Journey to Italy
Journey to Italy, also known as Voyage to Italy,[1] is a 1954 drama film directed by Roberto Rossellini. Ingrid Bergman and George Sanders play Katherine and Alex Joyce, a childless English married couple on a trip to Italy whose marriage is on the point of collapse until they are miraculously reconciled. The film was written by Rossellini and Vitaliano Brancati, but is loosely based on the 1934 novel Duo by Colette. Although the film was an Italian production, its dialogue was in English. The first theatrical release was in Italy under the title Viaggio in Italia; the dialogue had been dubbed into Italian. Journey to Italy is considered by many to be Rossellini's masterpiece,[2][3][4] as well as a seminal work of modernist cinema due to its loose storytelling. In 2012, it was listed by Sight & Sound magazine as one of the fifty greatest films ever made.[5] PlotAlex and Katherine Joyce (Sanders and Bergman) are a couple from England who have traveled by car to Italy to sell a villa near Naples that they have recently inherited from Alex's deceased Uncle Homer. The trip is intended as a vacation for Alex, who is a workaholic businessman given to brusqueness and sarcasm. Katherine is more sensitive, and the journey has evoked poignant memories of a poet friend, Charles Lewington, now deceased. The film begins with Katherine and Alex Joyce conversing as they drive through the Italian countryside. They arrive in Naples and run into Judy, an old friend, and her party. They join and have drinks and dinner. The next day they are given a lengthy room-by-room tour of Uncle Homer's villa by its caretakers, Tony and Natalia Burton. Tony is a former British soldier, Natalia is the Italian wife he married after the war. Within days of their arrival, the couple's relationship becomes strained amid mutual misunderstandings, buried anger that rises to the surface and a degree of jealousy on both sides. The two begin to spend their days separately. Alex takes a side trip to the island of Capri. His attempts to have a nice evening all fail, one with a woman who misses her husband, and one with a morose prostitute. Katherine tours Naples. On the third day of her visit, she tours the large, ancient statues at the Naples Museum. On the sixth day, she visits the Phlegraean Fields with their volcanic curiosities. On another day, she accompanies Natalie Burton to the Fontanelle cemetery, with its stacks of unidentified disinterred human skulls that are adopted and honored by local people.[6] On the last day of the film, they impetuously agree to divorce. Tony Burton suddenly appears, insisting that they go with him to Pompeii for an extraordinary opportunity. There, the three of them witness the discovery of another couple who had been buried in ashes during the eruption of Mount Vesuvius nearly 2000 years earlier.[7] Katherine is profoundly disturbed, and she and Alex leave Pompeii only to be caught up in the procession for Saint Gennaro in Naples.[8] Katherine is swept away in the crowd, and Alex goes after her and retrieves her. They embrace, and Katherine says, "Tell me that you love me!" He responds, "Well, if I do, will you promise not to take advantage of me?" The film concludes with a crane shot showing the couple embracing passionately amid the continuing religious procession. Cast
ProductionThe film originally was intended as an adaptation of the French writer Colette's novel Duo; Rossellini was, however, unable to get the rights to the novel and so was forced to draft a screenplay that differed sufficiently from the novel.[1] Rossellini and his co-author, Vitaliano Brancati, also apparently drew on a script entitled New Vine, by Antonio Pietrangeli, which described the argumentative relationship of an English couple touring Naples in a Jaguar automobile.[8] The film's storyline about Charles Lewington, the deceased poet who'd been in love with Katherine Joyce, is considered to be an allusion to the short story "The Dead" by James Joyce.[1][6][9] Rossellini's directorial style was very unusual. The actors did not receive their lines until shortly before filming of a particular scene, which left them little if any chance to prepare or rehearse.[1] George Sanders' autobiography Memoirs of a Professional Cad (1960) tellingly describes Rossellini's methods of direction and their effects on the actors and production team.[10] Theatrical releasesThe film was completed in 1953, but it took 18 months to arrange for distribution of the film in Italy.[8] It was released in 1954 with the title Viaggio in Italia, with a running time of 105 minutes.[11] The receipts and critical reception were poor. The film had been dubbed into Italian, and now is used as an example of "monstrous" difficulties with dubbing.[12] In April 1955, an 88-minute version of the film, in English, was released in France as L'Amour est le plus fort.[13] There was little interest in the film in the U.S. and Britain despite the fact that the film had been made in English with noted actors in the leads. An American version, with an 80-minute running time, had a limited release in 1955 with the title Strangers.[14] In Britain, a cut version (70 minutes) was released in 1958 under the title The Lonely Woman.[15] Reception and significanceJourney to Italy performed badly at the box office and was largely a critical failure.[16] It had a profound influence, however, on New Wave filmmakers working in the 1950s and 1960s. As described six decades later by film critic John Patterson: "French critics at the Cahiers du Cinéma – the likes of Jean-Luc Godard, Jacques Rivette, François Truffaut and Claude Chabrol – all saw it as the moment when poetic cinema grew up and became indisputably modern. Journey to Italy is thus one wellspring of the French New Wave. A film convulsed by themes of sterility, petrification, pregnancy and eternity, it finds its echo in such death-haunted Nouvelle Vague masterpieces as Chabrol's Le Boucher and Truffaut's La Chambre Verte."[17] Filmmaker Martin Scorsese talks about the film and his impressions of it in his own film My Voyage to Italy (1999).[1] Today, Journey to Italy generally is regarded as a landmark film. Critic Geoff Andrew referred to it as "a key stepping stone on the path to modern cinema" in its shift away from neorealism,[18] and A.O. Scott notes Rossellini's "way of dissolving narrative into atmosphere, of locating drama in the unspoken inner lives of his characters";[19] because Alex and Katherine are not developed through a conventional plot but instead spend lengthy amounts of time in boredom and dejection, the film frequently is cited as a major influence on the dramas of Michelangelo Antonioni and later works about modern malaise.[20] The film is ranked 41st in the 2012 survey of film critics conducted by Sight & Sound magazine, under the auspices of the British Film Institute.[5] It is ranked 71st in an overall aggregation of several "greatest films" surveys.[21] On Rotten Tomatoes, the average score from 26 critics is 8.6 out of 10 with an approval rating of 96%.[22] On Metacritic, based on an average of 4 reviews from critics, the film received a perfect score of 100, meaning "universal acclaim."[23] The Japanese filmmaker Akira Kurosawa cited this movie as one of his 100 favorite films.[24] Home media and restorationThere have been several releases of Journey to Italy for home video. In 2013, the Criterion Collection released a newly restored version as a region 1 DVD.[25] This version is based on restoration work at Cineteca di Bologna and Cinecittà Luce , which was reviewed very favorably by Glenn Erickson.[26] An earlier DVD version was released in 2003 as a region 2 DVD by the British Film Institute.[27] It was reviewed then by Gary Tooze.[28] A VHS tape version was released in 1992.[29] References
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