In 1941-42, the swaying of the North African front made life difficult for the Fascist Italian film industry. The troupe shooting I聽cavalieri del deserto, for example, had to flee when Allied forces, shooting in a different manner, approached too near. This movie鈥檚 scriptwriters, engaged in adapting a racy Emilio Salgari novel, were Vittorio Mussolini, eldest son of the dictator, and Federico Fellini, famous in the post-war era for his wry portrayals of his people鈥檚 peccadilloes. It might seem an unlikely partnership. Yet聽such conjunctions and disjunctions lie at the heart of Ruth Ben-Ghiat鈥檚 fine study of the intricacies of her subject.
Her gaze is directed at films produced in Fascist Italy with themes that tied in with the dictatorship鈥檚 violent rule of those colonies it had inherited from the Liberals (Libya, Eritrea, Somalia) and those it conquered (Ethiopia in 1935-36, Albania in 1939). Her purpose, she explains at the end of the book, is to display the 鈥渆mphatic yet elusive relationship鈥 such Fascist cinema had with 鈥渋ts own times鈥, a history with its own peaks and troughs, especially as Italy鈥檚 Second World War became a story of defeat and imperial loss. Films made in the 1930s centred much of their appeal and message on being shot on site, where the extras, white and black, were 鈥渞eal鈥 and only lead roles were taken by 鈥渟tars鈥. By contrast, Bengasi, which won the major prize at the Venice Biennale in the year of its release (1942), was filmed, of necessity, at聽Rome鈥檚 颁颈苍别肠颈迟迟脿. Nonetheless, the regime did spare 5,000 soldiers from its ever more hard-pressed war fronts to give flesh to聽the movie鈥檚 battle scenes. Here, notes Ben-Ghiat, was a 鈥渕easure of the importance鈥 of聽cinema to聽the regime.
Ben-Ghiat begins with theoretical and historical introductions before transitioning into detailed readings of eight films: Kif Tebbi, 1928; Il grande appello, 1936; Luciano Serra, pilota, 1938; Lo聽squadrone bianco, 1936, perhaps Augusto Genina鈥檚 directorial masterpiece; Sentinelle di bronzo, 1937; L鈥橢sclave blanc/Jungla nera, 1936; Sotto la Croce del Sud, 1938; and Un pilota ritorna, 1942 (one of young director Roberto Rossellini鈥檚 鈥淔ascist鈥 trilogy, soon to be replaced on screens by his 鈥淎nti-Fascist鈥 trilogy led by Rome: Open City in 1945). She reads with acumen and span, her analysis ably reviewing Italian empire cinema鈥檚 parallels with, and differences from, films produced in older and greater empires such as those of Britain and France, in聽Italy鈥檚 Axis partner, Nazi Germany, or in Hollywood, already triumphant in its own imperium of publicity and sales. Despite Fascism鈥檚 devotion to 鈥渁utarchy鈥, three-quarters of cinema tickets sold in Italy in 1938 were for Hollywood films. With such background sketched, each film is also scrutinised for its messages, witting and unwitting, visual and aural; Ben-Ghiat is acutely aware of sight and sound.
Sometimes readers might fear that the ghost of Derrida lurks in the margins of this monograph, advising that 鈥渢here is nothing outside the text鈥. Certainly Ben鈥慓hiat does not seriously ask who Vittorio Mussolini and Federico Fellini were in 1942, nor does she question how their relationship functioned. Yet this is a聽minor quibble. Italian Fascism鈥檚 Empire Cinema is the most subtle and detailed examination we have of a聽crucial element of the cultural practice of 鈥渢otalitarian鈥 dictatorship, Italian-style.
Richard Bosworth is senior research fellow, Jesus College, Oxford, and author of Italian Venice: A History听(2014).
Italian Fascism鈥檚 Empire Cinema
By Ruth Ben-Ghiat
Indiana University Press, 420pp, 拢61.00 and 拢24.99
ISBN 9780253015525, 5594 and 5662 (e-book)
Published 11 February 2015
POSTSCRIPT:
Review originally published as:聽Fighting them in the matinees (28 May 2015)
Register to continue
Why register?
- Registration is free and only takes a moment
- Once registered, you can read 3 articles a month
- Sign up for our newsletter
Subscribe
Or subscribe for unlimited access to:
- Unlimited access to news, views, insights & reviews
- Digital editions
- Digital access to 罢贬贰鈥檚 university and college rankings analysis
Already registered or a current subscriber?




