Sechs getrennte Episoden: Gescheiterte Selbstmörder diskutieren über ihre Verzweiflung. Ein Tanzsaal in der Provinz. Ein investigativer Reporter, der als zukünftiger Ehemann auftritt. Eine j... Alles lesenSechs getrennte Episoden: Gescheiterte Selbstmörder diskutieren über ihre Verzweiflung. Ein Tanzsaal in der Provinz. Ein investigativer Reporter, der als zukünftiger Ehemann auftritt. Eine junge ledige Mutter. Techniken italienischer Männer zur Beobachtung junger Mädchen. Ein flü... Alles lesenSechs getrennte Episoden: Gescheiterte Selbstmörder diskutieren über ihre Verzweiflung. Ein Tanzsaal in der Provinz. Ein investigativer Reporter, der als zukünftiger Ehemann auftritt. Eine junge ledige Mutter. Techniken italienischer Männer zur Beobachtung junger Mädchen. Ein flüchtiger Blick in die Prostitution.
Empfohlene Bewertungen
All of the stories are supposedly real-life, but some seem more real than others. In classic neorealistic style, all of the actors are non- professional, but it goes beyond that. Zavattini's segment, which has the strongest narrative, shows newspaper headlines suggesting it's entirely true; Antonioni's seems staged until one of the characters shows a scar that looks very real. Fellini's is the least documentarian segment, but still affecting.
The anthology film is hard to do, especially with a multitude of directors, each with their own style. But it seems to be something the Italians did well, which makes great sense in retrospect. Though they could not have predicted DVD in 1953, they might have known that a bigger name (Fellini) would draw audiences and expose them to others.
Is this New Wave, or is it neo-realist? I feel like it's on the cusp. Being post-war and using many real people as actors, it tends to have that realist quality. But, there are enough quirks (such as the cartoon soundtrack of the final chapter) to make it a big more New Wave. I don't know.
I think these European arthouse omnibus films tend to be very uneven, and this is really no exception. Carlo Lizzani (future director of some pretty kick ass poliziotteschi) and Michelangelo Antonioni turn in a couple of really dreary talking heads segments on prostitutes and suicide. Dino Risi livens things up a bit with a light hearted look at a dance hall.
Not at all surprisingly, Fellini completely steals the show with a delightfully unrealistic segment about a reporter going to a marriage broker to find a wife for his friend who thinks he's a werewolf. Zavattini and Francesco Maselli direct the second best segment, a fairly touching and tragic depiction of a single-mother unable to find work and living on the streets with her infant son. (This is very reminiscent of films he wrote for others like "Umberto D.")
The less said about Alberto Lattuada's segment the better.
So does the film work? Yeah ... but because it's conception is all that good. It was meant to be issue #1 of a series of film magazines on different topics. No others were made, which is not all that surprising since the film works to the degree that it ignores this idea and does it's own thing.
Wusstest du schon
- WissenswertesAs well as directing one of the segments, Cesare Zavattini also co-wrote five of them.
- VerbindungenReferenced in Chto? Gde? Kogda?: 2002 Autumn Series. The First Game (2002)
Top-Auswahl
- How long is Love in the City?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Erscheinungsdatum
- Herkunftsland
- Sprache
- Auch bekannt als
- Love in the City
- Drehorte
- Baretto, Rom, Latium, Italien(segment "Italiani si voltano, Gli")
- Produktionsfirma
- Weitere beteiligte Unternehmen bei IMDbPro anzeigen
- Laufzeit1 Stunde 36 Minuten
- Farbe
- Sound-Mix
- Seitenverhältnis
- 1.33 : 1