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Fellini's Roma

Roma

Italy, France

1972

128 Min
Color
English, French, Italian
  • Currently 3.7/5 Stars.
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DIR Federico Fellini

PROD Turi Vasile

SCR Federico Fellini, Bernardino Zapponi

DP Giuseppe Rotunno

CAST Peter Gonzales Falcon, Fiona Florence, Britta Barnes

Synopsis

A virtually plotless, gaudy, impressionistic portrait of Rome through the eyes of one of its most famous citizens. blending autobiography (a reconstruction of Fellini’s own arrival in Rome during the Mussolini years; a trip to a brothel and a music-hall) with scenes from present-day Roman life (a massive traffic jam on the autostrada; a raucous journey through Rome after dark; following an archaeological team through the site of the Rome subways; an unforgettable ecclesiastical fashion show) —IMDb

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

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chih

27Dec09

Roma occupies a warm place in my heart as a go-to movie for when I'm mentally exhausted. I find it so light and chaotic and wonderful. "Everyone said she was worse than Messalina."  
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Charles H. Drouot

14Sep09

Some of the scenes of Roma may well stay in your memory for ever... The last one with the motorbikes is so perfectly shot...   
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Sean Keeley

14Jul09

A cinematic endurance test. Scenes start off well, but are extended to unbearable lengths. This rambling mess goes on forever and is absolutely interminable. The very definition of cinematic overindulgence. 8 1/2 and La Dolce Vita are two of my favorite films ever, but this makes me want to take a break from Fellini.  
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Dylan

5May09

Intoxicatingly great. Like a wonderful dream  

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Reviews

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Thomas Cook, Fellini Style

By richmon​dhill on September 4, 2009

A rich, meandering tableau of the usual Fellini themes and obsessions. Not quite a love letter to a city, but one that manages to capture, almost entirely in visual terms, the joy, bewilderment, intoxication…  read review

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