Movie Reviews for Fellini's Roma

Fellini's Roma

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Movie Reviews of Fellini's Roma

Movie Review: older Fellini flick-more or less documentary
Summary: 4 Stars

I remember seeing this movie many years ago when I was in the UK. When I realized it was still available, I bought it. It was really only one scene that I remembered and liked and sure enough, I was right.

Movie Review: Must be a Fellini Fan
Summary: 4 Stars

You must be a true F. Fellini fan to enjoy this one. It is not as abstract as his other works, but a good documentary type movie through the eyes of one of Italy's greatest directors.

Movie Review: Interesting
Summary: 3 Stars

The 1972 film Roma, by Federico Fellini, lies somewhere between his 1968 film Satyricon and his 1973 film Amarcord, not only chronologically, but creatively (The Clowns, from 1970, is a minor work, by comparison). It is a picaresque film, as both the other films are, and has some of the heightened imagery and poesy of Satyricon, while possessing Amarcord's humor and jabs at Fellini's Fascist era youth. That said, it is not as good a film as the two films that sandwich it for the very reason that it sits on that fence the two other films eschew. Whereas Satyricon was a freestyle adaptation from an ancient Roman work of art, with recurring characters in its vignettes, Roma is more of a travelogue crossed with memory, and the only constant within it is the city of Rome. The film was written by Fellini and Bernardino Zapponi, who collaborated on Satyricon, and, like that film, it is a visual orgy, filled with color and spectacle.
The two hour film is divided into a series of hallucinogenic vignettes admixed with golden memories that recount Roman history, Fellini's past, and the present of the city. These narrative streams and themes bounce back and forth, as Fellini tries to embody the very concept of Rome as `The Eternal City' of mythos (as opposed to the `city of illusions' that American writer Gore Vidal calls it, in a late cameo appearance proclaiming Apocalypticism as a vision).... Of course, the film would not be Fellinian without whores and midgets, and a slew of other oddities- human or not. This parade of grotesques is not limited to the material, but also to the very habits of the Romans from all eras, such as a scene at an outdoor restaurant, where the lower classes practice vulgarianism unabashedly. The film also has a number of uncredited cameo appearances, aside from Fellini and Vidal- mostly by Italian filmic luminaries such as Anna Magnani, Marcello Mastroianni, Feodor Chaliapin, and Alberto Sordi. The DVD, put out by MGM, is spare in the extreme, with the only bonus being the original theatrical trailer. The film is shown in a 1.66:1 aspect ratio, and is a fine print- the colors really show what a great cinematographer Giuseppe Rotunno was; especially in the shots taken at night, where the lighting and the colors literally blaze in their contrast to the pitch. The art direction and costuming by Danilo Donati also shines, even more so than in earlier Fellini color films- especially during the stellar Papal throne sequence, which seems almost the antithesis (or genial parody) of Francis Bacon's Satanically satiric painted portrait of Pope Innocent X- replete with a throne that seems to explode in color and neon. That said, the only one of the Fellini regular crew who seems to be doing subpar work is the normally fantastic Nino Rota, whose soundtrack is barely an influence on the images. Whether this is because the music is deliberately understated or because the imagery is so overwhelming is debatable, but it's still a notable absence.
Overall, Roma is a solid film with great moments, but one that has more value as a work of art that bears scrutiny for its reflection of its creator, rather than standing on its own artistic merits. It is not as daring as Satyricon, not as ribald nor tightly edited as Amarcord, not as probing of the human condition as Nights Of Cabiria, not as intellectualized as 8½, nor is it as all-encompassing as La Dolce Vita. But, after all, how many films are? It is akin to dissing a drama of Eugene O'Neill because it falls short of The Iceman Cometh, Mourning Becomes Electra, or A Long Day's Journey Into Night. If it is best as a baedeker to those greater films in the Fellini canon, so be it, for it is a sojourn worth the undertaking.

Movie Review: Didn't live up to my expectations
Summary: 3 Stars

The first Fellini film I ever saw really made me sit up and notice-- the "Toby Dammit" segment of "Spirits of the Dead" (the rest of which is pretty forgettable). Nothing else I've seen of his lived up to my expectations after that-- I still think it's his best work. And the Nino Rota soundtrack of Toby Dammit is one of Nino's best as well. Later saw La Strada, and thought it was OK, but didn't have the surrealist-grotesque factor I loved so much in Toby Dammit. Heard the Juliet of the Spirits soundtrack, and it's one of my favorite Nino Rota disks, but I found it hard to get interested with the movie. I then looked into what he shot nearest to the time he did Toby Dammit, and it looked like Roma might be a good choice. While the papal fashion show is truly great, none of the rest of it was anywhere near as jaw-dropping as Toby Dammit-- even the motorcycle tour at the end of Roma wasn't nearly as good as the similar nighttime Ferrari tour through Rome at the end of Toby Dammit.

So Roma for me, didn't do it. I haven't given up though, still hoping for something that even comes near the perfect surreal-grotesque-ness of Toby Dammit-- I'm planning on eventually checking out Amarcord, The Ship Sails On, La Dolce Vita, 8-1/2 and probably Nights of Cabria, and wish The Clowns and even Casanova (great soundtrack, anyway) would make it to DVD, but I'm no longer expecting quite as much as I see more and more of his work-- methinks I may have started at the peak...

Movie Review: Pour out 3/4 of a bottle of fine wine, refill with water, drink
Summary: 3 Stars

Fellini's Roma is a collection of unrelated vignettes. Themes from earlier Fellini film's are presented again in short form. The grotesque gluttons from Satyricon, the school room antics from Amarcord, the anti-social crude male audience members heckling stage performers from I Vitelloni. And also including for educational purposes the detailed workings of Rome whorehouses. This film contains wisps of his genius, but in an unorganized aimless way. The ending is weak and inconclusive. Perhaps his muse was taking a nap when this was made. If "Fellini's Roma" was released as just "Roma", it would be a curiosity at best.
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