Shhh... You've found us.
Welcome to The Auteurs.
Your online cinema. Anytime, anywhere.

La Strada

Italy

1954

108 Min
Black and White
Italian
  • Currently 4.3/5 Stars.
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5

   |   

224 Views

DIR Federico Fellini

SCR Federico Fellini, Tullio Pinelli

CAST Giulietta Masina, Anthony Quinn, Richard Basehart, Aldo Silvani, Livia Venturini

ED Leo Catozzo

MUSIC Nino Rota

Synopsis

There has never been a face quite like that of Giulietta Masina. Her husband, the legendary Federico Fellini, directs her as Gelsomina in La strada, the film that launched them both to international stardom. Gelsomina is sold by her mother into the employ of Zampanò (Anthony Quinn), a brutal strongman in a traveling circus. When Zampanò encounters an old rival in highwire artist the Fool (Richard Basehart), his fury is provoked to its breaking point. With La strada, winner of the Academy Award for Best Foreign Film in 1956, Fellini left behind the familiar signposts of Italian neorealism for a poetic fable of love and cruelty, evoking brilliant performances and winning the hearts of audiences and critics worldwide. —The Criterion Collection

Director

Federico_fellini

Federico Fellini

One of the most visionary figures to emerge from the fertile motion picture community of postwar-era Italy, Federico Fellini brought a new level of autobiographical intensity to his craft; more than any other filmmaker of his era, he transformed the realities of his life into the surrealism of his art. Though originally a product of the neorealist school, the eccentricity of Fellini’s characterizations and his absurdist sense of comedy set him squarely apart from contemporaries like Vittorio De Sica or Roberto Rossellini, and at the peak of his career his work adopted a distinctively poetic, flamboyant, and influential style so unique that only the term “Felliniesque” could accurately describe it.

Born in Rimini, Italy, on January 20, 1920, Fellini’s first passion was the theater, and at the age of 12 he briefly ran away from home to join the circus, later entering college solely to avoid being drafted. Prior to the outbreak of World War II, he wrote and acted with his friend… read more

Wall

Displaying 4 of 23 wall posts.
Picture of John P

John P

6Feb10

Hm, on second thought, I'd like to see it again. There are a few moments I can't get out of my head, like the scene where Masina stares at that sick kid.  
Picture of John P

John P

4Feb10

My second Fellini film, and I wasn't hugely impressed. Don't get me wrong, Giulietta Masina is amazingly expressive. I just loved her and her movements. Quinn was serviceable, but this is really her show. I felt the direction was at many times aimless (especially the framing) and the film would have sunk without her. I do have to say I loved the ending, and am glad Fellini went for tragedy and avoided sappiness.  
Picture of Rrreeeiiiddd

Rrreeeiiiddd

20Jan10

Sad stuff. Zampanò is a douche.  
Picture of matthew duncker

matthew duncker

19Jan10

heartbreaking....  

Related Films

Fans

Displaying 5 of 1567 fans.

Lists

Displaying 5 of 59 lists.

Reviews

Displaying 2 of 2

Untitled

By Byron Brubake​r on June 1, 2009

The performances are wonderful from the three main characters, so the humor and tragedy is believable. Fellini is beginning to move away from his early influence by the Italian neo-realism movement…  read review

Untitled

By Adam Suraf on February 23, 2009

Fellini’s Oscar-winning international breakthrough, about the road life of a traveling strongman and his abused, idealistic assistant, so divisive when it was first released due to what Italian critics…  read review

Forum

Displaying 1 discussion topic.

Intimate

2 posts by 2 people 9 months ago

DVD

Buy the DVD from The Criterion Collection.