FEDERICO FELLINI
(1920-1993) Born January 20, Rimini, Emilia-Romagna, Italy
Key Production Countries: Italy, France
Key Genres: Comedy Drama, Satire, Ensemble Film, Drama, Period Film, Showbiz Comedy, Fantasy Comedy, Comedy, Surrealist Film, Urban Comedy, Fantasy, Melodrama
Key Collaborators: Nino Rota (Composer), Tullio Pinelli (Screenwriter), Ruggero Mastroianni (Editor), Ennio Flaiano (Screenwriter), Giuseppe Rotunno (Cinematographer), Giulietta Masina (Leading Actress), Bernardino Zapponi (Screenwriter), Marcello Mastroianni (Leading Character Actor), Brunello Rondi (Screenwriter), Danilo Donati (Production Designer), Otello Martelli (Cinematographer), Leo Catozzo (Editor)
"Like Dickens, Fellini was attracted to the theatrical. Both men mined their childhood experiences; both craved an audience. A hallmark of creativity in narrative fiction is the freedom to embroider the past, constructing a scenario which may have little to do with fact so long as it makes a good story. Fellini was blatant in mining his past, so if incidents which are presented as autobiography do not ring true, the audience is entitled to feel cheated. Events need to cohere in a convincing narrative which holds the interest of the audience as much as the creator. Fellini’s diversions verge on self-obsession." - Philip Gillett (Movie Greats: A Critical Study of Classic Cinema, 2008)
"In an era when Italian cinema means the easy consolations of Roberto Benigni's Life is Beautiful, the aesthetic and moral challenges posed by Federico Fellini seem at once important and exotic." - Richard Armstrong (The Rough Guide to Film, 2007)
"If this Italian film-maker had been restrained by the Hollywood system, one feels that his films might have pleased himself less, but pleased his audiences more. No doubt about it, Fellini was a brilliant creator of unforgettable images, the screen's nearest equivalent to a modern Spanish painter somewhere between Dalí and Miró. What might have happened if this talent had been harnessed, channelled into a recognizable shape?" - David Quinlan (Quinlan's Film Directors, 1999)
"Whether it was the world he loved or simply the fruits of his very public fantasy is open to debate; whatever, while his work was extremely uneven, he evidently saw himself as a great artist, whereas a more accurate assessment might describe him as a magnificent showman." - Geoff Andrew (The Director's Vision, 1999)
"In retrospect I Vitelloni (1953) now seems to be his masterpiece, simply because it managed to encapsulate the boredom and the random but natural desire for existential recognition that underlie all his later, more self-consciously contrived films. Fellini remains a master, but a flawed one, capable of raising us briefly on his waxen wings, and making us forget that what we are seeing below us is only make believe and papier-mâché." - Mario Reading (The Movie Companion, 2006)
"Federico Fellini, the circus ringmaster of Italian movies, was a giant of world cinema. His deeply autobiographical work brought the European art film on to the world stage, winning the Academy Award for the Best Foreign Film four times. His work, informed as it was by his love of comic books, theatre - especially circus - women and food, progressively grew away from realism and storytelling into imaginative flights of fantasy, and his films are sensual and luxurious, revelling in astonishing sights and intoxicating sounds. So well defined and coherent was his world view that his surname has become and adjective, Felliniesque being a watchword for absurd, decadent extravagance." - Ian Freer (Movie Makers, 2009)
"His international reputation grew throughout the 1950s, culminating in the success of La Dolce vita (1960). His later films became increasingly autobiographical and reflected his love of extravagant fantasy, dreams and the grotesque." - Chambers Film Factfinder, 2006
"With roots in Italian neo-realism, Fellini has grown into a brilliant stylist who depicts man's appetites with particular vigor." - William R. Meyer (The Film Buff's Catalog, 1978)
"It's absolutely impossible to improvise. Making a movie is a mathematical operation. It is like sending a missile to the moon. It isn't improvised. It is too defined to be called improvisational, too mechanical. Art is a scientific operation, so I can say that what we usually call improvisation is in my case just having an ear and eye for things that sometimes occur during the time we are making the picture." - Federico Fellini (Directing the Film, 1976)
(1920-1993) Born January 20, Rimini, Emilia-Romagna, Italy
Key Production Countries: Italy, France
Key Genres: Comedy Drama, Satire, Ensemble Film, Drama, Period Film, Showbiz Comedy, Fantasy Comedy, Comedy, Surrealist Film, Urban Comedy, Fantasy, Melodrama
Key Collaborators: Nino Rota (Composer), Tullio Pinelli (Screenwriter), Ruggero Mastroianni (Editor), Ennio Flaiano (Screenwriter), Giuseppe Rotunno (Cinematographer), Giulietta Masina (Leading Actress), Bernardino Zapponi (Screenwriter), Marcello Mastroianni (Leading Character Actor), Brunello Rondi (Screenwriter), Danilo Donati (Production Designer), Otello Martelli (Cinematographer), Leo Catozzo (Editor)
"Like Dickens, Fellini was attracted to the theatrical. Both men mined their childhood experiences; both craved an audience. A hallmark of creativity in narrative fiction is the freedom to embroider the past, constructing a scenario which may have little to do with fact so long as it makes a good story. Fellini was blatant in mining his past, so if incidents which are presented as autobiography do not ring true, the audience is entitled to feel cheated. Events need to cohere in a convincing narrative which holds the interest of the audience as much as the creator. Fellini’s diversions verge on self-obsession." - Philip Gillett (Movie Greats: A Critical Study of Classic Cinema, 2008)
"In an era when Italian cinema means the easy consolations of Roberto Benigni's Life is Beautiful, the aesthetic and moral challenges posed by Federico Fellini seem at once important and exotic." - Richard Armstrong (The Rough Guide to Film, 2007)
"If this Italian film-maker had been restrained by the Hollywood system, one feels that his films might have pleased himself less, but pleased his audiences more. No doubt about it, Fellini was a brilliant creator of unforgettable images, the screen's nearest equivalent to a modern Spanish painter somewhere between Dalí and Miró. What might have happened if this talent had been harnessed, channelled into a recognizable shape?" - David Quinlan (Quinlan's Film Directors, 1999)
"Whether it was the world he loved or simply the fruits of his very public fantasy is open to debate; whatever, while his work was extremely uneven, he evidently saw himself as a great artist, whereas a more accurate assessment might describe him as a magnificent showman." - Geoff Andrew (The Director's Vision, 1999)
"In retrospect I Vitelloni (1953) now seems to be his masterpiece, simply because it managed to encapsulate the boredom and the random but natural desire for existential recognition that underlie all his later, more self-consciously contrived films. Fellini remains a master, but a flawed one, capable of raising us briefly on his waxen wings, and making us forget that what we are seeing below us is only make believe and papier-mâché." - Mario Reading (The Movie Companion, 2006)
"Federico Fellini, the circus ringmaster of Italian movies, was a giant of world cinema. His deeply autobiographical work brought the European art film on to the world stage, winning the Academy Award for the Best Foreign Film four times. His work, informed as it was by his love of comic books, theatre - especially circus - women and food, progressively grew away from realism and storytelling into imaginative flights of fantasy, and his films are sensual and luxurious, revelling in astonishing sights and intoxicating sounds. So well defined and coherent was his world view that his surname has become and adjective, Felliniesque being a watchword for absurd, decadent extravagance." - Ian Freer (Movie Makers, 2009)
"His international reputation grew throughout the 1950s, culminating in the success of La Dolce vita (1960). His later films became increasingly autobiographical and reflected his love of extravagant fantasy, dreams and the grotesque." - Chambers Film Factfinder, 2006
"With roots in Italian neo-realism, Fellini has grown into a brilliant stylist who depicts man's appetites with particular vigor." - William R. Meyer (The Film Buff's Catalog, 1978)
"It's absolutely impossible to improvise. Making a movie is a mathematical operation. It is like sending a missile to the moon. It isn't improvised. It is too defined to be called improvisational, too mechanical. Art is a scientific operation, so I can say that what we usually call improvisation is in my case just having an ear and eye for things that sometimes occur during the time we are making the picture." - Federico Fellini (Directing the Film, 1976)
Highly Recommended
8½ (1963), Fellini Satyricon (1969), Amarcord (1973)
Recommended
I Vitelloni (1953), La Strada (1954)
IMDb profile
8½ (1963), Fellini Satyricon (1969), Amarcord (1973)
Recommended
I Vitelloni (1953), La Strada (1954)
IMDb profile