Ranking among the most ambitious and influential of all silent films,
Cabiria (1914) is a dazzling epic about a Sicilian slave girl's journey
during the Second Punic War. Director Giovanni Pastrone (who worked, in this
instance, under the pseudonym "Piero Fosco") obsessed over historical
accuracy and grand cumulative detail. Not one to cut corners, he built
magnificent sets and filmed exteriors in Tunisia, Sicily, and the Alps. At
the film's premiere in Turin, Ildebrando Pizzetti's specially-written score
was performed by an orchestra of 80, with a backing choir of 70. This
groundbreaking picture was truly one of the great spectacles of its time,
and it still inspires awe in viewers.
Pastrone's somewhat rambling narrative features the battle between Rome and
Carthage, and includes such remarkable sights as the eruption of Mt. Etna
and Hannibal's mountain crossing. Several fictional characters (including
the aforementioned slave girl, a Roman spy, and a muscle-bound servant) are
followed through startling recreations of historic events. D.W. Griffith
was obviously influenced by Cabiria when he shot his similarly
grandiose historical epic, Intolerance (1916).
Pastrone, much like Griffith, would stop at nothing to realize his vision.
Before production began, he spent long hours researching period clothing,
buildings, and decor, and he set the picture's budget at the then unheard-of
sum of one million lire. He shot over 66,000 feet of film for what would
become a 14,800 foot final print, another move that set the standard for
future directors. This illustrates that Pastrone viewed editing as a
pivotal element of the filmmaking process, a belief that would be accepted
as gospel in the ensuing years.
Forever pushing the boundaries of the form, he also invented new equipment,
including a device he called a "carello", which would come to be known as a
"dolly." This enabled him to track his camera through Cabiria's
massive sets, thus utilizing the space to its fullest effect. New lighting
techniques were also employed to add depth and mood to the shots, a method
that had never been fully explored for an entire production.
In what would appear to be an odd move, Pastrone enlisted the writer Gabriele
D'Annunzio to take co-credit for the screenplay of Cabiria. Though
D'Annunzio was an important literary figure who was viewed as Italy's "poet
warrior," he actually had very little to do with the creation of the film,
outside of writing one or two overtly flowery title cards. But his
theoretical involvement was a major publicity coup, one that translated into
a larger haul at the box office. If ever a filmmaker was ahead of his time,
both as an artist and a showman, it was Giovanni Pastrone.
Director/Producer: Piero Fosco (Giovanni Pastrone)
Screenplay: Giovanni Pastrone and Gabriele D'Annunzio
Cinematographers: Augusto Battagliotti, Eugenio Bava, Natale Chiusano,
Segundo de Chomon, Carlo Franzeri, Giovanni Tomatis
Special Effects: Eugenio Bava, Segundo de Chomon
Principal Cast: Italia Almirante-Manzini (Sophonisba), Lidia Quaranta
(Cabiria), Catena (Young Cabiria), Umberto Mozzato (Fulvio Axilla),
Bartolomeo Pagano (Maciste), Luigi Chellini (Scipione).
BW-127m.
by Paul Tatara
Cabiria
by Paul Tatara | December 23, 2003
SIGN UP FOR OUR NEWSLETTERS
CONNECT WITH TCM