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The Bicycle Thief (1948)

The Bicycle Thief (1948)
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This landmark Italian neorealist drama became one of the best-known and most widely acclaimed European movies, including a special Academy Award as "most outstanding foreign film" seven years before that Oscar category existed. Written primarily by neorealist pioneer Cesare Zavattini and directed by Vittorio DeSica, also one of the movement's main forces, the movie featured all the hallmarks of the neorealist style: a simple story about the lives of ordinary people, outdoor shooting and lighting, non-actors mixed together with actors, and a focus on social problems in the aftermath of World War II. Lamberto Maggiorani plays Antonio, an unemployed man who finds a coveted job that requires a bicycle. When it is stolen on his first day of work, Antonio and his young son Bruno (Enzo Staiola) begin a frantic search, learning valuable lessons along the way. The movie focuses on both the relationship between the father and the son and the larger framework of poverty and unemployment in postwar Italy. As in such other classic films as Shoeshine (1946), Umberto D. (1952), and his late masterpiece The Garden of the Finzi-Continis (1971), DeSica focuses on the ordinary details of ordinary lives as a way to dramatize wider social issues. As a result, The Bicycle Thief works as a sentimental study of a father and son, a historical document, a social statement, and a record of one of the century's most influential film movements. ~ Leo Charney, Rovi

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Starring:
Lamberto MaggioraniLianella Carell, (more)
Director(s):
Vittorio De Sica
Theatrical MPAA Rating:
NR
Format(s):
DVD
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Synopsis of The Bicycle Thief

This landmark Italian neorealist drama became one of the best-known and most widely acclaimed European movies, including a special Academy Award as "most outstanding foreign film" seven years before that Oscar category existed. Written primarily by neorealist pioneer Cesare Zavattini and directed by Vittorio DeSica, also one of the movement's main forces, the movie featured all the hallmarks of the neorealist style: a simple story about the lives of ordinary people, outdoor shooting and lighting, non-actors mixed together with actors, and a focus on social problems in the aftermath of World War II. Lamberto Maggiorani plays Antonio, an unemployed man who finds a coveted job that requires a bicycle. When it is stolen on his first day of work, Antonio and his young son Bruno (Enzo Staiola) begin a frantic search, learning valuable lessons along the way. The movie focuses on both the relationship between the father and the son and the larger framework of poverty and unemployment in postwar Italy. As in such other classic films as Shoeshine (1946), Umberto D. (1952), and his late masterpiece The Garden of the Finzi-Continis (1971), DeSica focuses on the ordinary details of ordinary lives as a way to dramatize wider social issues. As a result, The Bicycle Thief works as a sentimental study of a father and son, a historical document, a social statement, and a record of one of the century's most influential film movements. ~ Leo Charney, Rovi

Theatrical Feature Running Time:
89 mins

Complete Cast of The Bicycle Thief


Director(s):
Vittorio De Sica
Writer(s):
Vittorio De SicaO. BiancoliCesare Zavattini
Producer(s):
Vittorio De Sica
Theatrical MPAA Rating:
NR(Adult Situations, Suitable for Children)
The Bicycle Thief Awards:
  • 1949 - British Academy of Film and Television Arts - Best Film - Any Source
  • 1949 - Golden Globe - Best Foreign Film
  • 1949 - Hollywood Foreign Press Association - Best Foreign Film
  • 1949 - National Board of Review - Best Picture
  • 1949 - National Board of Review - Best Director
  • 1949 - New York Film Critics Circle - Best Foreign Film
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    SANDHYA P.

    This movie has a touching simplicity to it , a very real feel of the WW era. The pathos on the face of the ordinary people trying to eke a living in difficult times of war is worth watching. Do not watch this if you are not used to a slow pace of an older generation of movies. I felt that it has a timelessness to it and portrays the hardship of poverty in a very moving and nondramatic way.Worth watching.

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    Andrea P.

    So sad, so beautiful, and imbued with a tender irony, "The Bicycle Thief" is a tale of innocence and innocence lost. It is a parable for our age, a universal story simply told. When you watch it, think of Jean Valjean in "Les Miserables" and remember the admonition, "Judge not, lest ye be judged...." This is one of my all-time favorites, fraught with dramatic tension; for all its deceptive simplicity, it packs a powerful punch. Absolutely extraordinary.

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    Daniel Jacob H.

    I loved it.. My wife, not so much. It was simple as other reviewers have stated and it's rather unassuming in that it end, almost abruptly, but it lingers with you for days and weeks afterward. You start to see yourself through its lens, you start to see it through the lens of your life. You question what would you do in that situation. You question the right thing to do. It's haunting.

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