Original theatrical poster
Directed by Federico Fellini
Produced by Angelo Rizzoli
Screenplay by Federico Fellini
Ennio Flaiano
Tullio Pinelli
Brunello Rondi
Story by Federico Fellini
Ennio Flaiano
Starring Marcello Mastroianni
Claudia Cardinale
Anouk Aimée
Sandra Milo
Music by Nino Rota
Cinematography Gianni Di Venanzo
Editing by Leo Cattozzo
Studio Cineriz
Francinex
Distributed by Columbia Pictures (France)
Embassy Pictures (US)
Release date(s) 14 February 1963 (1963-02-14)
Running time 138 minutes
Country Italy
Language Italian
French
English
German

is a 1963 Italian fantasy film directed by Federico Fellini. Co-scripted by Fellini, Tullio Pinelli, Ennio Flaiano, and Brunello Rondi, it stars Marcello Mastroianni as Guido Anselmi, a famous Italian film director. Shot in black-and-white by cinematographer Gianni di Venanzo, the film features a soundtrack by Nino Rota with costume and set designs by Piero Gherardi.

Its title refers to Fellini's eighth and a half film as a director. His previous directorial work consisted of six features, two short segments, and a collaboration with another director, Alberto Lattuada, the latter three productions accounting for a "half" film each.[1]

won two Academy Awards for Best Foreign Language Film and Best Costume Design (black-and-white). Acknowledged as avant-garde[2] and a highly influential classic,[3] it was ranked third best film of all time in a 2002 poll of film directors conducted by the British Film Institute[4] and is also listed on the Vatican's compilation of the 45 best films made before 1995, the 100th anniversary of cinema.[5]

Contents

Plot

Guido Anselmi (Marcello Mastroianni), a famous Italian film director, is suffering from "director's block". Stalled on his new science fiction film that includes veiled autobiographical references, he has lost interest amid artistic and marital difficulties. As Guido struggles half-heartedly to work on the film, a series of flashbacks and dreams delve into his memories and fantasies; they are frequently interwoven with reality.

Cast

  • Marcello Mastroianni as Guido Anselmi, a film director
  • Anouk Aimée as Luisa Anselmi, Guido's wife
  • Rossella Falk as Rossella, Luisa's best friend and Guido's confidante
  • Sandra Milo as Carla, Guido's mistress
  • Claudia Cardinale as Claudia, a movie star Guido casts as his Ideal Woman
  • Guido Alberti as Pace, a film producer
  • Mario Conocchia as Mario Conocchia, Guido's production assistant
  • Bruno Agostini as Bruno Agostini, the production director
  • Cesarino Miceli Picardi as Cesarino, the production supervisor
  • Jean Rougeul as Carini Daumier, a film critic
  • Mario Pisu as Mario Mezzabotta, Guido's friend
  • Barbara Steele as Gloria Morin, Mezzabotta's new young girlfriend
  • Madeleine LeBeau as Madeleine, a French actress
  • Caterina Boratto as a mysterious lady in the hotel
  • Eddra Gale as La Saraghina, a prostitute
  • Eugene Walter as an American journalist

Production

When shooting began on 9 May 1962, Eugene Walter recalled Fellini taking "a little piece of brown paper tape" and sticking it near the viewfinder of the camera. Written on it was Ricordati che è un film comico ("Remember that this is a comic film").[6] was filmed in the spherical cinematographic process, using 35-millimeter film, and exhibited with an aspect ratio of 1.85:1.

As with most Italian films of this period, the sound was entirely dubbed in afterward; following a technique dear to Fellini, many lines of the dialogue were written only during post production, while the actors on the set mouthed random lines. This film marks the first time that actress Claudia Cardinale was allowed to dub her own dialogue – previously her voice was thought to be too throaty and, coupled with her Tunisian accent, was considered undesirable.[7]

In September 1962, Fellini shot the end of the film as initially written: Guido and his wife sit together in the restaurant car of a train bound for Rome. Lost in thought, Guido looks up to see all the characters of his film smiling ambiguously at him as the train enters a tunnel. Fellini then shot an alternative ending set around the spaceship on the beach at dusk but with the intention of using the scenes as a trailer for promotional purposes only. He and his co-writers, however, decided that this alternate sequence served as a more harmonious and exuberant ending to the film.[8]

Reception

Italy and France

First released in Italy on 14 February 1963, Otto e mezzo received virtually unanimous acclaim, with reviewers hailing Fellini as "a genius possessed of a magic touch, a prodigious style".[9] Italian novelist and critic Alberto Moravia described the film's protagonist, Guido Anselmi, as "obsessed by eroticism, a sadist, a masochist, a self-mythologizer, an adulterer, a clown, a liar and a cheat. He's afraid of life and wants to return to his mother's womb ... In some respects he resembles Leopold Bloom, the hero of James Joyce's Ulysses, and we have the impression that Fellini has read and contemplated this book. The film is introverted, a sort of private monologue interspersed with glimpses of reality ... Fellini's dreams are always surprising and, in a figurative sense, original, but his memories are pervaded by a deeper, more delicate sentiment. This is why the two episodes concerning the hero's childhood at the old country house in Romagna and his meeting with the woman on the beach in Rimini are the best of the film, and among the best of all Fellini's works to date".[10]

Reviewing for Corriere della Sera, Giovanni Grazzini underlined that "the beauty of the film lies in its 'confusion' ... a mixture of error and truth, reality and dream, stylistic and human values, and in the complete harmony between Fellini's cinematographic language and Guido's rambling imagination. It is impossible to distinguish Fellini from his fictional director and so Fellini's faults coincide with Guido's spiritual doubts. The osmosis between art and life is amazing. It will be difficult to repeat this achievement ...[11] Fellini's genius shines in everything here, as it has rarely shone in the movies. There isn't a set, a character or a situation that doesn't have a precise meaning on the great stage that is ".[12] Mario Verdone of Bianco e Nero insisted the film was "like a brilliant improvisation ... The film became the most difficult feat the director ever tried to pull off. It is like a series of acrobats that a tight-rope walker tries to execute high above the crowd ... always on the verge of falling and being smashed on the ground. But at just the right moment, the acrobat knows how to perform the right somersault: with a push he straightens up, saves himself and wins".[13]

screened at the Cannes Film Festival in April 1963 to "almost universal acclaim"[14] and was Italy's official entry in the later Moscow Film Festival where it won the Grand Prize. French film director François Truffaut wrote: "Fellini's film is complete, simple, beautiful, honest, like the one Guido wants to make in ".[15] Premier Plan critics André Bouissy and Raymond Borde argued that the film "has the importance, magnitude, and technical mastery of Citizen Kane. It has aged twenty years of the avant-garde in one fell swoop because it both integrates and surpasses all the discoveries of experimental cinema".[16] Pierre Kast of Les Cahiers du Cinéma explained that "my admiration for Fellini is not without limits. For instance, I did not enjoy La strada but I did I vitelloni. But I think we must all admit that , leaving aside for the moment all prejudice and reserve, is prodigious. Fantastic liberality, a total absence of precaution and hypocrisy, absolute dispassionate sincerity, artistic and financial courage – these are the characteristics of this incredible undertaking".[17]

United States

Released in the United States on 25 June 1963 by Joseph E. Levine, who had bought the rights sight unseen, the film was screened at the Festival Theatre in New York in the presence of Fellini and Marcello Mastroianni. The acclaim was unanimous with the exception of reviews by Judith Crist, Pauline Kael, and John Simon. Crist "didn't think the film touched the heart or moved the spirit".[14] Kael derided the film as a "structural disaster" while Simon considered it "a disheartening fiasco".[18][19] Newsweek defended the film as "beyond doubt, a work of art of the first magnitude".[14] Bosley Crowther praised it in the New York Times as "a piece of entertainment that will really make you sit up straight and think, a movie endowed with the challenge of a fascinating intellectual game ... If Mr. Fellini has not produced another masterpiece – another all-powerful exposure of Italy's ironic sweet life – he has made a stimulating contemplation of what might be called, with equal irony, a sweet guy".[20] Archer Winsten of The New York Post interpreted the film as "a kind of review and summary of Fellini's picture-making" but doubted that it would appeal as directly to the American public as La dolce vita had three years earlier: "This is a subtler, more imaginative, less sensational piece of work. There will be more people here who consider it confused and confusing. And when they do understand what it is about – the simultaneous creation of a work of art, a philosophy of living together in happiness, and the imposition of each upon the other, they will not be as pleased as if they had attended the exposition of an international scandal".[21] Audiences, however, loved it to such an extent that a company attempted to obtain the rights to mass-produce Guido Anselmi's black director's hat.[18]

Fellini biographer Hollis Alpert noted that in the months following its release, critical commentary on proliferated as the film "became an intellectual cud to chew on".[22] Philosopher and social critic Dwight Macdonald, for example, insisted it was "the most brilliant, varied, and entertaining movie since Citizen Kane".[22] In 1987, a group of thirty European intellectuals and filmmakers voted Otto e mezzo the most important European film ever made.[23] It came number three on the 2002 Sight & Sound Director's Poll beaten only by Citizen Kane and The Godfather (Parts 1 and 2). is a fixture on the Sight & Sound critics' and directors' polls of the top ten films ever made. It ranks number three on the magazine's 2002 Directors' Top Ten Poll and number nine on the Critics' Top Ten Poll.[4] It is ranked as the 4th Best Foreign Language film of all time by the Screen Directory.[24] In 1993, Chicago Sun-Times film reviewer Roger Ebert wrote that "despite the efforts of several other filmmakers to make their own versions of the same story, it remains the definitive film about director's block".[25]

Themes

is about the struggles involved in the creative process, both technical and personal, and the problems artists face when expected to deliver something personal and profound with intense public scrutiny, on a constricted schedule, while simultaneously having to deal with their own personal relationships. It is, in a larger sense, about finding true personal happiness in a difficult, fragmented life. Like several Italian films of the period (most evident in the films of Fellini's contemporary, Michelangelo Antonioni), also is about the alienating effects of modernization.[26]

The title is in keeping with Fellini's self-reflexive theme – the making of his eighth-and-a-half film.[27] His previous six feature films included Lo sceicco bianco (1952), I vitelloni (1953), La strada in (1954), Il bidone (1955), Le notti di Cabiria (1957), and La dolce vita (1960). With Alberto Lattuada, he co-directed Luci del varietà (Variety Lights) in 1950. His two short segments included Un Agenzia Matrimoniale (A Marriage Agency) in the 1953 omnibus film L'amore in città (Love in the City) and Le Tentazioni del Dottor Antonio from the 1962 omnibus film Boccaccio '70. The working title for was La bella confusione (The Beautiful Confusion) proposed by co-screenwriter, Ennio Flaiano, but Fellini then "had the simpler idea (which proved entirely wrong) to call it Comedy".[28]

According to Italian writer Alberto Arbasino, Fellini's film used similar artistic procedures and had parallels with Musil's 1930 novel The Man Without Qualities.[29]

Influence

Later in the year of the film's 1963 release, a group of young Italian writers founded Gruppo '63, a literary collective of the neoavanguardia composed of novelists, reviewers, critics, and poets inspired by and Umberto Eco's seminal essay, Opera aperta (Open Work).[30]

"Imitations of pile up by directors all over the world", wrote Fellini biographer Tullio Kezich.[31] The following is Kezich's short-list of the films it has inspired: Mickey One (Arthur Penn, 1965), Alex in Wonderland (Paul Mazursky, 1970), Beware of a Holy Whore (Rainer Werner Fassbinder, 1971), La Nuit américaine ("Day for Night") (François Truffaut, 1974), All That Jazz (Bob Fosse, 1979), Stardust Memories (Woody Allen, 1980), Sogni d'oro (Nanni Moretti, 1981), Parad Planet (Vadim Abdrashitov, 1984), La Pelicula del rey (Carlos Sorin, 1986), Living in Oblivion (Tom DiCillo, 1995) , 8½ Women (Peter Greenaway, 1999), along with the successful Broadway musical, Nine (Maury Yeston and Arthur Kopit, 1982; revived 2003; made into a film in 2009, directed by Rob Marshall and starring Daniel Day-Lewis as Guido).[32] Other films include Synecdoche, New York (Charlie Kaufman, 2008).

The 1993 music video for R.E.M.'s song "Everybody Hurts" draws heavily from 's opening dream sequence, with the band stuck in a traffic jam. Subtitles of the thoughts of people trapped inside cars appear on screen until everyone abandons their vehicle to walk instead; then they vanish.

The European Network of Young Cinema NISI MASA was named after the phrase "Asa Nisi Masa" in .

In 2010, the film was ranked #62 in Empire magazine's "The 100 Best Films Of World Cinema".[33]

Awards

won two Academy Awards for Best Foreign Language Film and Best Costume Design (black-and-white) while garnering three other nominations for Best Director, Best Original Screenplay, and Best Art Direction (black-and-white).[34] The New York Film Critics Circle also named best foreign language film. The Italian National Syndicate of Film Journalists awarded the movie all seven prizes for director, producer, original story, screenplay, music, cinematography, and best supporting actress (Sandra Milo).

At the Saint Vincent Film Festival, it was awarded Grand Prize over Luchino Visconti's Il gattopardo (The Leopard). The film screened in April at the 1963 Cannes Film Festival[35] to "almost universal acclaim but no prize was awarded because it was shown outside the competition. Cannes rules demanded exclusivity in competition entries, and was already earmarked as Italy's official entry in the later Moscow festival".[36] Presented on 18 July 1963 to an audience of 8,000 in the Kremlin's conference hall, won the prestigious Grand Prize at the Moscow Film Festival to acclaim that, according to Fellini biographer Tullio Kezich, worried the Soviet festival authorities: the applause was "a cry for freedom".[18] Jury members included Stanley Kramer, Jean Marais, Satyajit Ray, and screenwriter Sergio Amidei.[37]

See also

References

Notes

  1. ^ BBC – Review of Fellini's
  2. ^ Alberto Arbasino (1963), review of 8½ in Il Giorno, March 6th, 1963: "The film is a step forward in the history of novelistic form. The block structure of La Dolce Vita already paved the way in both cinema and littérature. Otto et mezzo, however, not only outdistances by many years almost all films currently made but impacts our narrative at the most sensitive moment of the friction between convention and avant-garde, and may well provide a boost in the direction of the expérimental, i.e. the future, as regards, among other things, the problems of being, of writing, and the relationship with reality."
  3. ^ Film scholar Charles Affron writes that "the status of as a 'classic' text can be recognized in the homage of its imitations and versions." Cf. Affron, 5. Fellini scholar Peter Bondanella concurs: "As might be expected from the work's important place in the history of the cinema, the criticism on is voluminous." Cf. Bondanella, The Cinema of Federico Fellini, 163
  4. ^ a b "Directors' Top Ten Poll". British Film Institute. http://www.bfi.org.uk/sightandsound/topten/poll/directors.html. Retrieved 26 March 2007. 
  5. ^ "Vatican Best Films List". USCCB. http://www.usccb.org/movies/vaticanfilms.shtml. Retrieved 25 July 2010. 
  6. ^ Eugene Walter, "Dinner with Fellini", The Transatlantic Review, Autumn 1964. Quoted in Affron, 267
  7. ^ , Criterion Collection DVD, featured commentary track.
  8. ^ Alpert, 174-175, and Kezich, 245. The documentary L'Ultima sequenza (2003) also discusses the lost sequence.
  9. ^ Kezich, 245
  10. ^ Moravia's review first published in L'Espresso (Rome) on 17 February 1963. Quoted in Fava and Vigano, 115-116
  11. ^ Grazzini's review first published in Corriere della Sera (Milan) on 16 February 1963. Quoted in Fava and Vigano, 116
  12. ^ This translation of Grazzini's review quoted in Affron, 255
  13. ^ Affron, 255
  14. ^ a b c Alpert, 180
  15. ^ Truffaut's review first published in Lui (Paris), 1 July 1963. Affron, 257
  16. ^ First published in Premier Plan (Paris), 30 November 1963. Affron, 257
  17. ^ First published in Les Cahiers du Cinéma (Paris), July 1963. Fava and Vigano, 116
  18. ^ a b c Kezich, 247
  19. ^ John Simon considered the film's originality was compromised "because the 'dance of life' at the end was suggested by Bergman's dance of death in The Seventh Seal (which Fellini had not seen)". Quoted in Alpert, 181
  20. ^ First published in the NYT, 26 June 1963. Fava and Vigano, 118
  21. ^ First published in The New York Post, 26 June 1963. Fava and Vigano, 118.
  22. ^ a b Alpert, 181
  23. ^ Bondanella, The Films of Federico Fellini, 93.
  24. ^ "Top Ten Listings: Foreign Language". The Screen Directory. http://www.thescreendirectory.com/cat4/top_tens.php?c=33. Retrieved 26 March 2007. 
  25. ^ Ebert, "Fellini's ", Chicago Sun-Times (7 May 1993). Retrieved on 21 December 2008.
  26. ^ "Screening the Past". http://www.latrobe.edu.au/screeningthepast/reviews/rev0703/gmolbr15.html. Retrieved 9 September 2007. 
  27. ^ Bondanella, The Cinema of Federico Fellini, 175
  28. ^ Quoted in Kezich, 234
  29. ^ Gabriele Pedullà, Alberto Arbasino [2000] "Interviste – Sull'albero di ciliegie" ("On the Cherry Tree") in CONTEMPORANEA Rivista di studi sulla letteratura e sulla comunicazione, Volume 1, 2003. Q: In some of your texts written during the 60s – I’m thinking above all of Certi romanzi – critical reflections on questions of the novel [...] are always interlaced in both an implicit and explicit way with reflections on cinema. In particular, it seems to me that your affinity with Fellini is especially significant: for example, your review of Otto e mezzo in Il Giorno. A: Reading Musil, we discovered parallels and similar procedures. But without being able to establish, either then or today, how much there was of Flaiano and how much, on the other hand, was of [Fellini’s] own intuition.
  30. ^ Kezich, 246
  31. ^ Kezich, 249
  32. ^ Kezich, 249-250
  33. ^ "The 100 Best Films Of World Cinema". Empire. http://www.empireonline.com/features/100-greatest-world-cinema-films/default.asp?film=62. 
  34. ^ "The 36th Academy Awards (1964) Nominees and Winners". oscars.org. http://www.oscars.org/awards/academyawards/legacy/ceremony/36th-winners.html. Retrieved 2011-11-03. 
  35. ^ "Festival de Cannes: 8½". festival-cannes.com. http://www.festival-cannes.com/en/archives/ficheFilm/id/3125/year/1963.html. Retrieved 27 February 2009. 
  36. ^ Alpert, 180.
  37. ^ Kezich, 248

Bibliography

  • Affron, Charles. 8½: Federico Fellini, Director. New Brunswick: Rutgers University Press, 1989.
  • Alpert, Hollis. Fellini: A Life. New York: Paragon House, 1988.
  • Bondanella, Peter. The Cinema of Federico Fellini. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1992.
  • Bondanella, Peter. The Films of Federico Fellini. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2002.
  • Fava, Claudio and Aldo Vigano. The Films of Federico Fellini. New York: Citadel Press, 1990.
  • Kezich, Tullio. Federico Fellini: His Life and Work. New York: Faber and Faber, 2006.

External links

Awards and achievements
Preceded by
Sundays and Cybele
Golden Globe for Best Foreign Film
1964
Succeeded by
Yesterday, Today and Tomorrow

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