BenjaminW.1969 (1955) “The work of art in the age of mechanical reproduction,” pp. 217–251 in ArendtH. (ed.), Illuminations. Translated by ZohnH.. New York: Schocken Books.
2.
De SicaV.1948Bicycles Thieves [Ladri di biciclette]. Produzione Films Vittorio De Sica.
3.
De SicaV.1952Umberto D. Rizzoli Film/Produzione Films Vittorio De Sica/Amato Film.
4.
GavíriaV.1990Rodrigo D: No Future. Compañia de Fomento Cinematográfico. FOCINE, Fotoclub-76.
5.
KingJ.LópezA. M.AlvaradoM. (eds.). 1993. Mediating Two Worlds: Cinematic Encounters in the Americas. London: BFI Publishing.
6.
KurosawaA.1985Ran. Greenwich Film Productions, Herald Ace, Nippon Herald Films.
7.
MartinM. T. (ed.). 1997aNew Latin American Cinema. Vol. 1. Contemporary Film and Television. Detroit, MI: Wayne State University Press.
8.
MartinM. T. (ed.). 1997bNew Latin American Cinema. Vol. 2. Studies of National Cinemas. Detroit, MI: Wayne State University Press.
9.
TrerotolaD.2011 “Ratón de cinemateca.” El Amante Cine, no. 230, 14–15.
10.
ViscontiL.1971Death in Venice. Warner Brothers Pictures.
11.
WilsonKristi2007 “From pensioner to teenager: everyday violence in De Sica’s Umberto D and Gavíria’s Rodrigo D: No Future,” pp. 144–164 in RubertoL. E.WilsonK. M. (eds.), Italian Neorealism and Global Cinema. Detroit, MI: Wayne State University Press.