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Fellini Roma

Original title: Roma
  • 1972
  • Tous publics
  • 2h
IMDb RATING
7.3/10
14K
YOUR RATING
Fellini Roma (1972)
SatireComedyDrama

A fluid, unconnected and sometimes chaotic procession of scenes detailing the various people and events of life in Italy's capital, most of it based on director Federico Fellini's life.A fluid, unconnected and sometimes chaotic procession of scenes detailing the various people and events of life in Italy's capital, most of it based on director Federico Fellini's life.A fluid, unconnected and sometimes chaotic procession of scenes detailing the various people and events of life in Italy's capital, most of it based on director Federico Fellini's life.

  • Director
    • Federico Fellini
  • Writers
    • Federico Fellini
    • Bernardino Zapponi
  • Stars
    • Britta Barnes
    • Peter Gonzales Falcon
    • Fiona Florence
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.3/10
    14K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Federico Fellini
    • Writers
      • Federico Fellini
      • Bernardino Zapponi
    • Stars
      • Britta Barnes
      • Peter Gonzales Falcon
      • Fiona Florence
    • 71User reviews
    • 48Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 1 BAFTA Award
      • 3 wins & 3 nominations total

    Videos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 2:46
    Trailer

    Photos102

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    Top cast99+

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    Britta Barnes
    Peter Gonzales Falcon
    • Fellini, Age 18
    • (as Peter Gonzales)
    Fiona Florence
    • Dolores - Young Prostitute
    Pia De Doses
    • Princess Domitilla
    Marne Maitland
    Marne Maitland
    • Guide in the Catacombs
    Renato Giovannoli
    • Cardinal Ottaviani
    Elisa Mainardi
    Elisa Mainardi
    • Pharmacist's wife…
    Galliano Sbarra
    • Music Hall Compere
    Anna Magnani
    Anna Magnani
    • Anna Magnani
    Ginette Marcelle Bron
    Stefano Mayore
    • Fellini as a Child
    Vito Abbonato
    • Young policeman
    • (uncredited)
    Alfredo Adami
    • Widowers' Member at Teatrino
    • (uncredited)
    Sbarra Adami
      Ennio Antonelli
      • Toll Booth Agent
      • (uncredited)
      Salvatore Baccaro
      Salvatore Baccaro
      • Sitting Man at Trastevere
      • (uncredited)
      Bruno Bertocci
      • Musical Director
      • (uncredited)
      Bireno
        • Director
          • Federico Fellini
        • Writers
          • Federico Fellini
          • Bernardino Zapponi
        • All cast & crew
        • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

        User reviews71

        7.314.4K
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        Featured reviews

        9Tgrain

        A non-traditional film which exceeds all expectations.

        ROMA is not the kind of film you may want to watch if you are in the mood for a made for TV movie, but perfect if you want to get away from one. The ultimate cinematic escape, it is a collection of interesting and arresting scenes and images from Rome throughout history. It does not concentrate on history per say, but excerpts Italian society and it's lifestyles from the conformity of Mussolini's time to the hippy-dippy days - in a non-narrative, non-documentary way. Some things change, others stay the same. Don't expect to find much of a plot, but rather moments of great amusement with character and sometimes very involving images. ROMA doesn't insult it's viewers with it's unconventional liberties, and that alone makes it a worthwhile trip to take - even if only once.
        8Wiebke

        Life Has No Plot

        Some people would complain that this movie has no plot, but does life have a plot? No, of course not! And so this movies goes, from scene to scene, through memories, collages, documentary footage, hallucinations, with only one continuous character but hundreds of faces, bits of conversation, music, all flowing around just like life when you are very drunk and everything in life makes sense, no matter how absurd.

        This movie contains some stunning scenes: the "ecclesiastical fashion show"; the Roman traffic jam in the rain; the deli-style whorehouse; the family style meal; the discovery and destruction of Roman ruins during the construction of the subway system. You can walk in at any moment on this movie and it doesn't matter, you don't have to follow it to enjoy it. Perhaps this is true of all Fellini movies, I'm not sure -- certainly it's true of another favorite of mine, Satyricon.
        9thinkMovies

        A stroke of genius

        I have come to believe that Fellini is a genius (past tense would be irrelevant here). More so since as an American who studied film in Britain came to live my life an hour's drive from his birthplace when I was 49, 14 years ago. And discovered Italy. Fellini expressed Italy in the most accurate way imaginable. The so-called "Fellini crowd" does exist, everywhere here. Fellini lovingly satirized everything pitiful and shameful and laughable he saw around him.

        I don't know whether I would call Roma a masterpiece, yet it is the work of genius. Fellini growing up under Fascism in Rimini, near the river (more of a stream really) Rubicone which Caesar crossed with his legion marching on Rome. Later, Fellini as a young man arrives in Rome at the outbreak of WWII. And Finally, Fellini in the early 1970ies introduces us to Rome. There is a plot! A very clear one. What's wrong with those who say the film consists of unconnected vignettes? But you have to live here for at least a decade or more to find the plot in Fellini's Roma.

        Chaos is an Ancient Greek word, but it describes Italy to a "t". A chaos organized only in the imagination of arrogance of fascism and of the church, and of everyday ignorance.

        "May I ask you a question" Fellini asks Anna Magnani attempting to interview her around midnight at her Roman doorstep. "No, I don't trust you, Federi, go to sleep" responds the famous actress. Should we trust him to tell us the truth about Rome, the Church, fascism and ignorance?
        8lasttimeisaw

        Fellini effortlessly blurs the line between fiction and non-fiction

        Fellini's ROMA imposingly alternates between two paralleled narratives in Rome, his salad days during the WWII and the beginning of 1970s, when he is an eminent filmmaker making a new film about the city, erratically charts its local customs and folk culture to pay homage to an ancient and great city. Structurally, the film doesn't stick to a linear one, instead it disguises with a pseudo-documentary style, in fact, most of the scenes were re-constructed in Cinecittà, however, Fellini stuns audience again with his majestic undertaking which significantly blurs the line between fiction and non-fiction.

        The film is not just an ode to the city, more prominently, it is the clashes between past and present that reverberate strongly today. His young self (played by Falcon), a doe-eyed townie arrives in Rome for college, enjoys a boisterous dinner in the street trattoria with the entire neighbourhood, watches a shoddy variety show with crude spectators which would be interrupted by an air raid, flirts with the brothel for the first time; when time leaps forward to the 1970s, the flower-child generation is consuming with alienation and torpidity, a poetic episode of the underground metro construction team encounters an undiscovered catacomb, where fresh air breaches into the isolated space and ruins all its frescoes in a jiffy. A superlative conceit encapsulates the dilemma between modern civilisation and ancient heritage.

        There is no absence of Fellini-esque extravaganza, the brothels during wartime are quintessentially embellished with crazed peculiarity and vulgarity for its zeitgeist and national spirit, where sex can be simply traded as commodity without any emotional investment. The most striking one, is the flamboyant fashion-show of church accouterments organised by Princess Domitilla (De Doses) for Cardinal Ottaviani (Giovannoli), consummated in an overblown resurrection of the deceased Pope, it is sacrilege in its most diverting form, only Fellini can shape it with such grand appeal and laugh about it.

        Two notable celebrity cameos, Gore Vidal, expresses his love of the city from an expatriate slant, and more poignant one is from Anna Magnani, her final screen presence - Ciao, buonanotte! - a sounding farewell for this fiery cinema icon. The epilogue, riding with a band of motorists, visiting landmarks in the night, Fellini's ROMA breezily captures this city's breath of life, sentimental to its distinguished history, meanwhile vivacious even farcical in celebrating its ever-progressing motions, a charming knockout!
        7mattreviews

        A portrayal of a love for a city

        At the opening credits of "Roma", we are informed by our narrator and director Federico Fellini that this is not a normal film in the traditional storytelling sense, but more a perception of Rome, the way Fellini sees it. Sounds interesting? Well, it is, in that one must be so in love with their city to want to show it to the world through a series of small stories and shots of random happenings. I can relate: I have the same love for Melbourne.

        We shift from a portrayal of Fellini as a schoolboy with dreams of going to Rome, to a depiction of Fellini as a young man, moving to the city he always wanted to live at. There's also scenes of early 1970s theatre attendance, the almost ritual-like eating habits of the Romans, and then we move onto a documentary-like part of the film where we get to see Fellini's camera crew struggle as they try to capture the hustle and bustle of the entrance into Rome via a major highway, filled with drifters, animals, trucks, hitch-hikers, bikes, and more.

        The constant changing in scenes and stories is a bit messy, and could possibly confuse those not understanding what Fellini is trying to do with the film. At some times, I found myself questioning whether what we were being shown was a realistic dramatization of Fellini's past experiences, or some kind of farcical take on Roman culture (see the religious clothing fashion show scene!). The film is quite intriguing, taking in the sexual revolution of the era and putting it up against a city full of tradition. We are also exposed to some of the city's dirty little secrets, such as the surprising popularity of their whorehouses.

        It can't be denied that there is something endearing to "Roma" that allows Fellini to get away with a film that doesn't really give you much to take home with you, other than an idea of what Rome was like for someone in 1972, and what kind of life was lead to come to those perceptions. It is somewhat self indulgent, but Fellini does put across the impression that he has something to show you, something he'd like to share with you, because he has loved it for so long, and it still fascinates him on a daily basis.

        More like this

        Fellini Satyricon
        6.8
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        Et vogue le navire...
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        Juliette des esprits
        7.4
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        Le Casanova de Fellini
        7.0
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        La cité des femmes
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        Amarcord
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        Intervista
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        7.2
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        7.5
        Il bidone

        Storyline

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        Did you know

        Edit
        • Trivia
          Anna Magnani's final screen appearance.
        • Goofs
          Peter Gonzales Falcon's hairstyles are all in the longish 1972 mode, even though the portions of the film in which he appears are supposed to be taking place thirty or more years earlier, at which time men's hair was cut much, much shorter, and would never be worn as it appears in this film.
        • Quotes

          Narrator: This gentlemen is a Roman. A Roman from dawn to dusk. As jealous of Rome as if she were his wife. He is afraid that in my film I might present her in a bad light. He is telling me that I should show only the better side of Rome: her historical profile, her monuments - not a bunch fo homosexuals or my usual enormous whores.

        • Alternate versions
          Originally released in a 128 minutes version. Later cut to 119 minutes.
        • Connections
          Featured in Film Night: The Secret World of Federico Fellini (1972)

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        Details

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        • Release date
          • May 17, 1972 (France)
        • Countries of origin
          • Italy
          • France
        • Languages
          • Italian
          • German
          • English
          • French
          • Latin
          • Spanish
        • Also known as
          • Roma
        • Filming locations
          • Rome, Lazio, Italy
        • Production companies
          • Ultra Film
          • Les Productions Artistes Associés
        • See more company credits at IMDbPro

        Box office

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        • Gross worldwide
          • $807
        See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

        Tech specs

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        • Runtime
          2 hours
        • Sound mix
          • Mono
        • Aspect ratio
          • 1.85 : 1

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