Fellini's Roma (2001)
Fellini's Roma Image Cover
Additional Images
Director:Federico Fellini
Studio:MGM (Video & DVD)
Rating:4.0 (28 votes)
Date Added:2009-03-18
ASIN:B000059H9B
UPC:9780792849377
Genre:Art House & International
Release:2001-04-10
Location:0733
Duration:119
Picture Format:Widescreen
Aspect Ratio:1.66:1
Sound:Dolby Digital 2.0 Mono
Languages:French, Italian
Subtitles:English, Spanish, French
Custom 1:CopiedR
Federico Fellini  ...  (Director)
  ...  (Writer)
 
Alfredo Adami  ...  
Britta Barnes  ...  
Bireno  ...  
Ginette Marcelle Bron  ...  
Pia De Doses  ...  
Summary: Federico Fellini's 1972 ode to the city of Rome is far from a coherent narrative, but as a selection of images and sounds celebrating the famed Italian capital, it's dazzling and hugely enjoyable. Stylistically, it's a perfect bridge between the excesses of "Satyricon" and the nostalgia of "Amarcord", and it showcases the true love that Fellini had for the Eternal City. Mixing autobiographical flashbacks with the travails of a present-day movie company making a film about the city (headed up by Fellini himself), "Roma" is an impressionistic tour de force, delivered via Fellini's unique cinematic vision. If you can't tolerate Fellini's larger-than-life approach, the sometimes-garish colors, or the circus atmosphere, you'll probably find "Roma" insufferable. But fans of Fellini will be in seventh heaven, especially during some of the wonderful set pieces--a music dance hall performance that's interrupted by bombing during World War II; a papal fashion show that's so surreal it must be seen to be believed; and a breathtaking sequence in which the film crew, tagging along with an archaeological dig, happens upon an ancient Roman catacomb and watches as the beautiful murals disintegrate before their eyes. Through it all, Fellini's passion for Rome (and moviemaking) shines through, especially in the film's climax, a dialogue-free sequence of motorcycles roaring through the city at night, a tour that ends at the magnificent Colosseum. At that marriage of past and present, "Roma" is about as perfect as cinema can get. "--Mark Englehart"