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IMDbPro

La città delle donne

  • 1980
  • R
  • 2h 19m
ÉVALUATION IMDb
6,9/10
8,6 k
MA NOTE
Marcello Mastroianni in La città delle donne (1980)
Trailer for City of Women
Liretrailer1:29
1 vidéo
99+ photos
ComédieDrameFantastiqueSatire

Un homme d'affaires se retrouve pris au piège dans un hôtel et menacé par une horde de femmes.Un homme d'affaires se retrouve pris au piège dans un hôtel et menacé par une horde de femmes.Un homme d'affaires se retrouve pris au piège dans un hôtel et menacé par une horde de femmes.

  • Director
    • Federico Fellini
  • Writers
    • Federico Fellini
    • Bernardino Zapponi
    • Brunello Rondi
  • Stars
    • Marcello Mastroianni
    • Anna Prucnal
    • Bernice Stegers
  • Voir l’information sur la production à IMDbPro
  • ÉVALUATION IMDb
    6,9/10
    8,6 k
    MA NOTE
    • Director
      • Federico Fellini
    • Writers
      • Federico Fellini
      • Bernardino Zapponi
      • Brunello Rondi
    • Stars
      • Marcello Mastroianni
      • Anna Prucnal
      • Bernice Stegers
    • 40Commentaires d'utilisateurs
    • 26Commentaires de critiques
  • Voir l’information sur la production à IMDbPro
    • Prix
      • 6 victoires au total

    Vidéos1

    City of Women
    Trailer 1:29
    City of Women

    Photos115

    Voir l’affiche
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    Rôles principaux71

    Modifier
    Marcello Mastroianni
    Marcello Mastroianni
    • Snàporaz
    Anna Prucnal
    Anna Prucnal
    • Elena
    Bernice Stegers
    Bernice Stegers
    • Woman on train
    Jole Silvani
    • Motorcyclist
    • (as Iole Silvani)
    Donatella Damiani
    Donatella Damiani
    • Donatella (Woman on roller skates)
    Ettore Manni
    Ettore Manni
    • Dr. Xavier Katzone
    Fiammetta Baralla
    • Oliver Hardy
    Hélène Calzarelli
    • Feminist
    • (as Helene G. Calzarelli)
    Catherine Carrel
    • Commandant
    Marcello Di Falco
    • Slave
    Silvana Fusacchia
    • Skater
    Gabriella Giorgelli
    Gabriella Giorgelli
    • Fishwoman of San Leo
    Dominique Labourier
    Dominique Labourier
    • Feminist
    Stéphane Emilfork
    • Feminist
    Sylvie Matton
    • Feminist
    • (as Sylvie Mayer)
    Meerberger Nahyr
    Sibilla Sedat
    • Judge
    Katren Gebelein
    • Enderbreith Small
    • Director
      • Federico Fellini
    • Writers
      • Federico Fellini
      • Bernardino Zapponi
      • Brunello Rondi
    • Tous les acteurs et membres de l'équipe
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Commentaires des utilisateurs40

    6,98.5K
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    10

    Avis en vedette

    7ElMaruecan82

    "Marcello... don't come here...."

    The opening shot of Fellini's "City of Women" is a train about to enter a tunnel, not exactly the subtlest shot to suggest a certain type of act, but in that case it works perfectly for two reasons: the POV is the train so we don't watch the phallic symbol but its 'target', plus the penetration into darkness foresees the trip into the hearts of darkness that awaits Guido, the film protagonist, played by an aged but still charming Marcello Mastroianni. That darkness is associated with women's liberation might divide opinions, but Fellini is not the man to say 'mea culpa'.

    So the film opens in a train, Guido has a fling with a beautiful but rather severe-looking woman, he follows her to the bathroom, obviously not to talk about the latest dress fashion in Milan, the two conclude, the train stops, he follows her again, and finds himself in a feminist convention with the most incongruous set of female characters steaming off centuries of repressed anger and resentment against men and patriarchy, expressing in the most turbulent and truculent way their desire to build a more just society rid of phallocracy and ever archetypes that made Italy the Mecca of Latin seduction. And that's only for starters. If you're surprised by the aesthetics, then it's probably the first Fellini you ever saw, and then I'm afraid you didn't pick the right one.

    Indeed, this is a film to satisfy the fans (mildly) and disconcert the newcomers, on the surface, like all Fellini movies, "Cities of Women" is a never-ending succession of disjointed vignettes forcing us to endure with enchantment, disgust, puzzlement and even embarrassment the shenanigans, not of a loony protagonist but of a gallery of female characters who cover the whole spectrum of women's attitudes, from the castrating to the nymphomaniac type, from the kitschy to the one who rhymes with it, from the frigid icy intellectual to the voluptuous matron. And in the content, I'm afraid the film doesn't provide more than a certain view of Fellini regarding the aggressiveness of feminism in the late 70s... and whether he sides with these women or looks at them with amused detachment isn't a matter of opinion, Fellini knows where he stands.

    The film was made after his "Casanova", a critic against the Italian Don Juan who tries to pass as a sophisticated bourgeois in order to hide his crass obsessions. It's possible that Fellini had the same defiance against a certain hypocritical expression of feminism which, in the name of positive values: freedom, liberation, independence carried the same vulgar obsessions about sex. And in that cacophony of anti-men slogans, rapidly, a think-thank sessions turns into a heated debated where sexual positions and references to genitals are dropped, so it's not much Fellini criticizing the women that hate men, but the women whose hatred toward men cloud their judgment and bring the worst masculine traits in them.

    In a way, every intellectual woman according to Fellini has her mind focused on her vagina or her relationships with men, seeing phallic symbols everywhere, and Guido embodies the point of view of men who, like Fellini, grew up with homely big-bosomed women incarnated by their mothers and aunts, came to age in the post-war era with sexually liberated women but then came the late 70s where religion and patriarchy stopped having a saying in everything. However, Guido doesn't handle the hostility with bad spirit but acts like a man visiting a curiosity, a zoo, and tries to understand with false benevolence what he believes to be a foreign language. To Fellini's defense, this misconception about feminism has hold up a long time until the 1990s... and to his defense again, the exaggeration wasn't that exaggerated.

    To make a timely parallel, the film reminded me of Mr. Burns' visit at Yale ("The Simpsons"), Fellini at least had the guts to go against the stream and stick to his guns by expressing his nostalgia for the old-fashioned women, and he does so with the same flamboaynt bravura and extravagant flashiness that made his trademarks. And he does instrumentalize women like he did with his own wife Giuletta Masina in "Juliet of the Spirits", where she was given a rather ungrateful role in a movie that was also venturing in the fantasies of her husband, made of the same kind of attractive women, to whom she didn't belong. In "City of Women", women are all here, but for the biggest part of the film, they're not tantalizing him, "La Dolce Vita" had Anita Ekberg sensually inviting Marcello to "come here", this time, the invitation is reversed.

    "O tempora! O mores" said the Romans, and Fellini takes us to a journey where women have seized the microphone. However, being the unapologetic macho he is, he proposes a second immersion in a universe where the roles are reversed again and that's where the film loses its pace. Guido visits the house of a man who had 10000 conquests and what follows is another "8½" fantasy ride, made of naughty games and an interesting trial that reminded me of "Pluto's Judgment Day". As to counterbalance his previous act, Fellini had to get back to another Casanova figure, without any sense whatsoever of restrain and measure, he's an artist so carried away by his instincts that he believes any idea that pops up in his mind deserves to be included.

    Which makes the film like half an hour too long while it could have stuck to its initial idea and be a social fantasy-induced comment on feminism and a companion piece of "8½". "City of Women" has dazzling imagery, a wonderful set design, and reflects the powerful imagination of the director, what it lacks is just 'control' and a discipline. But it's still worth the watch as his last hurrah before the 80s, and seriously, it shouldn't offend much because the offensive parts are so cartoonish and over-the-top, they're no worse than a Benny Hill skit.
    6hou-3

    Fellini on a downward slide

    I am a great fan of early Fellini, and as late as Amarcord I still find much to admire. After that, though, there seems to me to be an inexorable decline in originality. By the time we get to this film the decline is definitely in evidence throughout. Freshness has given way to trademark, vitality to predictability. Mastroianni is still there, as cool and enigmatic as ever, and some of the cinematography remains dazzling. But an air of staleness hangs over the whole film, which apart from its other defects is far too long. Fellini fanatics admire it, that much is obvious, and good luck to them. But most simple admirers will pass it by. It is worth adding that in the troubled and deeply unequal world we live in, Fellini's later obsession with the idle rich is looking increasingly frivolous. But maybe that's just me.
    8Enigma700

    Disagree with other posters -- Outstanding Movie

    By the time this movie was made Women's issues were alive in the media of all industrialized nations ... This movie was meant to shock and shock it does. Its not crass ... it is very cerebral and highbrow. The character is lost in a sea of femme weapons. This movie actually depicts well the confusion and men and women in a new age. The movie is full of enticement followed by letdown and weirdness ... as is our daily lives in this new age. Have you ever heard that all a man thinks about is sex ... well this movie takes it to extremes. Its funny, scary, enticing, crazy, dreamy, wild, intellectual, modern. I think one of best of Frederico. He got better with age. The movie characters are all over the edge, too much, too weird ... its all for a point.
    7Nazi_Fighter_David

    Of all the Fellini films, this is probably his most erotic

    It is not as much a study of eroticism as it is one man's erotic fantasy about the battle between the sexes…

    A rich, horny Italian (Mastroianni) meets a woman on a train… When the train stops, he follows her into a lonely wood, which becomes a futuristic world of forceful women who have almost entirely destroyed completely all men in their society…

    Mastroianni's character is left alive as a curiosity piece… His experiences carry him deeper and deeper into this bizarre fantasy city… The film never fully provides passion and erotic lusts, but is tickling and stimulating pleasantly none the less... Fellini's point—that women resent the fact that men are easily excited—is most effectively carried by Donatella Damiani, a buxom and very beautiful young actress who runs nearly naked throughout the movie…

    Although the film never tires, it never quite completes its erotic expectations either, giving priority to consider carefully its own bizarre reality… It has elements of science fiction and adventure, but is more exactly a fantasy on the estrangement between men and women...
    8Asa_Nisi_Masa2

    Not a masterpiece but the trademark Fellini genius still shines through

    A few weeks ago, I posted a review of 8½, presently my undisputed Number 1 favourite movie. Still on the subject of Il Maestro, I've recently rewatched City of Women. This is another Fellini movie I'd watched many years ago, in my late teens, and didn't like at all back then. Well, I liked it (with reservations) this time. La città delle donne is one of the most robust, unrepressed and rough-around-the-edges explorations of the specifically Latin nature of machismo, feminism, gender rivalry and sexual politics I have ever seen. Many people don't like La città delle donne, but like 8½ and most Fellini movies of the later period it has an extraordinary, instinctive grasp of the rhythm and symbolic power of dreams. Its irritating aspect is coupled with and impossible to separate from the grasp it has upon the potency of what our psyche hides in among its hidden, ancestral folds - in this case, Marcello Mastroianni's character's but also our very own. This movie worms its way into your own psyche in time - as with other Fellini movies, it seems to reveal scenes that are totally new and surprising, yet strangely familiar to me even though I've never seen them before. As if I'd always been familiar with them, perhaps from a previous life - Fellini seems able to tap into a universal psychic blueprint of the soul, I think that's what it is - only a true Genius could do something like this. He gets to the emotional core of human experience, which means that even though I was never a young man who went to a brothel in 1930s Italy, as he has, there is something of the experience that I can relate to, as if it were universal. I guess the fact that things are rarely LITERALLY represented in his later movies (post-La Dolce Vita), also contributes towards this, making everything more symbolic and hence, universal.

    But Città delle donne is also a shrill, over-the-top movie, grating in some ways, ridiculous, dated in others. Character-wise, Marcello is probably at his most repulsive... or perhaps I should say pathetic. But the movie, though flawed and a rehash of some other familiar Fellini themes treated more successfully elsewhere, is also delightful in parts, with a power in the use of visual symbols that I have rarely seen before, even in his own, more overall successful movies. For instance, the whole sequence in Dr Xavier Katzone's grotesque house, especially the mausoleum-like tunnel containing what is essentially the "essence" of his numerous past conquests, as well as the scenes of Marcello floating on the very originally-shaped "hot air balloon", Marcello being chased by the drugged-up teenage girl bullies in their squeaky old jalopies, etc - all scenes I won't be forgetting in a hurry.

    If one really finds nothing to like in La città delle donne, it's ultimately still an important document on the gender battles that recent humanity has crossed. Perhaps Italy began these a decade or two later than, for instance, Northern European nations, but it got there eventually and in its own special, culturally individual way that can be compared to no other, since Italian men and women are not German or British or Swedish. Fellini pays tribute to that very Italian type of battle of the sexes here, stereotype-free but ever so evocatively. I have never delighted more in the never-obvious send-up of machismo as with this movie. This may be lost on non-Italian speakers but even the man's name, Katzone, is a phonetic rendering of the vulgar Italian word for... er... "big (male) genitals"! I give La città delle donne a 7½ out of 10 - I would have given it an 8 if it hadn't irritated me with its excesses in certain parts. Oh, what the hell - let's give it an 8/10!

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    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      Prior to Marcello Mastroianni, the role of Snàporaz was offered to Dustin Hoffman. He declined after he couldn't convince Federico Fellini to shoot the movie in direct sound rather than dubbing it afterwards. Hoffman feared dubbing himself would compromise his performance.
    • Gaffes
      When Mastroianni is following Bernice Stegers in the woods in the beginning of the movie, reflection of the crew can be seen clearly in her sunglasses.
    • Citations

      Old Lady: "A house without a woman", they say in my parts, "is like the Sea without a Siren". Don't you agree with me?

    • Connexions
      Edited into Fellini: Je suis un grand menteur (2002)
    • Bandes originales
      Una donna senza un uomo è
      Music and Lyrics by Mary Francolao

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    FAQ18

    • How long is City of Women?Propulsé par Alexa

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 28 mars 1980 (Italy)
    • Pays d’origine
      • Italy
      • France
    • Langue
      • Italian
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • City of Women
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Cinecittà Studios, Cinecittà, Rome, Lazio, Italie(Studio)
    • sociétés de production
      • Opera Film Produzione
      • Gaumont
    • Consultez plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Box-office

    Modifier
    • Brut – États-Unis et Canada
      • 12 516 $ US
    • Fin de semaine d'ouverture – États-Unis et Canada
      • 6 244 $ US
      • 21 févr. 2016
    • Brut – à l'échelle mondiale
      • 12 932 $ US
    Voir les informations détaillées sur le box-office sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

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    • Durée
      • 2h 19m(139 min)
    • Mixage
      • Mono
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.85 : 1

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