Watch unlimited films online for $6.99.
Try MUBI for FREE.
 

Fellini's Intervista

Intervista

Italy, France

1987

105 Min
Color
1.37:1
English, Japanese, Italian
  • Currently 3.5/5 Stars.
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5

   |   

DIR Federico Fellini

EXEC Pietro Notarianni

PROD Ibrahim Moussa

SCR Federico Fellini, Gianfranco Angelucci

DP Tonino Delli Colli

CAST Federico Fellini, Marcello Mastroianni, Anita Ekberg, Sergio Rubini, Antonella Ponziani, Maurizio Mein, Paola Liguori, Lara Wendel, Antonio Cantafora, Nadia Ottaviani, Tonino Delli Colli

ED Nino Baragli

PROD DES Danilo Donati

MUSIC Nicola Piovani

Cannes (Out of Competition): 40th Anniversary Prize, Cannes (Rétrospective)

Synopsis

While shooting a movie about his arrival to Cinecittà to interview a famous star, Federico Fellini is interviewed by Japanese television. Fellini highlights and revisits the beginning of his career portrayed by the young actor Sergio Rubini in the early 40’s. Then he casts new characters for his next movie, Amerika, from Franz Kafka. Later Marcello Mastroianni performing Mandrake visits Fellini and his producers, cast and crew and together they pay a visit to Anita Ekberg in her country cottage. Last but not the least, Fellini foresees the end of the golden era to the cinema industry with the competition of the television.

Director

Original

Federico Fellini

One of the most visionary figures to emerge from the fertile motion picture community of postwar-era Italy, Federico Fellini brought a new level of autobiographical intensity to his craft; more than any other filmmaker of his era, he transformed the realities of his life into the surrealism of his art. Though originally a product of the neorealist school, the eccentricity of Fellini’s characterizations and his absurdist sense of comedy set him squarely apart from contemporaries like Vittorio De Sica or Roberto Rossellini, and at the peak of his career his work adopted a distinctively poetic, flamboyant, and influential style so unique that only the term “Felliniesque” could accurately describe it.

Born in Rimini, Italy, on January 20, 1920, Fellini’s first passion was the theater, and at the age of 12 he briefly ran away from home to join the circus, later entering college solely to avoid being drafted. Prior to the outbreak of World War II, he wrote and acted with his friend… read more

Wall

Displaying 4 of 5 wall posts.
Picture of Jack Lineman

Jack Lineman

3Mar12

The scene with Mastroianni and Ekberg in the house is just beautiful.

Picture of Joel

Joel

13Feb11

I felt similarly about this film as with Roma, a delightful, albeit confusing masterpiece. Fellini gives us the Swan Songs of all Swan Songs, a retrospective felliniesque tour-de-force with the camera turned lovingly on himself. If you've liked Fellini in the past this one won't disappoint.

Picture of Christopher Smith

Christopher Smith

14Jan11

Late-period Fellini shows that he had lost none of his magic, even if his financiers may have thought so, since the lower budget as all to apparent. But it rises above with moments of raucous energy and quiet beauty that are pure Fellini. Not on the level of his earlier masterpieces for a number of reasons, but a nostalgic ode to cinema by one of its masters.

Picture of Blue K, Custodian of the Cinema

Blue K, Custodian of the Cinema

28Feb10

Anita Ekberg apparently swallowed the Trevi fountain.

Related Films

Fans

Displaying 5 of 31 fans.

Lists

Displaying 5 of 20 lists.

Reviews

No reviews yet — Write the first

Forum

Displaying 0 discussion topics.