Affiliation:
1. 0000000419367558Boston University
Abstract
This article argues that a full understanding of Ermanno Olmi’s feature films will require a deep engagement with the sponsored cinema he made as director of the Sezione Cinema Edisonvolta. It begins by spelling out some of the stakes and challenges of a ‘sponsored turn’
in Italian cinema studies, which during the past decade has inaugurated the long archival and critical process of revaluing the corporate roots of auteurs like Michelangelo Antonioni, Bernardo Bertolucci and, to a certain extent, Ermanno Olmi. It then elaborates on the relation between Olmi’s
sponsored cinema (1953‐61) and feature filmmaking (1961‐2014) by analysing two films that mark the director’s transition from the small to big screen: Michelino 1a B (1956) and Il posto (1961). The central contention is that these
films tell two different versions of the same coming-of-age story: a young boy from the provinces finds work in a downtown office building, where he must come to terms with the fact that he will remain there all his life. The distance between the two films is a measure of Olmi’s own
coming-of-age as an intellectual: from a resolved promoter of the guiding role of business in modern life to a sceptical interrogator of white-collar mundanity. After a comparative reading that reveals general similarities of structure and specific scenes of quotation, the article concludes
with some remarks about education, a concept through which Olmi’s feature films show themselves to be aware of ‐ even commenting on ‐ sponsored cinema.
Subject
Visual Arts and Performing Arts,Communication,Cultural Studies
Cited by
1 articles.
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