Young Italy Giovane Italia | |
---|---|
Founded | 1954 |
Dissolved | 1971 |
Ideology | National conservatism Italian nationalism Neo-fascism |
Mother party | Italian Social Movement |
The Young Italy (Italian : Giovane Italia) was the youth wing of the Italian Social Movement from 1954 to 1971.
At the Rome conference, which sanctioned the foundation of Young Italy as an autonomous national body, albeit linked to the Italian Social Movement and in which over 200 young people representing the provincial associations set up in the various regions participate, Massimo Anderson was elected first Secretary General [1] and Fabio De Felice was elected president.
In 1971, Anderson and Pietro Cerullo brought together the Young Italy and the Students and Workers Youth Rally in a new political entity called Youth Front, with Anderson as secretary and Cerullo as president. [2]
According to Evola, the concept of life provided was "spiritualistic" and contrasted with the "materialist" one of Marxism. [3]
Vittorio De Sica was an Italian film director and actor, a leading figure in the neorealist movement.
Italy of Values is a populist and anti-corruption political party in Italy. The party was founded in 1998 by former Mani pulite prosecutor Antonio Di Pietro, who entered politics in 1996 and finally left the party in 2014. IdV has aimed at gathering and giving voice to different sectors of the Italian society. From the beginning of its existence one of its major issues has been the so-called "moral issue". In the early 2010s, IdV was eclipsed by the new-born Five Star Movement, founded by comedian Beppe Grillo, which used the same populist and anti-corruption rhetoric.
Rossano Brazzi was an Italian actor. He moved to Hollywood in 1948 and was propelled to international fame with his role in the English-language film Three Coins in the Fountain (1954), followed by the leading male role in David Lean's Summertime (1955), opposite Katharine Hepburn. In 1958, he played the lead as Frenchman Emile De Becque in the Rodgers and Hammerstein musical South Pacific. His other notable English-language films include The Barefoot Contessa (1954), The Story of Esther Costello (1957), opposite Joan Crawford, Count Your Blessings (1959), Light in the Piazza (1962), and The Italian Job (1969).
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The list of the 100 Italian films to be saved was created with the aim to report "100 films that have changed the collective memory of the country between 1942 and 1978". Film preservation, or film restoration, describes a series of ongoing efforts among film historians, archivists, museums, cinematheques, and non-profit organizations to rescue decaying film stock and preserve the images they contain. In the widest sense, preservation assures that a movie will continue to exist in as close to its original form as possible.
The Nastro d'Argento is a film award assigned each year, since 1948, by Sindacato Nazionale dei Giornalisti Cinematografici Italiani, the association of Italian film critics.
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The Youth Front was the youth wing of the Italian Social Movement from 1971 to 1996.