in Besieged, Bertolucci transfers<br />

both protagonists to a foreign country, making both <strong>of</strong> them outsiders and reducing the<br />

novel's socio-political dichotomy between capitalist imperialism and colonial labour in<br />

favour <strong>of</strong> a more existential discourse. Bertolucci's decision to transform the male<br />

protagonist from an embodiment <strong>of</strong> European capitalism to a lonely individual estranged in a<br />

foreign country positions Kinsky closer to Shandurai's vulnerable social condition; the<br />

distance between the two is further reduced in the film in terms <strong>of</strong> class, because Shandurai is<br />

not just a cleaner, as in the novel and as many Africans would be in real-life Italy, but she is<br />

also a medical student. Her studies link her to a small but growing group <strong>of</strong> migrants<br />

involved in higher education, a group with some prospect <strong>of</strong> a brighter future. This ensures<br />

that she is perceived by viewers as less marginalized than many other foreigners and more<br />

likely to eventually integrate into Western society. In the film, Shandurai has (at least) one<br />

white friend - a fellow student Agostino (although his homosexuality also marginalizes him<br />

in a society like that <strong>of</strong> contemporary Italy) while Kinsky only has contact with the children<br />

attending his music classes. As a consequence, despite her situation, Shandurai is perceived<br />

as less isolated and with more <strong>of</strong> a future that her employer Kinsky. The factors corroborate<br />

Loshitsky's 'positive' interpretation <strong>of</strong> Besieged as 'an emancipatory film that tries to close<br />

the gap between the two worlds' (Loshitsky, 2010: 91).<br />

By contrast, it should also be observed that a status difference between the<br />

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protagonists remains visible, Shandurai continuing to refer to her employer as 'Mr. Kinsky'.<br />

Also, after Bertolucci frames the numerous, crumpled up pieces <strong>of</strong> paper on which Shandurai<br />

has written 'thank you', following Kinsky s intervention to free her husband, she realizes that<br />

the only way to thank him is to make love to him; significantly, Kinsky does not renounce the<br />

opportunity <strong>of</strong> taking advantage <strong>of</strong> the economic sacrifice he has made. This reflects<br />

Loshitsky's outline <strong>of</strong> a possible 'negative' interpretation <strong>of</strong> the film, the critic saying: 'Read<br />

as an economic equation, the transaction is hardly liberating. According to the implied<br />

contract between them, Kinsky will release Shandurai's husband and she will become his. He<br />

will own her" (Loshitsky, 2010: 92). This symbolizes a perpetuation <strong>of</strong> Western colonialism<br />

as 'possession' <strong>of</strong> Africa and, intellectually, ends the film on a reactionary note. Viewers who<br />

had identified the progressive aspects <strong>of</strong> Besieged such as the heightening <strong>of</strong> Shandurai's<br />

social status will, cognitively and intellectually, have difficulty in reconciling the film's<br />

ending with its narrative development, the film therefore replicating the perplexing nature <strong>of</strong><br />

Paul's behaviour in the final sequences <strong>of</strong> Last Tango in Paris after a sustained filmic<br />

discourse on personal and sexual liberation. While the ending <strong>of</strong> both films are endowed with<br />

a degree <strong>of</strong> cinematic drama and spectacle, and I will discuss Bertolucci's propensity towards<br />

this more fully in the conclusion, the privileging <strong>of</strong> 'spectacle' over intellectual coherence is<br />

less satisfying for those viewers who have engaged with the films from a more critical,<br />

academic perspective.<br />

The aesthetic and intellectual effect <strong>of</strong> Bertolucci's stylized visuals<br />

The film's uncomplicated linear narrative is articulated through relatively sophisticated<br />

cinematic techniques which Bertolucci also used in his earlier films, such as unbalanced<br />

framing, slow motion, and stylized camera movement. The result <strong>of</strong> this approach is<br />

multifunctional in intellectual and affective terms as it increases the viewer's awareness <strong>of</strong><br />

the presence <strong>of</strong> the camera and generates fascination at the way these cinematic devices<br />

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create different artistic effects, yet it also induces empathy with the protagonists' inner<br />

feelings and draws other emotional responses. To exemplify this, a number <strong>of</strong> sequences -<br />

selected on the basis <strong>of</strong> their significance in aesthetic and theoretical terms - will be<br />

discussed. With regard to frame composition, two scenes are particularly significant. One<br />

portrays the first time that Kinsky moves forward along the staircase to talk to Shandurai. In<br />

this sequence, the camera is made to physically follow their small talk, as alternating low and<br />

high camera angles reproduce the two characters' points <strong>of</strong> view and underline the<br />

awkwardness <strong>of</strong> the situation. The use <strong>of</strong> unbalanced framing underlines Shandurai's<br />

discomfort - as she stands in the middle <strong>of</strong> the entrance hall, clutching shopping bags - and<br />

simultaneously creates a comic effect on viewers. The same occurs in the two-part scene<br />

depicting Shandurai at her most disoriented during the emptying <strong>of</strong> the house. The first part<br />

begins with a skewed framing that films Shandurai from knee level as she goes downstairs to<br />

open the front door. To increase viewers' expectations, the camera does not pan to the left to<br />

follow her to the door, but stops on the first flight <strong>of</strong> stairs, making viewers wait for her<br />

return. Without shifting the frame so that again only her knees and feet are visible, the<br />

sequence re-starts with Shandurai leading two men upstairs. The camera s pause increases the<br />

sense <strong>of</strong> curiosity and expectation that the scene intends to cue, but combined with the<br />

peculiarity <strong>of</strong> the framing, it effectively draws attention to the director's presence behind the<br />

camera. In the second part, the two men descend the stairs again led by Shandurai, but this<br />

time the shot is in medium close-up, to draw attention to the rolled-up, precious tapestry that<br />

they are carrying on their shoulders behind the woman's disconcerted gaze. The combination<br />

<strong>of</strong> the skewed framing, the circular movement <strong>of</strong> the scene, and the fact that not a word is<br />

spoken in the whole take, again ensures that Shandurai's disorientation is endowed with a<br />

sense <strong>of</strong> the comic for the viewers' benefit only. In both sequences, the distancing effect <strong>of</strong><br />

the film's knowing, stylized framings generates an awareness <strong>of</strong> the film as a piece <strong>of</strong><br />

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constructed artifice, while, however, also strengthening the viewer's emotional understanding<br />

<strong>of</strong> Shandurai's character. This is typical <strong>of</strong> the way in which, from his earliest work such as<br />

Before the Revolution, Bertolucci's film-making tends to engender viewing experiences in<br />

which intellectual awareness and affective engagement are interlinked.<br />

Two more scenes are worth mentioning for their idiosyncratic camera movement and<br />

changes <strong>of</strong> speed. The first one introduces Shandurai's disquieting perception <strong>of</strong> Kinsky's<br />

evolving attitude to life as an insidious siege to her inner feelings. Here, Bertolucci chooses<br />

the representational form <strong>of</strong> the dream, thereby evoking the notion that the subconscious<br />

tends to reveal emotional turmoil, while reason refuses to accept its existence. The sequence<br />

starts with the camera focusing in on Shandurai as she falls asleep at the kitchen table, then<br />

the close-up <strong>of</strong> the woman's face undergoes a 180 degree rotation, which might symbolize<br />

her mental transposition to Africa where the dream takes place. She is shown tearing down<br />

posters on which the picture <strong>of</strong> the dictator has been replaced by Kinsky's portrait. The<br />

dream's end is marked by a reverse rotation to the original shot <strong>of</strong> Shandurai's face. The<br />

second scene is designed to confirm Kinsky's new, positive attitude towards life. At the end<br />

<strong>of</strong> the concert he has given to showcase the music he has composed, Kinsky follows his<br />

guests/students out on to the patio and starts juggling with oranges and apples, which<br />

accidentally hit a tray <strong>of</strong> drinks that Shandurai is holding. The clownesque quality <strong>of</strong> this<br />

mise-en-scene is enhanced by an unexpected form <strong>of</strong> closure strongly reminiscent <strong>of</strong> silent<br />

comedies from the 1920s. The images <strong>of</strong> Kinsky guiltily running away towards the back <strong>of</strong><br />

the frame are shot using a speeded up effect that immediately evokes the warm, comic<br />

humour <strong>of</strong> the earlier genre, hi these two scenes the peculiarity <strong>of</strong> the camera movement and<br />

the change <strong>of</strong> speed suddenly bring up a third point <strong>of</strong> view unattached to any authority<br />

within the diegesis and the effects instantiate how Bertolucci engages viewers on both<br />

affective and cognitive levels at the same time.<br />

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The use <strong>of</strong> different film speeds and slow stylized camera movement also appears<br />

designed to increase viewers' awareness <strong>of</strong> cinematic artifice and to draw emotions by<br />

casting a lyrical quality on to the images. The following sequences exemplify the<br />

development <strong>of</strong> a lyrical effect through the slow motion device. One scene shows Shandurai<br />

pressing herself against the wall <strong>of</strong> the landing in the attempt to avoid meeting Kinsky, but<br />

she drops her dustcloth which slowly descends like a feather down the stairwell and lands on<br />

Kinsky's head, who stops and returns the cloth with a cheerfully impish expression. The slow<br />

motion used for the cloth's descent lends the mise-en-scene a lyrical quality which is<br />

enhanced by the use <strong>of</strong> neutral colours: the white <strong>of</strong> the cloth, the cream <strong>of</strong> walls and steps <strong>of</strong><br />

the staircase, the s<strong>of</strong>t daylight. On the one hand, the slow motion effect represents a poetic<br />

pause in the tension created by the fact that their communication is still somewhat stilted; on<br />

the other, it symbolizes the fact that Kinsky's world view has become more light-hearted and<br />

relaxed.<br />

A remarkable lyrical effect is achieved in the scene depicting Shandurai "s subtle<br />

awareness <strong>of</strong> her situation in the form <strong>of</strong> a daydream. An extreme close-up <strong>of</strong> beer foam<br />

being stared by Shandurai, suspended on the rim <strong>of</strong> a glass, turns into an extreme close-up <strong>of</strong><br />

the foam <strong>of</strong> soapy water. Slowly, the frame enlarges to gradually include a bucket, Shandurai,<br />

and an increasingly large portion <strong>of</strong> the entrance floor that she is washing with radial<br />

movements, so that the space takes a circular shape. Then the camera tilts upwards and, by<br />

slowly retreating from her, it shows more <strong>of</strong> the stairwell, which creates the impression that<br />

Shandurai is enclosed in the house like an insect trapped in a carnivorous flower. Through her<br />

rhythmic movement and blank gaze, she appears charmed by Kinsky "s music as it fills the<br />

stairwell, and this enhances the sense <strong>of</strong> estrangement from reality that the whole sequence<br />

cues. By contrast, slow motion is also used by Bertolucci to emphasize a moment <strong>of</strong> drama.<br />

The technique intensifies Kinsky's emotions, literally evoking an impression <strong>of</strong> him being<br />

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swept away by his repressed feelings as he is filmed frontally in a scene where he runs after<br />

Shandurai. His frantic body movements, combined with his contorted facial expression,<br />

achieve a pr<strong>of</strong>ound affective impact on the viewer. It is a visual approach which increases the<br />

physical intensity <strong>of</strong> Kinsky's final, almost violent gesture, as he grips Shandurai's arms.<br />

This is an instance where any sense <strong>of</strong> stylistic realism is totally abandoned, but on this<br />

occasion, the technique is used to elicit an affective engagement from viewers; few spectators<br />

are likely to be able to disengage themselves from the proceedings to reflect on this artificial<br />

and emotional form <strong>of</strong> representation.<br />

Conclusion<br />

The film's extensive use <strong>of</strong> stylized visuals gives the impression that Bertolucci was in his<br />

element in drawing on these devices to create the dual effect <strong>of</strong> a significant aesthetic impact<br />

and that <strong>of</strong> an auteur still at the top <strong>of</strong> his game. By using these aesthetics to effectively<br />

interrupt what is <strong>of</strong>ten an absorbing narrative, Bertolucci seems to ask viewers to reflect<br />

intellectually on the implications <strong>of</strong> the on-screen emotions portrayed in Besieged, rather than<br />

to share them passively. With regard to the development <strong>of</strong> the film's theme concerning an<br />

encounter between individuals from different cultures and its examination <strong>of</strong> the socio-<br />

economic, political and personal factors conditioning this emerging rapport. Bertolucci's<br />

decision to use an open ending, creating doubt as to whether Shandurai, after sleeping with<br />

Kinsky, will open the door to her husband as he arrives and rings the bell, is an approach that<br />

would perplex mainstream cinemagoers with their expectations <strong>of</strong> narrative completion.<br />

Similarly, as discussed earlier, the circumstances <strong>of</strong> this denouement and <strong>of</strong> the love scene<br />

between Shandurai and Kinsky may exasperate more intellectually demanding viewers, and a<br />

sense <strong>of</strong> deja vu may be experienced by those familiar with the director's earlier work such as<br />

Last Tango in Paris. Bertolucci's predilection for cinematic spectacle and dramatic excess,<br />

typified by Shandurai's act <strong>of</strong> <strong>of</strong>fering herself to Kinsky. halts the progressive discourse<br />

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unfolded by the narrative until that scene. It negates the viewers' hypothesis that Kinsky s<br />

behaviour has gradually matured out <strong>of</strong> interpersonal solidarity, this seemingly indicated by<br />

the way he withholds the details <strong>of</strong> the sale <strong>of</strong> his valuables from Shandurai and by his<br />

increasing openness with the African priest. As indicated in this chapter, although there are<br />

numerous visual and narrative devices that momentarily align viewers the thought processes<br />

and emotions <strong>of</strong> Shandurai and Kinsky, and although the narrative frequently highlights a<br />

new multicultural Italy where self-realization is possible for migrants like Shandurai, the<br />

transactional nature <strong>of</strong> the protagonists' intimacy, centred on the socio-economic influence <strong>of</strong><br />

a white Western male pr<strong>of</strong>iting from the vulnerability <strong>of</strong> an African female, is an outcome<br />

that on all levels emotional, cognitive and intellectual will estrange many spectators.<br />

Notes<br />

1. 'Je remarquais alors que le recueillement [...] est 1'acte par lequel je me ressaisis come unite, mais ce<br />

ressaisissement ou cette reprise affecte 1'aspect d'une detente ou d'un abandon. Au sein du<br />

recueillement, disais-je, je prends position en face de ma vie...'<br />

2. 'L'avoir est ici considere sous le signe de la propriete; mais il est evident qu'il deborde la propriete et<br />

c'est peut-etre par la qu'il interesse le plus directement le philosophe.'<br />

3. 'Le recueillement c'est en verite 1'acte par lequel on abandonne en quelque sorte tous les pouvoirs q'on<br />

possede et comme si cet abandon suscitait une certaine reponse [...] II convient de reconnaitre ici qu'il<br />

y a deux types d'attente bien differents 1'une de 1'autre [...] dont 1'autre releve beaucoup plutot de la<br />

confiance qu'on peut placer dans un etre ou dans la realite en tant que celle-ci est assimilable a un etre.<br />

Mais ce qui intervient dans ce second cas, c'est a proprement parler la liberte."<br />

References<br />

Carroll, N. (1996) Tlieorizing the Moving Image, Cambridge: Cambridge <strong>University</strong> Press.<br />

Loshitsky, Y. (2010) Screening Strangers, Bloomington and Indianapolis: Indiana <strong>University</strong><br />

Press.<br />

Marcel, G. (1964) La Dignite Humaine (et Ses Assises Existentielles), Alencon: Editions<br />

Aubier-Montaigne.<br />

Mirabella JC. and Pitiot, P. (1991) Intervista a Bernardo Bertolucci, Rome: Gremese<br />

Editore.<br />

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Plantinga, C. (1999) 'The Scene <strong>of</strong> Empathy and the Human Face on Film', in Plantinga, C.<br />

and Smith G. (ed.) Passionate Views, Baltimore: The John Hopkins <strong>University</strong> Press.<br />

Smith M. (1995) Engaging Characters, Oxford: Oxford <strong>University</strong> Press.<br />

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CONCLUSION<br />

This project's aim has been to investigate the ways in which Bertolucci has constructed the<br />

cognitive and emotional structures <strong>of</strong> each <strong>of</strong> his feature films in the context <strong>of</strong> a reception<br />

situation characterized by conscious viewer engagement with on-screen events, a reception<br />

process based on an interrelation between cognition and emotion. The study also illustrates<br />

that the passage from one phase to another <strong>of</strong> Bertolucci's film-making is not typified by<br />

clear-cut changes. The analysis <strong>of</strong> his early 1960s films has shown how his enthusiasm for<br />

the innovative work <strong>of</strong> the Nouvelle Vague does not result in exclusively cerebral films, but<br />

instead the use <strong>of</strong> the new cinematic language has a tw<strong>of</strong>old effect, that <strong>of</strong> eliciting reflection<br />

on the nature <strong>of</strong> cinema and also drawing a significant affective response ranging from<br />

lyricism (The Grim Reaper and Before the Revolution} to unease (Partner). Regarding<br />

Bertolucci's way <strong>of</strong> adopting elements <strong>of</strong> the Nouvelle Vague model, Roberto Perpignani (the<br />

film editor for Before the Revolution and Partner} asserts in a DVD interview that although<br />

Bertolucci was swept along by the disruptive force <strong>of</strong> the Nouvelle Vague films, and although<br />

they were important reference points for him, they were incorporated into a process <strong>of</strong> free,<br />

autonomous creativity on the director's part: 'Bertolucci was working on his own idea'<br />

(Perpignani, 2005). Perpignani indicates the sequence in Before the Revolution <strong>of</strong> Agostino<br />

repeatedly falling from his bicycle as exemplifying Bertolucci's personal experimentation.<br />

Perpignani also maintains that at that time, there were few opportunities to examine<br />

scientifically the techniques used in other films, and so the effects that materialized in<br />

Bertolucci's early films were the result <strong>of</strong> dialogue between the director and himself about<br />

the Nouvelle Vague films that they had both seen and which had remained in their memories:<br />

'this was our authorization to use them' (Perpignani, 2005). Even the director's use <strong>of</strong><br />

different distancing effects - which resurfaced throughout his career - is characterized by a<br />

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dual effect, since they <strong>of</strong>ten appeal to the viewer's senses and emotions. This combined effect<br />

generates a process that <strong>of</strong>ten engages viewers cognitively and affectively at the same time,<br />

hi the most experimental <strong>of</strong> Bertolucci's films, Partner, the emotional impact <strong>of</strong> the film's<br />

distanciation effects is a self-conscious by-product <strong>of</strong> a cognitive process, whereas in<br />

Bertolucci's other work, the effects <strong>of</strong>ten generate specific moods.<br />

My analysis <strong>of</strong> the films belonging to the second phase <strong>of</strong> Bertolucci's career - from<br />

The Conformist onwards - which incorporated a greater number <strong>of</strong> elements from more<br />

traditional codes <strong>of</strong> film-making, has highlighted several characteristics that prevent the films<br />

from being categorized as mainstream products. This reflects Bertolucci's assertion that he<br />

liked to think that he had combined certain Hollywood values with the essence <strong>of</strong> a cinema<br />

which was against Hollywood; he was not certain about the efficacy <strong>of</strong> the result but the<br />

process enthused him because, as he admitted, 'there is a Hollywood cinema that I deeply<br />

love' (Mirabella and Pitiot, 1991: 43). To contextualize in greater detail Bertolucci's attempts<br />

to combine in his films elements <strong>of</strong> cinematic spectacle with the characteristics <strong>of</strong> arthouse<br />

cinema, this study has focused on the predominantly unfavourable reaction to the director's<br />

films from the early to mid 1960s and to his subsequent inactivity, suggesting that it was a<br />

key factor in motivating a change in his film-making orientation. The collection <strong>of</strong><br />

declarations both by the director himself and by critics and scholars that are contained in this<br />

study require, at the very least, that greater consideration be given to the notion that the<br />

evolution in Bertolucci's artistic direction was prompted by his dispiriting pr<strong>of</strong>essional<br />

circumstances rather than by more private troubles. Indirectly, Vittorio Storaro's recent<br />

pronouncements confirm this interpretation. Recounting his collaboration with Bertolucci at<br />

the time <strong>of</strong> Tire Spider's Stratagem, Storaro admits his mixed feelings <strong>of</strong> anticipation at<br />

making a film with Bertolucci, who had taught him so much during the shooting <strong>of</strong> Before<br />

the Revolution where he was assistant to Aldo Scavarda and who, according to Storaro, still<br />

330


had much to teach him, and his resolution not to accept the <strong>of</strong>fer if Bertolucci showed signs<br />

<strong>of</strong> the same arrogance that he had previously displayed on set. Instead, Storaro found that<br />

Bertolucci had matured greatly, 'having passed through a tunnel, [...] and was ready to start<br />

again, with great courage and humility, with a modest film for television' (Storaro, 2005).<br />

This study has outlined that the second phase <strong>of</strong> Bertolucci's career continued to<br />

feature several characteristics <strong>of</strong> art cinema, notably his idiosyncratic use <strong>of</strong> the camera and<br />

his frequent adoption <strong>of</strong> elaborate schemes <strong>of</strong> narration, which includes a self-conscious use<br />

<strong>of</strong> different genres such as detective movies - with particular reference to noir - and<br />

melodrama. It is as if Bertolucci creates a sort <strong>of</strong> a dialogue with these genres, revisiting them<br />

and engaging with them but manipulating their established conventions. It has been<br />

illustrated how this strategy generates a notable effect on the viewers' cognitive activity<br />

during the viewing experience. Drawing on Torben Grodal's description <strong>of</strong> the viewer's<br />

mode <strong>of</strong> perception, it can be argued that Bertolucci's films create a mode <strong>of</strong> perception<br />

whose 'source is ambiguous' by creating perspectives belonging 'to intermediary positions'<br />

between 'an exterior hypothetical or real world and an interior mental world" (Grodal, 1997:<br />

158). The perspectives cued by the films sometimes draw negative evaluations from viewers<br />

which, Grodal suggests, form as a result <strong>of</strong> viewers perceiving the fictive agent as<br />

'unfamiliar' and 'distant' (Grodal, 1997: 158). Another element from the second phase <strong>of</strong><br />

Bertolucci's work that positions his films between art cinema and mainstream films that are<br />

centred on cinematic 'spectacle', can be found in the director's increased emphasis on<br />

privileging visually and sensually evocative viewing experiences. This approach is<br />

constructed around a richer visual approach to landscapes, settings and mise-en-scene, on<br />

which the films' affective resonance is centred, rather than on direct, strong viewer<br />

identification with the films' protagonists. In this sense, none <strong>of</strong> Bertolucci's later films<br />

feature cathartic experiences based on viewers sharing the vicissitudes <strong>of</strong> characters, and so<br />

331


the likelihood <strong>of</strong> leaving the auditorium with a feelgood sensation is not high. This is the case<br />

even in Little Buddha whose positive denouement merely hints that a different, more<br />

harmonious way <strong>of</strong> life is possible, rather than implying that it is a reality that will soon be<br />

established.<br />

For this study, the tendency <strong>of</strong> Bertolucci's films to elicit reflection from viewers,<br />

although passing from overt political resonances to more existentialist ones, represents<br />

another common denominator in his work. In 1963, while being interviewed on the set <strong>of</strong><br />

Before the Revolution, Bertolucci declared that, for him, cinema was above all a matter <strong>of</strong><br />

talking about oneself through others, or using others to describe oneself (Bertolucci, 1963). In<br />

the light <strong>of</strong> this comment and <strong>of</strong> the findings <strong>of</strong> this study, all <strong>of</strong> Bertolucci's films point to a<br />

constant authorial presence, describing - through characters and situations his ideas on the<br />

human condition in contemporary society and articulating several <strong>of</strong> his own, individual,<br />

unresolved conflicts. This interpretation is corroborated by Casetti's affirmation that one <strong>of</strong><br />

the elements <strong>of</strong> continuity in Bertolucci's work is represented by a strong subjectivity, the<br />

stories <strong>of</strong> all his films being filtered through the director's consciousness (Casetti, 2005).<br />

Casetti's recognition that another element <strong>of</strong> continuity is constituted by the fragmentation <strong>of</strong><br />

Bertolucci's narratives, (Casetti, 2005) reinforces this project's perspective that even in his<br />

later, more commercial work, Bertolucci preserves specific cinematic devices that create<br />

complex narrations. However, it has been argued in this study that this combination <strong>of</strong> styles,<br />

commercial spectacle and art cinema's thematic and stylistic resonances, is not entirely<br />

successful. As already indicated within the analysis <strong>of</strong> each film, I believe that the director's<br />

propensity to privilege spectacle over the coherence <strong>of</strong> a film's intellectual standpoint -<br />

sometimes at the very end <strong>of</strong> the film as in the case <strong>of</strong> Last Tango in Paris and Besieged -<br />

undermines the validity <strong>of</strong> the discourse articulated in the narration, with the effect <strong>of</strong><br />

frustrating the director's intellectually demanding art cinema viewers and creating an uneven<br />

332


and confusing experience for mainstream viewers. It is a tendency that again emerged in<br />

Bertolucci's short film Histoire d'Eaux (2002).<br />

The film marks a return to the director's origins, being shot in black and white and<br />

possessing a style that combines Pasolini's neorealism with lyricism. Thematically, it re-<br />

proposes the notions in Gina's apologue in Before the Revolution about time not existing and<br />

about a lack <strong>of</strong> fulfilment when people's lives become materialistic. The apologue's Buddhist<br />

monk and his disciple are transformed in the short film into a modern day immigrant who is<br />

thrown out <strong>of</strong> a truck together with other illegal immigrants, into the Italian countryside. The<br />

story's theme remains the same with the disciple/immigrant sent <strong>of</strong>f in search <strong>of</strong> water. He<br />

becomes sidetracked and is gradually drawn into a range <strong>of</strong> life experiences; he falls for an<br />

Italian girl who provides him with a job, a house and a son. When the symbol <strong>of</strong> the<br />

immigrant's socio-economic achievement a car crashes, he disconsolately wanders<br />

through a wood, where he finds his mentor still waiting for the water. The immigrant then<br />

kneels, suddenly aware <strong>of</strong> the ephemeral quality <strong>of</strong> time and life. Although the film's<br />

intention appears that <strong>of</strong> sketching a situation suspended between reality and a dream, the<br />

denouement <strong>of</strong> the immigrant seemingly re-embracing his ascetic former values appears<br />

incongruent with the generally positive narrative sequence <strong>of</strong> the serene encounter between<br />

two cultures. This is symbolized by the immigrant's integration into Italian society, and by<br />

his family life and working environment absorbing elements <strong>of</strong> his culture. Bertolucci<br />

asserted that with this short film he aimed to 'help people replace their fears about diversity<br />

with curiosity and then love.' (Socci, 2003: 19). But the denouement he gives to the story<br />

seems another example <strong>of</strong> how the film's socio-political standpoint is dissolved by the<br />

director's propensity for a coup de theatre, rather than for a coherent resolution both in<br />

narrative and moral terms; consequently, he manages to surprise viewers, but at the price <strong>of</strong><br />

leaving them with an ambivalent perception <strong>of</strong> the social discourse unfolded by the film.<br />

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Nevertheless, this short film also confirms the evaluation <strong>of</strong> Bertolucci's work as a whole that<br />

emerges from this investigation, in terms <strong>of</strong> identifying as a key element <strong>of</strong> his film -making<br />

the way viewers are placed in positions which are distant from the film protagonists but<br />

which are counterbalanced by a powerful fascination for what is perceived on screen. The<br />

frequency with which this structure is employed represents a genuinely original trait in<br />

Bertolucci's work.<br />

The significance <strong>of</strong> a director's work can <strong>of</strong>ten be evaluated in terms <strong>of</strong> their<br />

influence on other directors and <strong>of</strong> their impact on their respective national cinemas and on<br />

world cinema in given periods. The way in which younger directors now explore sex<br />

thematically and stylistically has gradually evolved as a consequence <strong>of</strong> the work <strong>of</strong> a number<br />

<strong>of</strong> European and American directors, including Bertolucci; his realistic portrayals <strong>of</strong><br />

eroticism, which started with Before the Revolution, deserve acknowledgement for having<br />

broken the unspoken rule <strong>of</strong> cinematic self-censorship regarding sexuality. In this context,<br />

Last Tango in Paris seems to have markedly influenced a film like Intimacy (2001), where<br />

Patrice Chereau portrays the weekly sexual encounter between a couple who are unknown to<br />

each other, using an intense, realist style that leaves little to the imagination. The title <strong>of</strong><br />

Gabriele Salvatores' film Quo Vadis Baby? (2005) refers to a line uttered by Marion Brando<br />

(Paul) to Maria Schneider (Jeanne) in Last Tango in Paris - a film watched by two tormented<br />

lovers and aspiring actors who are galvanized by constantly rewatching it in a secluded<br />

apartment. A more recent homage to Bertolucci came from the third episode - Ratking - <strong>of</strong><br />

the BBC One fiction series, Zen, (2011), set in Rome, which openly drew on the Italian<br />

cinematic style <strong>of</strong> the late 60s and 70s. For Bertolucci, the episode's cinematic evocations<br />

referred to T)ie Conformist, the makers <strong>of</strong> Zen using the sets used by Bertolucci in the<br />

sequences depicting Clerici's encounter with his father and with the Fascist minister, as well<br />

as deploying frame compositions evoking the latter sequence. While Bertolucci's impact<br />

334


within Italian cinema has not been as sustained as that <strong>of</strong> several <strong>of</strong> his contemporaries, the<br />

evocative visuals <strong>of</strong> his work, its absorbing narrative structures and considered reflections on<br />

society and the individual - in short, the affective, cognitive and intellectual resonances that<br />

this study has attempted to highlight, have gained international recognition both for<br />

Bertolucci and also for Italian cinema in every individual decade <strong>of</strong> the 20th century.<br />

References<br />

Bertolucci, B. (1963) 'Cinema d'oggi', in Bertolucci, G. (ed.) with the collaboration <strong>of</strong><br />

Sanguineti, T., (2005), Extra to DVD Before the Revolution, (Special Edition 2005),<br />

Disc 1, RHV.<br />

Casetti, F. (2005) 'Riletture/Re-readings', in Bertolucci G. (ed.) with the collaboration <strong>of</strong><br />

Sanguineti, T., Extra to DVD Before the Revolution, (Special Edition 2005), Disc 2,<br />

RHV.<br />

Grodal, T. (1997) Moving Pictures, Oxford: Oxford <strong>University</strong> Press.<br />

Mirabella, J.C. and Pitiot, P., (1991) Intenista a Bemardo Bertolucci, Rome: Gremese<br />

Editore.<br />

Perpignani, R. (2005) 'La bottega dei giovani maestri/The Working <strong>of</strong> the Young Masters', in<br />

Bertolucci, G.(ed.) with the collaboration <strong>of</strong> Sanguineti, T., Extra to DVD Before the<br />

Revolution, (Special Edition 2005), Disc 2, RHV.<br />

Socci, S. (2003) Bemardo Bertolucci, later edition, Milan: II Castoro Cinema.<br />

Storaro, V. (2005) 'La bottega dei giovani maestri/The Workshop <strong>of</strong> the Young Masters", in<br />

Bertolucci, G. (ed.) with the collaboration <strong>of</strong> Sanguineti, T., Extra to DVD Before the<br />

Revolution, (Special Edition 2005), Disc 2, RHV.<br />

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GLOSSARY<br />

Alignment: The process by which viewers engage with screen characters, via spatio-temporal<br />

attachments and/or subjective access.<br />

Allegiance: The process by which viewers morally evaluate screen characters, ranking them<br />

in a system <strong>of</strong> preference, and forming attachments to given characters.<br />

Autonomic: Reactions based on non-voluntary mechanisms (supported by the autonomic<br />

nervous system) like laughter, crying, shivering.<br />

Bottom-up: The process by which viewers organize the data perceived on screen, with little<br />

input from their associated memories.<br />

Canonical narration: A narration following a linear chain <strong>of</strong> cause and effect.<br />

Cognitive identification: The process by which viewers participate in constructed fiction, by<br />

identifying with characters on the basis <strong>of</strong> recognizing the characters' motivations, a<br />

process also involving the emotions generated by this identification.<br />

Diegetic narration: The presentation <strong>of</strong> information internal to the fictive world.<br />

Distributed narration: A narration where the information is disclosed intermittently.<br />

Downstream: The perception <strong>of</strong> images and sounds on screen which induce affective<br />

reactions within viewers and activate hypotheses regarding possible actions.<br />

Epistemic identification: The process by which viewers imagine believing what a screen<br />

character believes, based on a shared perception or knowledge <strong>of</strong> events.<br />

External focalization: The process by which the narration depicts an action through a<br />

character's subjectivity, but integrated by another subjectivity, <strong>of</strong>ten connected to that<br />

<strong>of</strong> the implied author.<br />

Intensities: The 'emotional' tones connected to the activation <strong>of</strong> vivid perceptions.<br />

Internal focalization: The process by which the narration depicts an action through a<br />

character's subjectivity.<br />

Narration: The way in which the story is presented.<br />

Narrative: The story.<br />

Non-diegetic narration: The presentation <strong>of</strong> information made available only to viewers.<br />

Non-focalization: The process by which a narration simply depicts screen events, without the<br />

information being filtered through any intra or extra diegetic subjectivity.<br />

336


Oneiric: The depiction <strong>of</strong> dream-like states.<br />

Paratelic: A narration modality focusing on processes rather than on the achievement <strong>of</strong><br />

goals.<br />

Perceptual identification: The process by which the viewer sees what the character sees,<br />

instantiated by the POV shot as well as by the face-reaction shot.<br />

Pro-attitude: The viewer s concern for characters or situations.<br />

Procedural schemata: A narration requiring a search for motivations and for relations<br />

between space, causality and time.<br />

Reality-status: The extent to which a given screen action or phenomenon reflects authentic<br />

human experience.<br />

Recognition: The process by which viewers identify and construct screen characters' traits<br />

according to real life experience.<br />

Retardation: The process by which narrative information is delayed.<br />

Saturation: The viewer's experience <strong>of</strong> emotions connected to the activation <strong>of</strong> mental<br />

associations.<br />

Telic: A narration modality focusing on goal orientation.<br />

Top-down: The process by which viewers organize the screen data on the basis <strong>of</strong> their<br />

acquired knowledge and mental schemas.<br />

Upstream: The process by which the viewers' perception <strong>of</strong> forms and movements on screen<br />

is blurred or blocked.<br />

337


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Gillespie, D. (2000) Early Soviet Cinema: Innovation, Ideology and Propaganda, London:<br />

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B. (ed.) (2000) Bemardo Bertolucci Interviews, Jackson: <strong>University</strong> Press <strong>of</strong> Mississippi.<br />

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Pitiot, P. (ed.) (1999) Intervista a Bernardo Bertolucci, Rome: Gremese Editore.<br />

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(ed) (1999) Intervista a Bernardo Bertolucci, Rome: Gremese Editore.<br />

Grodal, T. (1997) Moving Pictures, Oxford: Oxford <strong>University</strong> Press.<br />

340


Grodal, T. (1999) 'Emotions, Cognitions, and Narrative Patterns in Film', in Plantinga, C.<br />

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Murphy, T.S. (2005) Books for Burning, London and New York: Verso.<br />

Naremore, J. (1998) More Tlian Night: Film Noir in its Context, Berkely: <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong><br />

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Peploe, M. (1990) 'Life as a Road Movie', in Negri, L. and Gerard, F.S. (ed.) Bertolucci,<br />

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Masters' in DVD Extra to Before the Revolution, special edition, Disc 2, RHV.<br />

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Ranvaud, D. (1987) 'L'Ultimo Imperatore di Bernardo Bertolucci'. in Ungari, E. (1982)<br />

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Manchester: Manchester <strong>University</strong> Press.<br />

Weitman, S. (1999) 'On the Elementary Forms <strong>of</strong> the Socioerotic Life', in Featherston, M.<br />

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Willett, J. (ed.) (1992) Brecht on Theatre, translation from German by Willett J., London:<br />

Methuen Drama.<br />

Wood, M.P. (2007) 'Italian Film Noir', in Andrew Spicer (ed.) European Film Noir,<br />

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Wouters, C. (1999) 'Balancing Sex and Love Since the '60s Sexual Revolution', in<br />

Featherston, M. (ed.) Love and Eroticism, London: Sage Publications.<br />

345


Documentaries<br />

FILMOGRAPHY OF BERNARDO BERTOLUCCI'S FILMS<br />

1957 La teleferica/The Cable, home video, B&W.<br />

1958 La morte del maiale/Death <strong>of</strong> a Pig, home video, B&W.<br />

1965-1966 La via del petrolio/The Oil Route, Rai Radiotelevisione Italiana/ENI.<br />

1966 // canale/The Canal, Prod. Giorgio Patara S.r.l.<br />

1971 La salute e malata o Ipoveri muoiono prima/Health Is III or the Poor Die First,<br />

ARCI/Unitelefilm.<br />

1976 // silenzio e complicita/Silence is Complicity. A collective work<br />

<strong>of</strong> 33 directors and intellectuals, coordinated by Laura Betti, on the assassination<br />

<strong>of</strong> Pier Paolo Pasolini. Studio Vergini.<br />

1985 Cartolina dalla Cina, 10 minutes <strong>of</strong> material relevant to the location survey<br />

for The Last Emperor, broadcast on television on December 1985.<br />

1989 Bologna, segment <strong>of</strong> the collective work 12 registi per 12<br />

Citta, Istituto Luce, broadcast on television on Summer 1989.<br />

Short Films<br />

1967-1969 Agonia/Agony, segment <strong>of</strong> the collective film Amore e rabbia/Love and Anger,<br />

Castoro Film/Anouchka Film.<br />

2002 Histoire d'eaitx, segment <strong>of</strong> T\ie Cello in Ten Minutes Older, Road Movies<br />

GmbH.<br />

Full-length Films<br />

1962 La commare secca/Tlie Grim Reaper<br />

Screenplay: Bernardo Bertolucci, Sergio Cirti<br />

346


Cinematography: Giovanni Narzisi; Production Design: Adriana Spadaro<br />

Editing: Nino Baragli; Music: Carlo Rustichelli, Piero Piccioni<br />

Production: Compagnia Cinematografica Cervi.<br />

1964 Prima della Rivoluzione/Before the Revolution<br />

Screenplay: Bernardo Bertolucci, Gianni Amico<br />

Cinematography: Aldo Scavarda<br />

Editing: Roberto Perpignani; Music: Gino Paoli, Ennio Morricone<br />

Production: Iride Cinematografica.<br />

1968 Partner<br />

Screenplay: Gianni Amico, Bernardo Bertolucci<br />

Cinematography: Ugo Piccone; Production Design: Francesco Tullio Altan<br />

Editing: Roberto Perpignani; Music: Ennio Morricone<br />

Production: Red Film.<br />

1970 Strategic/ del ragno/T7ie Spider's Stratagem<br />

Screenplay: Marilu Parolini, Edoardo De Gregorio<br />

Cinematography: Vittorio Storaro; Production Design: Nedo Azzini<br />

Production: Red Film/Radiotelevisione Italiana.<br />

1970 // Conformista/The Conformist<br />

Screenplay: Bernardo Bertolucci<br />

Cinematography: Vittorio Storaro; Production Design: Nedo Azzini<br />

Editing: Franco Arcalli; Music: Georges Delerue<br />

Production : Mars Film/Marianne Productions/Maran Film Gmbh.<br />

347


1972 Ultimo tango a Parigi/ Last Tango in Paris<br />

Screenplay: Bernardo Bertolucci, Franco Arcalli<br />

Cinematography: Vittorio Storaro; Production Design: Ezio Frigerio<br />

Editing: Franco Arcalli; Music: Gato Barbieri<br />

Production: PEA/Artistes Associes.<br />

1976 Novecento/1900<br />

Screenplay: Bernardo Bertolucci, Franco Arcalli, Giuseppe Bertolucci<br />

Cinematography: Vittorio Storaro; Production Design: Ezio Frigerio<br />

Editing: Franco Arcalli; Music: Ennio Morricone<br />

Production: PEA/Artistes Associes/Artemis Film.<br />

1979 La luna/Luna<br />

Screenplay: Bernardo Bertolucci, Giuseppe Bertolucci, Clare Peploe<br />

Cinematography: Vittorio Storaro<br />

Production Design: Maria Paola Maino, Gianni Silvestri<br />

Editing: Gabriella Cristiani; Production: Fiction Cinematografica/20 th Century Fox.<br />

1981 La tragedia di un uomo ridicolo/The Tragedy <strong>of</strong> a Ridiculous Man<br />

Screenplay: Bernardo Bertolucci<br />

Cinematography: Carlo Di Palma; Production Design: Gianni Silvestri<br />

Editing: Gabriella Cristiani; Music: Ennio Morricone<br />

Production: Fiction Cinematografica/The Ladd Company.<br />

1987 L 'Ultimo Imperatore/Tlie Last Emperor<br />

Screenplay: Bernardo Bertolucci, Mark Peploe with Enzo Ungari<br />

Cinematography: Vittorio Storaro; Production Design: Ferdinando Scarfiotti<br />

348


Editing: Gabriella Cristiani; Music: Ryuichi Sakamoto<br />

Production: Recorded Picture Company/Tao Film, in association with the China Film<br />

Coproduction Corporation.<br />

1990 H te nel deserto/The Sheltering Sky<br />

Screenplay: Bernardo Bertolucci, Mark Peploe<br />

Cinematography: Vittorio Storaro; Production Design: Gianni Silvestri<br />

Editing: Gabriella Cristiani; Music: Ryuichi Sakamoto<br />

Production: Sahara Company, Recorded Picture Company/Tao Film.<br />

1993 Piccolo Buddha/Little Buddha<br />

Screenplay: Bernardo Bertolucci, Rudy Wurlitzer, Mark Peploe<br />

Cinematography: Vittorio Storaro; Production Design: James Acheson<br />

Editing: Pietro Scalia; Music: Ryuichi Sakamoto<br />

Production: Sahara Company, Recorded Picture Company/Ciby 2000.<br />

1996 lo ballo da sola/Stealing Beauty<br />

Screenplay: Susan Minot, Bernardo Bertolucci<br />

Cinematography: Darius Khondji; Production Design: Gianni Silvestri<br />

Editing: Pietro Scalia; Music: Richard Hartley<br />

Production: Recorded Picture Company/UGC Images.<br />

1998 L'assedio/Besieged<br />

Screenplay: Bernardo Bertolucci, Clare Peploe<br />

Cinematography: Fabio Cianchetti; Production Design: Gianni Silvestri<br />

Editing: Jacopo Quadri; Music: Alessio Vlad<br />

Production: Fiction Films/Navert Films/Mediaset/BBC.<br />

349


2003 I sognatori/The Dreamers<br />

Screenplay: Gilbert Adair<br />

Cinematography: Fabio Cianchetti; Production Design: Jean Rabasse<br />

Editing: Jacopo Quadri; Production: Recorded Picture Company/Peninsula Films/<br />

Fiction Films.<br />

350


SELECT FILMOGRAPHY<br />

A bout de souffle (Breathless), Jean-Luc Godard, 1960.<br />

Amarcord (1remember), Federico Fellini, 1973.<br />

A Passage to India, David Lean, 1984.<br />

Avatar, James Cameron, 2009.<br />

Bronenosets Potemkin (Battleship Potemkin), Sergei Eisenstein, 1925.<br />

Buongiorno, notte (Good Morning, Night), Marco Bellocchio, 2004.<br />

Chinatown, Roman Polanski, 1974.<br />

C 'era una volta in America (Once Upon a Time in America), Sergio Leone, 1984.<br />

C 'era una volta il West (Once upon a Time in the West), Sergio Leone, 1968.<br />

Colpire al cuore (Blow to the Heart), Gianni Amelio, 1983.<br />

Deliverance, John Boorman, 1972.<br />

Deux ou trios choses que je sais d'elle (Two or Three Things I Know About Her), Jean-Luc<br />

Godard, 1966.<br />

Dr. Strangelove, Stanley Kubrick, 1964.<br />

Edipo re (Oedipus Rex), Pier Paolo Pasolini, 1967.<br />

E.T., Steven Spielberg, 1982.<br />

Guess WJio 's Coming to Dinner, Stanley Kramer, 1967.<br />

Histoire(s) du cinema, Jean-Luc Godard, 1988-98.<br />

// buono il brutto e il cattivo (The Good, the Bad and the Ugly), Sergio Leone 1966.<br />

II deserto rosso (Red Desert), Michelangelo Antonioni, 1964.<br />

In a Lonely Place, Nicholas Ray, 1950.<br />

Indagini su un cittadino al di sopra di ogni sospetto (Investigation <strong>of</strong> a Citizen Above<br />

Suspicion), Elio Petri, 1970.<br />

Intimacy, Patrice Chereau, 2001.<br />

Ipugni in tasca (Fists in the Pocket), Marco Bellocchio, 1965.<br />

Johnny Guitar, Nicholas Ray, 1954.<br />

351


Johnny Stecchino, Roberto Benigni, 1991.<br />

La Bete Humaine (The Human Beast/Judas was a Woman) Jean Renoir, 1938.<br />

La Chinoise, Jean-Luc Godard, 1967.<br />

La giusta distanza (The Right Distance), Carlo Mazzacurati, 2007.<br />

La notte di San Lorenzo (Night <strong>of</strong> Shooting Stars), Emilio and Vittorio Taviani, 1982.<br />

La ora de los homos (Hour <strong>of</strong> the Furnaces), Fernando E. Solanas, 1973.<br />

La regie dujeu (The Rules <strong>of</strong> the Game), Jean Renoir, 1939.<br />

La Stella che non c 'e (The Missing Star), Gianni Amelio, 2006.<br />

Les Carabiniers (The Soldiers), Jean-Luc Godard, 1963.<br />

Le notti di Cabiria (The Nights <strong>of</strong>Cabiria), Federico Fellini, 1957.<br />

Le petit soldat, Jean-Luc Godard, 1960.<br />

Local Hero, Bill Forsyth, 1983.<br />

L 'ora dipunta (The Trial Begins}, Vincenzo Marra, 2007.<br />

L 'ora di religione (The Religion Hour), Marco Bellocchio, 2002.<br />

Masculin feminin (Masculine, Feminine), Jean-Luc Godard, 1966.<br />

Modern Times, Charles Chaplin, 1936.<br />

Nosferatu, Friedrich Wilhelm Murnau, 1922.<br />

Nuovo Cinema Paradiso (Cinema Paradiso), Giuseppe Tornatore, 1988.<br />

Pepe le Moko, Julien Duvivier, 1937.<br />

Pierrot le Fou, Jean-Luc Godard, 1965.<br />

Philadelphia, Jonathan Demme, 1993.<br />

Poveri ma belli (A Girl in Bikini), Dino Risi, 1957.<br />

Pravda, Dziga Vertov Group, 1970.<br />

Psycho, Alfred Hitchcock, 1960.<br />

Pulp Fiction, Quentin Tarantino, 1994.<br />

Quo Vadis Baby?, Gabriele Salvatores, 2005.<br />

Raiders <strong>of</strong> the Lost Ark, Steven Spielberg, 1981.<br />

352


Rashomon, Akira Kurosawa, 1951.<br />

Ratking, Jon Jones, 16/01/2011, 3 rd episode <strong>of</strong> Zen, 2011.<br />

Rear Window, Alfred Hitchcock, 1954.<br />

Rebel without a Cause, Nicholas Ray, 1955.<br />

Roma citta aperta (Rome Open City), Roberto Rossellini, 1945.<br />

Rouge (Red), (from Tftree Colours, preceded by Blue and White) Krzyszt<strong>of</strong> Kieslowski, 1994.<br />

Salvatore Giuliano, Francesco Rosi, 1962.<br />

Sauve qui pent (le vie) (Every Man for Himself), Jean-Luc Godard, 1980.<br />

Stagecoach, Alan Ford, 1939.<br />

Star Wars, George Lucas, 1977.<br />

The Full Monty, Peter Cattaneo, 1997.<br />

The Postman Always Rings Twice, Tay Garnett, 1946.<br />

The Runaway Bride, Carry Marshall, 1999.<br />

The Silence <strong>of</strong> the Lambs, Jonathan Demme, 1991<br />

The Wrong Man, Alfred Hitchcock, 1956.<br />

They Live by Night, Nicholas Ray, 1948.<br />

Toto che visse due volte (Toto Who Lived Twice). Cipri and Maresco, 1998.<br />

Unefemme est unefemme (A Woman Is a Woman), Jean-Luc Godard, 1961.<br />

Viaggio in Italia (The Lonely Woman), Roberto Rossellini, 1954<br />

Vivre sa vie (My Life to Live), Jean-Luc Godard, 1962.<br />

Week-end, Jean-Luc Godard, 1967.<br />

Wild Strawberries, Ingmar Bergman, 1957.<br />

353


Ph.D. Thesis Sih/ana SERRA 2011

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