Italy’s first capital after the Risorgimento ended in the 1870s, Turin was in the midst of rapid industrialization during the period of
The Organizer, although the film unfolds some years before the growth of the industry. Populating his densely inhabited film with actual workers, Monicelli was attempting, three years before
The Battle of Algiers (1966), to create a sort of
neorealist period piece; using a strategy that would subsequently be seen in
Bonnie and Clyde (1967),
The Organizer opens with a montage of historical photographs that skillfully segues into contemporary facsimiles.
Style Inspired, according to its director, by the revolutionary ghosts of Paris’s no longer extant
Bastille and set in the slums of late-nineteenth-century Turin, the film accepts what the influential Italian Marxist leader
Antonio Gramsci saw as “the challenge of modernity,” namely, “to live without illusions and without becoming disillusioned.” To that end,
The Organizer is variously (and, for some, disconcertingly) jaunty, sentimental, comic, and baffling, as Monicelli applies the tonal shifts associated with the
French New Wave to a straightforward saga of working-class solidarity. Others attribute those tonal shifts to
Age & Scarpelli, who "were among the leading screenwriters" of the
commedia all'italiana. In an interview, Monicelli said "the subject is serious or tragic, but our point of view is comic and humorous. This is a type of comedy that grows out of the fact that Italians see reality and life precisely in this matter." Notable for its period detail and
Giuseppe Rotunno’s accomplished faux-daguerreotype cinematography, the film is not so much a call to action as to recollection—both a historical monument and a taboo-breaking depiction of a specific moment. Throughout, Rotunno’s black-and-white cinematography makes evocative use of flat lighting and gray skies to accentuate the sense of soot and smoke. (Because little was left of nineteenth-century Turin, the movie was actually shot in the nearby Piedmontese cities of Cuneo, Fossano, and Savigliano, with the vast factory interior filmed in Zagreb, Yugoslavia.) ==Reception==