Ciao, ho ho, is Burl! Yes, I’ve seen a lot of classic movies
in my day, but one that always eluded my gaze was Fellini’s 8½! I don’t know why, because it’s right
up my street, but I guess everybody has some gap somewhere in their film
education! There are people, as I understand it, who still have never seen John
Frankenheimer’s Prophecy, for
example! Ha ha!
I’ve seen plenty of Fellini pictures of course, including
once a marvelous 35mm cinema screening of Casanova!
But this picture has to be one of his best! Most of you will know the story:
Marcello Mastroianni plays a famous film director named Guido who is preparing
a new picture! However, he doesn’t really know what it’s going to be about, and
the project is falling apart around him even as his life, particularly his
rom*ntic life, is falling apart too! Try as he might to direct all the ladies
in his life, their previous tractability has waned along with Guido’s powers of
influence!
The story is built from dreams, flashbacks, real life and
scenes in which real life collides with movie scenes and probably dreams,
fantasies and flashbacks as well! The brilliant staging and beautiful black and
white photography keep it all looking good and moving swiftly, and the overall
impression is of kaleidoscopic chaos, a groovy disintegration, a headlong loss
of control arrested only when the director finally gives up on conventional
attempts to regain command and instead marshals his powers of filmmaking!
Ha ha, Guido can really be a not-so-nice guy, but he’s still
sympathetic and makes for a grand hero! The flashbacks explain a lot, and in
particular a great sequence involving a hefty dancer named Saragina! Nino
Rota’s score really works here, and the beachside rhumba is altogether a
beautiful piece of filmmaking! All the ladies are very impressive, and I was
gladdened to see Barbara Steele, famed from her appearances in Shivers and Piranha, show up as a raven-haired non-Italian!
Most of the last part of the picture takes place around a
huge half-built structure that is supposed to be a spaceship set for Guido’s
movie! But soon every single person in his life shows up there, and of course
there’s a clown parade as well! Ha ha, there has to be a clown parade! It must
have been difficult to schedule these scenes – usually in a movie with a large
cast, you don’t have everybody in there at once! Those would have been some
pretty long call sheets, ha ha!
Well, this is a picture that lived up to my long-germinating
expectations of it! It may well be the Fellini picture I like the best (that
I’ve seen, haven’t seen them all yet!), and that’s saying something! It’s a
True Tale of Filmmaking, and a funny and enjoyable picture! I give 8½ three ½ clown parades and an extra
half of a pair of sunglasses!
No comments:
Post a Comment