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Les vitelloni

Original title: I vitelloni
  • 1953
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 49m
IMDb RATING
7.8/10
22K
YOUR RATING
Les vitelloni (1953)
Watch Trailer [English SUB]
Play trailer3:36
2 Videos
99+ Photos
Dark ComedySatireComedyDrama

A character study of five young men at crucial turning points in their lives in a small town in Italy.A character study of five young men at crucial turning points in their lives in a small town in Italy.A character study of five young men at crucial turning points in their lives in a small town in Italy.

  • Director
    • Federico Fellini
  • Writers
    • Federico Fellini
    • Ennio Flaiano
    • Tullio Pinelli
  • Stars
    • Alberto Sordi
    • Franco Fabrizi
    • Franco Interlenghi
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.8/10
    22K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Federico Fellini
    • Writers
      • Federico Fellini
      • Ennio Flaiano
      • Tullio Pinelli
    • Stars
      • Alberto Sordi
      • Franco Fabrizi
      • Franco Interlenghi
    • 84User reviews
    • 57Critic reviews
    • 87Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 1 Oscar
      • 4 wins & 3 nominations total

    Videos2

    Trailer [English SUB]
    Trailer 3:36
    Trailer [English SUB]
    I Vitelloni Trailer
    Trailer 1:16
    I Vitelloni Trailer
    I Vitelloni Trailer
    Trailer 1:16
    I Vitelloni Trailer

    Photos121

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    + 115
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    Top cast30

    Edit
    Alberto Sordi
    Alberto Sordi
    • Alberto
    Franco Fabrizi
    Franco Fabrizi
    • Fausto Moretti
    Franco Interlenghi
    Franco Interlenghi
    • Moraldo Rubini
    Leopoldo Trieste
    Leopoldo Trieste
    • Leopoldo Vannucci
    Riccardo Fellini
    Riccardo Fellini
    • Riccardo
    Leonora Ruffo
    Leonora Ruffo
    • Sandra Rubini
    • (as Eleonora Ruffo)
    Jean Brochard
    Jean Brochard
    • Francesco Moretti
    Claude Farell
    Claude Farell
    • Olga
    Carlo Romano
    Carlo Romano
    • Michele Curti
    Enrico Viarisio
    Enrico Viarisio
    • Signor Rubini
    Paola Borboni
    Paola Borboni
    • Signora Rubini
    Lída Baarová
    Lída Baarová
    • Giulia Curti
    • (as Lida Baarowa)
    Arlette Sauvage
    • La sconosciuta del cinema
    Vira Silenti
    • Gisella
    Maja Niles
    • Caterina
    • (as Maja Nipora)
    Achille Majeroni
    Achille Majeroni
    • Sergio Natali
    Guido Martufi
    • Guido
    Silvio Bagolini
    • Giudizio
    • Director
      • Federico Fellini
    • Writers
      • Federico Fellini
      • Ennio Flaiano
      • Tullio Pinelli
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews84

    7.822.1K
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    Featured reviews

    8claudio_carvalho

    Italian Melodrama

    In a small seaside town in Italy, Moraldo Rubini (Franco Interlenghi), Alberto (Alberto Sordi), Fausto Moretti (Franco Fabrizi), Leopoldo Vannucci (Leopoldo Trieste) and Riccardo (Riccardo Fellini) form a group of idle friends that spend their time together doing nothing but drinking, flirting and going to parties. When Fausto's girlfriend Sandra Rubini (Eleonora Ruffo) gets pregnant, he is pressed by his own father to marry her. However, the irresponsible Fausto remains unfaithful to Sandra, cheating her with many women and almost leading his family to a tragedy.

    "I Vitelloni" is an Italian melodrama with the signature of Federico Fellini: excellent production, great music score, outstanding interpretations, wonderful cinematography. The story is dated in the present days, it is not my favorite Fellini's film, but it is still a magnificent movie. I am not sure whether the story of this group of "Peter Pans" is autobiographic or not, but it is a good screenplay related to Italian culture of the 50s. My vote is eight.

    Title (Brazil): "Os Boas Vidas" ("The Bons Vivants")
    8zetes

    Not one of the Maestro's masterworks, but very good nonetheless

    I Vitelloni was Federico Fellini's third film, and it shows very well how he was maturing in his style, and likewise very well how he was not yet fully mature. His next film would be La Strada, one of the world's great films. I Vitelloni, although many who have had the chance to see it champion it as one of his best, is a tier down from La Strada and his other melodramatic masterpiece, Nights of Cabiria (his other masterpieces, IMO, are La Dolce Vita, 8 ½, and Amarcord of those I've seen, which are all of the ones that are generally considered to be great; I'd also make a case for And the Ship Sails On). The film's flaws are mostly in the script: it is sloppy. There are several great scenes, a couple of the best, especially in a visual aspect, that Fellini ever created, but more often the actions of the characters are difficult to understand. The characters themselves aren't all that well defined - in a scene that has since become common, the five title characters are introduced to us by a narrator, who tells us certain primary traits for each of them. Sadly, we only learn a bit more about most of them. What really harms the film, though, is the fact that a few of these main characters are difficult to distinguish from one another. To make things worse, as time moves on in the film, the characters constantly change the style of their facial hair!

    The film is quite episodic, which is actually Fellini's most common way of going about it, but most of the events in his better films seem to bear more weight on the emotions of the films. I Vitelloni is still a very good film, but, given its unavailability, it's unnecessary to knock yourself down searching it out. Perhaps Criterion will release it on DVD soon. Maybe, if it has some good extras, I'll purchase it. 8/10.
    nick-pett664

    The interchangeability of gang members

    I think that the only other user to have commented on this film may have missed some of the point. The actions of the characters are not hard to understand. Fausto is a womaniser because he does not take love and its attendant responsibilities seriously. Alberto and Riccardo booze and smoke and hang around because those are the roles designated to some men in adult gangs of this kind. Moraldo sees Fausto's womanising and is torn between loyalty to the camaraderie of the group and to his friend and love for his sister, resulting in him helping Fausto to protect Sandra from the truth.

    With regards to the lack of character definition of the characters, I don't think that this should be seen as a problem. Their inability to escape the attraction of a casual life robs them of character and their love of the gang robs them of individuality. The interchangeability of their looks and the swapping of facial hair styles illustrates the dynamics of a gang - shared vocabulary, shared likes and dislikes, playing off each other.

    I think that this is a perfect distillation of the aimless lives of adult males, unable to break away from the gang. Whether this is Fellini's best or not, it is a very affecting study of small-town ennui and male relationships.
    9TheLittleSongbird

    Wonderful

    An early Fellini and a wonderful one at that. While it is not my favourite Fellini(my top 5 being Nights of Cabiria, La Dolce Vita, 8 1/2, Amarcord and La Strada), it is one of his best and sadly one of his more neglected works. The film does look gorgeous, with rapid yet fluid cinematography and beautiful scenery. Nino Rota's score brings great pathos to every scene it appears in, the script is funny, tense and moving and while familiar in a way the story is engaging. The character studies are just as impressive, these are distinct characters that you do care for. You don't perhaps quite identify with them in the way you do with the titular characters of La Strada and especially Nights of Cabiria, but they are not as detached as some of Fellini's later films like Casanova or Satyricon(my least favourite Fellini but still has its interest points). Fellini's direction is restrained yet quirky and charming, the complete opposite of self-indulgent or dull like him and some of his later films have been criticised for being. The acting is very good indeed, Franco Fabrizi as Fausto especially is superb. All in all, a wonderful film and one of Fellini's better films while not quite among my absolute favourites from him. 9/10 Bethany Cox
    10FilmSnobby

    Fellini's best.

    Federico Fellini's second feature, *I Vitelloni* (literal trans.: "fatted veal calves"; figurative trans.: "the guys"), is an honest, unpretentious work from the Master before he became besotted with his own self-indulgence.

    It's autobiographical in several indirect ways. The depictions here of young men who are not quite so young anymore, living with their mothers, settling for dead-end jobs or simply not working, and generally languishing their lives away, are based on Fellini's own observations of such fellows in his boyhood home of Rimini. Autobiographical too in its sense of style: the movie is inescapably stamped by the Neo-Realism of Fellini's apprenticeship. The grimy faces of working-class people, crumbling tenements, and weed-choked rail-yards are all here. But with a difference: Fellini casts a critical eye on this scene, eschewing the usual Neo-Realist appeal to our presumed socialist sympathies. *I Vitelloni* is not a political film in the usual mid-century Italian manner. Fellini gives us a quintet of heroes who, for the most part, aspire to be bourgeois big-shots of their shabby seacoast town. Not content with that, he makes them lazy, as well . . . and then he asks us to root for them, to actually like them! Needless to say, the intelligentsia of the period didn't warm to this film, even as the film-going public in Europe loved it, recognizing themselves and their friends and their own hometowns in it.

    Just as Shakespeare shows us the brilliant results of striving within the non-negotiable limits of the nine-line sonnet or the blank verse of his plays, Fellini achieves genius in this film, stylistically, from the fruitful tension between the dictates of Neo-Realist imperatives (which no young Italian director of the Fifties could ignore if he wanted a career), and the dictates of his own vision. For, even while being a dutifully serious Neo-Realist (even to the point of employing a static, unblinking, non-flashy camera on the proceedings -- hardly the "Fellini-esque" style we would see in later years!), the director's penchant for the grotesque can no longer contain itself. In this film we get the aging, corpulent homosexual actor, with hair in need of a cut, noisily slurping up soup while one of the Vitelloni reads aloud to him some terrible play he has composed. We get the nauseous parties, in which Fellini tosses the Neo-Realist camera in the trash and picks up his own camera, swooping with it into the hot, frantic fray, honing in for sweaty close-ups, climbing the rafters for a dizzying aerial view, skewing the angles while watching an off-key trumpet player blare into the ear of a miserable drunk, and filling the screen with gigantic papier-mache clowns that constitute the floats of a Lenten parade. At the same time, the mandate to keep himself in check, or perhaps the humble desire to make an easily digestible movie, gives *I Vitelloni* the discipline and order so lacking in post-*8-1/2* Fellini films.

    But the thematic meat of the movie provides the most fruitful tension. Fellini shows us the Vitelloni, the "guys", most of them creeping past 30, grasping after any passing pleasure that comes to hand, whether it be a woman (young or old, married or not, willing or not), a drunken night at the local pool hall, an attempt at petty thievery, a day of gambling at the races, or whatever. Then Fellini contrasts this with the older generation, tellingly single (their mates long buried), barely supporting the passel of lazy Vitelloni and assorted nieces and grandchildren who all lay about the family home. The old folks' sacrifices seem to have produced ignoble results, particularly within themselves: all too often, the old men and women are grouchy, unhappy, prone to fits of violence or weeping, and -- saddest of all -- lonely. The Vitelloni look at their elders, see the sterile results of lives rendered bereft by tradition and "sacrifice", and naturally rebel, searching in easy hedonism for the happiness that has eluded their parents. One character, a compulsive womanizer, plans on running away after he knocks up his girlfriend -- and why not? The womanizer's bitter father provides no wholesome example of "responsibility". Indeed, it seems as if the old man forces his son to marry the girl simply because he, the father, is friends with the girlfriend's father, and, after all, misery loves company. The question of whether or not the cad actually loves the girl is never asked. Guess how this marriage turns out.

    Without unduly spoiling things, one of the Vitelloni actually DOES escape the shabby town by movie's end, but even here Fellini offers an unequivocal qualification: the character, staring out the window as the train pulls out, hangs his head and weeps. He knows, as do we, that he will be just as unhappy in Rome as he was in this fictionalized Rimini. Meanwhile, a young boy who works at the train station waves goodbye to the leaving train and turns his back on it, balancing precariously on a rail as he boyishly walks off. Fellini indicates that some people will simply be happier than others, no matter the circumstances: truly one of cinema's bleaker statements on the human condition.

    *I Vitelloni* remains a great masterpiece, and is Fellini's most neglected film . . . though it somehow seems fitting that a movie which virtually INVENTED the notion of "slackers" should be forgotten. No matter: perfection is rarely popular, anyway. 10 stars out of 10.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Reportedly said to be Stanley Kubrick's favorite movie.
    • Goofs
      When Sandra receives the "Miss Mermaid" sash, it is placed over her left shoulder. Later inside during the storm it is seen to be over her right shoulder.
    • Quotes

      Sergio Natali: He who cares not for art, cares not for life.

    • Connections
      Featured in O Cinema Falado (1986)
    • Soundtracks
      Io Cerca La Titina
      (Je Cherche après Titine)

      Music by Léo Daniderff

      French lyrics by Bertal-Maubon

      Italian lyrics by Guido Di Napoli

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    FAQ18

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • September 2, 1954 (Argentina)
    • Countries of origin
      • Italy
      • France
    • Language
      • Italian
    • Also known as
      • Les inutiles
    • Filming locations
      • Florence, Tuscany, Italy(masquerade ball inside the Goldoni theater)
    • Production companies
      • Peg-Films
      • Cité Films
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $116,428
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $14,790
      • Nov 16, 2003
    • Gross worldwide
      • $148,421
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 49 minutes
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.33 : 1

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