Bicycle Thief example essay topic
The film opens with a montage of early morning urban activities ending on a crowd of unemployed laborers clamoring for work. Sitting to the side is Antonio Ricci. Beaten down by despair, he has lost the energy to fight. His spirits are lifted, however, when his name is called out for a job. Invigorated, he damns poverty. His joy however, is fleeting, employment depends on one condition – that he owns a bicycle.
To provide for his family, Antonio long ago pawned his bicycle and now, in one day, he raise the price of the pawn ticket. Not knowing where he will get the money, he turns to his wife Maria. In their stark home, the only thing left to pawn is a remnant of her dowry and the family's last vestige of comfort – the bed sheets. Bravely, Maria strips the bed and begins to wash the linens. At the pawn shop, it becomes evident that the Ricci's misery is not unique. Their sheets are added to a mountain of small white bundles, and Antonio reclaims his bicycle from the rack of hundreds like it.
Delighted by the prospect of a good fortune, the couple happily ride away. Antonio picks up his instructions for the following morning and Maria stops by to see Signora Santona, a medium who predicted that Antonio would find a job. He gently scolds his wife for her superstitions, but Maria holds firm to her belief in the woman's psychic ability. In a series intermittent domestic scenes, Antonio is portrayed as a loving husband and an understanding father. His warmth belies the stereotypically "macho" Latin male. He helps his wife carry heavy buckets of water and engages his young son Bruno as a reliable helper, and trusted him with the preparation of the cherished bicycle for the first day's work.
Hired as a billposter, Antonio was required to affix looming images of Rita Hayworth to the gray and ancient walls of Rome; ironically, he juxtaposes Hollywood's glamorous world vision to the stark real ties of post-War Europe. While Antonio struggles to smooth out the lumps under the advertisement, a thief slips up behind him and steals his bicycle. Antonio chases him in vain, loses him in the rush of the mid-morning traffic. Thus begins an unrelenting three day search for his stolen bicycle. Accompanied by Bruno, Antonio combs Rome to recover his property, which has come to represent both his livelihood and any hope for a prosperous future.
The police are of no help; they cannot be bothered with such a trivial case. Enlisting friends, Antonio and his son search the open air markets where stolen goods are dismantled and sold, for a trace of evidence. In a masterful montage of human faces and bicycle parts – frames, tires, seats, horns, and so on, De Sica contrasts the world's apparent abundance with Antonio's desperate need. The camera takes Antonio's point of view, panning right to left, it seeks hopelessly for a "needle in a haystack". While waiting for a rain storm to clear Antonio spots the thief talking with an old man.
Again, he chases but loses the thief, and follows the old man into a church, which is offering food and a shave to those want those services. Commenting on the role of the Catholic Church in post-War Italy, De Sica interrupts the mass with Antonio's interrogation of the old man. As the congregation prays, that their souls be purified and their spirits soothed on their paths of sorrow and privation, Antonio demands the criminal's address. The old man is oblivious to both and only wants to know what he will be given to eat. De Sica's evaluation of the Catholic Church is clear. In a world in which the recovery of a bicycle stands between prosperity and starvation, a priest's promise of heaven has lost his power to comfort the poor.
Sanctuaries have become soup kitchens, where well dressed women herd the parishioners like sheep, and lawyers serve as barbers and leads the litany. While the bourgeoisie must seduce the power to Mass, Roman women line up to spend their last lira on a clairvoyant. When Antonio losses hope – admitting that even the saints cannot help him – he too turns to Signora Santona. Hungry for a brighter future, her clients come to her as they once did to the church, confessing their problems.
She in turn, provides them with metaphoric and cryptic answers. She tells Antonio that he will either find the bicycle now or not at all. She sounds like a charlatan but when Antonio and Bruno step into the street, the thief miraculously appears and the chase is on again. The criminal turns out to be a pathetic epileptic, just as destitute as Antonio. The police can offer no help without witnesses and evidence, so Antonio surrenders his fight without pressing charges.
Hopeless, Antonio and Bruno wander aimlessly through the city streets, finally resting outside a soccer stadium. Hundreds of bicycles are parked outside. The crowd pours out, and Antonio is mesmerized by the sounds and sights of the cyclists riding by. In desperation, he dashes to steal a lone bicycle. He is immediately caught, threatened by his captors and humiliated in front of Bruno, compassionately, the owner allows Antonio to go without pressing charges. In tears, father and son are swallowed by the crowd walking silently into an uncertain future.
(McGills Survey Of Cinema, p. 1) It was the thematic richness in the "Bicycle Thief". I am aware that there has been a lot of complex criticism regarding this film, and much of it has been of diverse nature. For one thing, De Sica exposes a variety of psychological and emotional losses, i.e. the simple story of a stolen bicycle. At the same time, as Antonio meets frustration at every turn, he losses his confidence and his self respect and feels completely isolated. However, he is rises above the earthy, so to speak, when he refuses to press charges on the thief. In the next major move of the film, he is quick to attempt to steal someone else's bicycle.
Humiliation is his only reward. At the same time, there is yet another facet of this film with has to do with father and son relationships. It is actually the emotional center, and in my view the one around which the entire story unfolds. De Sica has claimed that his primary intent was poetic rather than political, and the film has been praised as anti-Fascist and pro-Solidarity. Indeed, the stark realism of this backdrop reveals the results of years of war and impoverished living. The comments made about society as well as politics are inescapable, but are not overt.
When De Sica began directing in the early 1940's he had already established himself as a successful leading man on both stage and screen. Following his directorial debut, with a few sentimental comedies, De Sica collaborate with screen writer Cesare Vazattini on "I Bambini Ci Guarda no" (1943); "The Children Are Watching Us", and embarked upon an artistic partnership that would last throughout the 1970?'s. He seems strongly influenced neo-realistic style, and in addition to the "Bicycle Thief", they contributed to other films as well. (McGills Survey of Cinema, p. 2) In view, the "Bicycle Thief" has much to do with a clashing of cultures. There are transcending messages, i. e., politics and social decay which appear in this movie, but are not necessarily the immediate intent of this film.
At the same time, it could also be argued that poverty is a central theme, because one man (and his entire family) depend upon the ownership of a single bicycle – – one which he is not able to get after it had been stolen from him. In emphasizing the need to honor the individuality of each culture, one Satyagig Ray saw no reason for closing the doors to the outside world in his films / community. Indeed, opening doors was an important priority of Ray's work. In this respect, Ray's attitude can contrast sharply with the increasing tendency to see his own culture (India) or other cultures, i.e. European, Spanish, Asian, etc., in highly conservative terms, for purposes of preserving them from the "pollution" of western ideas and thought. He was also willing to enjoy and to learn from ideas, art forms and styles of life from anywhere, in India or abroad.
Ray heterogeneity within local communities. This perception contrasts sharply with the tendency of many communitarian's, religious and secular, who are willing to break up the nation into communities and then stop dead there: "Thus far and no further". The great film maker's eagerness to seek the larger unit – – to talk to the whole world – – went well with his enthusiasm for understanding the smallest of the small, i.e. the individuality, ultimately, of each person. (Mamartya, p, 27) "The Bicycle Thief; La dri Di Bicilette", McGill's Survey of Cinema, 15 June 1995 Mamartya, Sen, "Our Culture, Their Culture, Satyagig Ray And The Art of Universalism", Vol. 214, The New Republic, 1 April 1996.