- Shoeshine
- Sciuscià
- Italy1946
- Vittorio De Sica
- 92 DCP
- NR
“The picture is, without pretentiousness, a masterpiece: wonderfully rich and supple, bursting at the seams with humane sympathy, wisdom, and creative energy.”
James Agee, Time
One of the greatest achievements in the cinematic revolution known as Italian neorealism, Vittorio De Sica’s Shoeshine stands as a timeless masterpiece of trenchant social observation and stirring emotional humanism. In postwar Rome, street kids Giuseppe (Rinaldo Smordoni) and Pasquale (Franco Interlenghi) shine the shoes of American servicemen in hopes of saving enough money to purchase a beautiful horse. But when Giuseppe’s criminal brother tricks them into participating in a confidence scam, the duo are arrested and then ground through the merciless gears of the juvenile detention system until their once-unbreakable friendship becomes the first casualty in an inexorable sequence of tragic events. Scripted by an all-star team of screenwriters (led by neorealist legend Cesare Zavattini), and directed by De Sica with an uncompromising eye for the period’s singular personalities and harsh conditions, Shoeshine is filmmaking at its most soulful, urgent, and heartbreakingly beautiful. —Janus Films
In Italian and English with English subtitles
“Shoeshine marked a new era of political cinema [and] helped put Italian movies at the centre of the world … Elements of observation and research are concentrated into intensely emotional moments that heighten the film’s moral and mnemonic power.”
Richard Brody, The New Yorker
“Shoeshine mirrors the anguished soul of a starving, disorganized, and demoralized nation with such uncompromising realism that the roughness of its composition is overshadowed by its driving, emotional force … A brilliantly executed social document.”
Thomas M. Pryor, The New York Times