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Et vogue le navire...

Original title: E la nave va
  • 1983
  • Tous publics
  • 2h 12m
IMDb RATING
7.4/10
7.2K
YOUR RATING
Et vogue le navire... (1983)
DramaMusic

In 1914, a luxury ship leaves Italy in order to scatter the ashes of a famous opera singer. A lovable bumbling journalist chronicles the voyage and meets the singer's many eccentric friends ... Read allIn 1914, a luxury ship leaves Italy in order to scatter the ashes of a famous opera singer. A lovable bumbling journalist chronicles the voyage and meets the singer's many eccentric friends and admirers.In 1914, a luxury ship leaves Italy in order to scatter the ashes of a famous opera singer. A lovable bumbling journalist chronicles the voyage and meets the singer's many eccentric friends and admirers.

  • Director
    • Federico Fellini
  • Writers
    • Federico Fellini
    • Tonino Guerra
  • Stars
    • Freddie Jones
    • Barbara Jefford
    • Victor Poletti
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.4/10
    7.2K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Federico Fellini
    • Writers
      • Federico Fellini
      • Tonino Guerra
    • Stars
      • Freddie Jones
      • Barbara Jefford
      • Victor Poletti
    • 32User reviews
    • 29Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 11 wins & 6 nominations total

    Photos122

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    Top cast66

    Edit
    Freddie Jones
    Freddie Jones
    • Orlando
    Barbara Jefford
    Barbara Jefford
    • Ildebranda Cuffari
    Victor Poletti
    • Aureliano Fuciletto
    Peter Cellier
    Peter Cellier
    • Sir Reginald J. Dongby
    Elisa Mainardi
    Elisa Mainardi
    • Teresa Valegnani
    Norma West
    Norma West
    • Lady Violet Dongby Albertini
    Paolo Paoloni
    Paolo Paoloni
    • Il Maestro Albertini
    Sarah-Jane Varley
    • Dorotea
    Fiorenzo Serra
    • Il Granduca
    Pina Bausch
    Pina Bausch
    • La Principessa Lherimia
    Pasquale Zito
    • Il Conte di Bassano
    Linda Polan
    • Ines Ruffo Saltini
    Philip Locke
    Philip Locke
    • Il Primo Ministro
    Jonathan Cecil
    Jonathan Cecil
    • Ricotin
    Maurice Barrier
    Maurice Barrier
    • Ziloev
    Fred Williams
    • Sabatino Lepori
    Elisabeth Kaza
    Elisabeth Kaza
    • La produttrice
    Colin Higgins
    • Il capo della polizia
    • Director
      • Federico Fellini
    • Writers
      • Federico Fellini
      • Tonino Guerra
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews32

    7.47.1K
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    Featured reviews

    10arnold.mcbay

    Glittering late career gem

    A glittering gem of a movie that I feel deserves more attention in Fellini's canon. The motif of the ending of an era and the films positioning near the end of his career make for a particularly poignant expression. I think it is a tendency for most artist's to be seen to be at the height of their power somewhere in mid-life. Although Fellini's most challenging and provocative work preceded And the ship sails on, I can't say any are more poetic than it. It's rich sentimentality beautifully positions individual stories within the tapesty of larger world events oblivious to these characters. This film is also worth seeing if only for the stunning visuals, and the glorious music!
    8alice liddell

    Fellini magics strangeness into an overworked subject.

    When younger, I was a Fellini obsessive - I adored the excess, the humour, the grotesquerie, the sympathetic comedie humaine, the audacious visuals, the beautiful, sad, lonely Marcello Mastroianni. For some reason I hadn't seen one of his pictures for a while, and while his astounding images remained inviolable in my mind's private cinema, the gradual, repeated decline of his critical status made me tread fearfully into this nautical drama.

    It is clearly his worst film. It always threatens to break into a frenzied dance of the Id, like his best pictures, but never quite does. The acting is generally poor, the dubbing atrocious; the ideas seem to cancel each other out in an aimless mess. Fellini's style is more restrained than usual, with a greater, seemingly restricted, emphasis on content composition and montage. It is clearly the work of a jaded Maestro.

    And yet it contains more life, wit and magic than most films this year, and, needless to say, it is less silly than Titanic. The story (a group of mourners carrying the body of a celebrated opera singer on a huge liner as World War I breaks out) is open to many allegorical interpretations (ship as nation, empire, class, art, life etc.), none of which quite fit. There is much play on images of moon (Claire de lune tinkles throughout), tides and sunsets - possibly as motifs of decline, but also of the ever-continuing circle that is its opposite, life?

    The film's tone is ambivalent, nostalgic for an elegant age of art and beauty, yet coldly aware of its inhuman faults. This is epitomised by the trademark Fellini altar ego, a journalist/film narrator, who watches the mixture of tragedy and farce with an amused eye, yet desperately wants to belong, and share in its faded grandeur.

    There are wonderful set-pieces, and graceful, Kubrickian camera movements. The narrative and characterisation is constantly splintered, mocking the desire of the passengers for order and rank. Imperial folly is angrily lampooned, culminating in a remarkable burlesque dogfight, stylised as a Verdi opera, yielding, in impotent terror, the Force of Destiny.

    The classical music soundtrack initially seems bland and uninventive, but actually offers, once identified, a stunning, ironic commentary on the actions, pretensions, sadnesses and failures of the characters and the society they represent. The party scene with the Serbs is very moving - loaded with the mixture of anger and regret that constitute the film's heart.

    The self-reflexivity does not patronise the audience for giving into illusion - the film's 'reality' is in question from the beginning. Film is shown not to be a modern weapon of the future (cinema as an art-form emerged at around the same time as the film was set), but merely a skip for the bricolage of Europe and the past. This pessimism, though, is not despairing - there is great beauty in loss.
    eunice-4

    Fellini's Touch in Every Frame

    There is no mistaking a Fellini film, even when you only catch the last 30 minutes, as I did when channel surfing. I made an effort to catch the full film next time it was shown, and was rewarded with a stunning feast. Not one of Fellini's best (or worst excesses) depending on your opinion of Fellini, but images that will stay with me for many years. Like Ken Russell, Fellini can always be depended on to go way over the top and never do anything by halves.

    The story of a group of rich aristocrats, opera singers, hangers on and just plain rich accompanying the body of a great opera singer to her cremation on the island of her birth in 1914, is shown in Fellini's stylised fashion as an allegory on the decline of Europe in WWI. The opulent excess of the doomed rich lifestyle, which no matter how hard they tried, was never regained, contrasts with the workers slaving in order to enable the rich to enjoy that elegant privileged lifestyle. The scene where the passengers tour the boiler rooms, standing on a cat walk to look down on the stokers shovelling coal into the boilers and trilling arias while the stokers took off their caps to show respect, made me hope the catwalk would collapse and plunge the passengers into the furnace.

    The stylistic storytelling reminded me of "Oh what a lovely War" Joan Littlewood's depiction of WWI as a series of songs and dances by a seaside concert party. If you want reality, you can look out of the window every day and see reality. Sometimes a surrealist view puts a different window on things. The stupendous finale of the movie is enough to make the film worthwhile if nothing else.
    10bojin-1

    A gallery of Europeans before the volcano erupts.

    "E la nave va" is one of the best films made by Fellini, which I see as the best film director ever. Just two personal comments about it. First, I have seen it in 1985, when in Romania a dark dictatorship saved hard currency by preventing foreign films to be imported. It was presented during a festival arranged by the Italian Embassy. Combine the local cultural desert and the post-modern style of this film and you'll understand why, after the film ended, I wanted to have just a walk-on part on it. My wife just proposed to pay the projectionist to run it again. The second comment is about a strange premonition Fellini had about the conflict in Serbia/Yougoslavia. Each time I see "E la nave va", I'm deeply moved about the ending, masterly contrasting bold opera music and the vanishing of a certain Europe.
    7krebstar

    world through Fellini's eyes

    first five minutes of `E La Nave Va` was what attracted me most from this movie (not meaning that the rest of it was not interesting). i thought that it should be a silent movie but then i realized that there were some inaudible voices coming from the background. then i asked myself whether there's a problem with the sound system or not. but just as i was thinking about this, voices started to be audible. and the black and white movie became coloured when the ashes were taken to the ship with ceremony. i guess the purpose of using black and white and silent cinema techniques before the ship scenes was to underline the fact that the important factor in the film was the ship itself. life without the ship was black and white (probably meaning boring and full of cliches). but when we enter the world inside the ship (or when we enter the world through Fellini's eyes), we see that there are lots of differences from reality. and that makes the ship coloured! Fellini had created so many symbols including the rhinoceros and the ship itself. but these symbols are not so clearly defined so after watching the film, the audience leaves with some question marks. even if you are not interested in the plot, watch this for a good visual treat. Fellini has reminded me that the cinema is an art which underlines the importance of visual structure.

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    Related interests

    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama
    Prince and Apollonia Kotero in Purple Rain (1984)
    Music

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Italy's official submission for the Best Foreign Language Film at the 56th Academy Awards.
    • Quotes

      Orlando: Pum pum? The mountain's mouth? But it's a volcano's mouth. We're sitting on a volcano's mouth. Now I understood the metaphor! A tragedy.

    • Connections
      Edited into Bellissimo: Immagini del cinema italiano (1985)
    • Soundtracks
      La donna è mobile
      from 'Rigoletto'

      Composed by Giuseppe Verdi

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    FAQ16

    • How long is The Ship Sails On?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • January 4, 1984 (France)
    • Countries of origin
      • Italy
      • France
    • Languages
      • Italian
      • German
      • Serbian
      • Russian
      • English
    • Also known as
      • And the Ship Sails On
    • Filming locations
      • Cinecittà Studios, Cinecittà, Rome, Lazio, Italy(Studio)
    • Production companies
      • Rai 1
      • Vides Cinematografica
      • Gaumont
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross worldwide
      • $226
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 2h 12m(132 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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