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The Bicycle Thief (1948, It.) (aka
Ladri di Biciclette, or Bicycle Thieves)
In Vittorio de Sica's humanistic post-war drama - a
Best Foreign Film Oscar winner (before the category was officially
created) - an all-time classic Neo-realism film (with an amateur,
unprofessional cast filmed in non-studio locations):
- in a simple, tragic, yet compelling story set in
post-WWII Italy during a time of unemployment and devastation,
the story of the desperate economic plight of a prototypical Italian
father - impoverished, working-class family man, Antonio Ricci
(Lamberto Maggiorani)
- the pawnshop scene when Antonio's wife Maria Ricci
(Lianella Carell) sold their dowry's linen sheets for 7,500 lira
to a pawnshop, allowing him to buy back his own bicycle for 6,500,
which he had pawned weeks earlier for money to buy food - the pawnbroker
added the linens to a huge pile on a stacked scaffolding
- the theft of Antonio's bicycle in the ruined city
of Rome while he was hanging up a film poster of Rita Hayworth on
a ladder, on the first day of his job; a confederate helped the robber
get away - victimized Antonio's very job and survival were dependent
on this simple form of transportation
- the search of anguished, panic-stricken father with
his constant companion, son Bruno Ricci (Enzo Staiola) for the bike
for a full week
- the scene of frustrated and annoyed Antonio slapping
his son, and the look on his son's hurt face; shortly later a young
boy, not Bruno, was rescued from drowning and Antonio thought it
was his son, but then was overjoyed to find his son unhurt - feeling
guilty, he ordered them mozzarella sandwiches in a nearby restaurant;
during the meal when they briefly forgot their troubles, Antonio
shared his glass of white wine with him, establishing a closer bond,
while next to them, a richer family - in contrast - was eating a
fine meal
Father and Son - Searching for Bike
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Antonio Ricci
(Lamberto Maggiorani)
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Bruno Ricci
(Enzo Staiola)
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Treating His Son to a Meal in a Restaurant
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- defeated after the stolen bike couldn't be located,
and only meeting with apathy from police, the desperate father
stole another bicycle outside the football stadium, but he was
immediately apprehended and humiliated in front of his son; the
bike owner let the humiliated Antonio go because his son was present;
although upset, Bruno offered his father his hand as they walked
off into the crowd, in the touching, concluding sequence
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Pawnshop - Linens Swapped for Bicycle
The Bicycle's Theft
Hand in Hand With His Father After His Apprehension for
Stealing a Different Bicycle
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