Bicycle Thieves
1948 · Vittorio De Sica · 89 min · Drama
Vittorio De Sica stripped cinema down to its essentials and created something that still resonates almost eighty years later. A father and son walk through post-war Rome looking for a stolen bicycle, and that's the entire plot, yet the emotional weight of their search rivals anything Hollywood has produced with a hundred times the budget. The non-professional cast gives the film an authenticity that trained actors might not have achieved, and the streets of Rome become a character in their own right. Some viewers will find the pace too slow and the ending too bleak, but the simplicity is what makes it powerful. This is filmmaking at its most humane, a story about dignity, desperation, and the bond between parent and child.