Few films balance charm and social critique quite like Miracle in Milan. Based on Cesare Zavattini’s novel Totò il Buono, it reimagines neorealism as a fairytale of poverty and grace. Vittorio De Sica, best known for Bicycle Thieves, trades that film’s grit for whimsy, spinning a fable about a young man, a shantytown, and a magic dove — gifted from heaven by his late mother — that just might help the poor soar above their station. It’s surreal, sweet, and far funnier than Italian neorealism usually dares.
Miracle in Milan is often described as De Sica’s most optimistic film — a deliberate counterbalance to his earlier despairing works. The surreal delivers the social commentary; the magical supplies the hope. Even the villains are oddly endearing, fitting perfectly with the film’s playful tone.
Technically, it’s flawless — every shot, composition, and scrap of set design feels intentional, turning hardship into something improbably beautiful. Winner of the Grand Prize at Cannes in 1951, it may overplay the fantasy by the end, but it’s still a delight: a film that believes kindness can lift you — quite literally — above it all.