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La voix de la Lune

Original title: La voce della luna
  • 1990
  • Tous publics
  • 2h 6m
IMDb RATING
6.3/10
3.5K
YOUR RATING
La voix de la Lune (1990)
ComedyDrama

The amusing and entertaining adventures of a recently released mental patient and his band of misfits, who discover conspiracies to participate in while looking for love.The amusing and entertaining adventures of a recently released mental patient and his band of misfits, who discover conspiracies to participate in while looking for love.The amusing and entertaining adventures of a recently released mental patient and his band of misfits, who discover conspiracies to participate in while looking for love.

  • Director
    • Federico Fellini
  • Writers
    • Ermanno Cavazzoni
    • Federico Fellini
    • Tullio Pinelli
  • Stars
    • Roberto Benigni
    • Paolo Villaggio
    • Nadia Ottaviani
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.3/10
    3.5K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Federico Fellini
    • Writers
      • Ermanno Cavazzoni
      • Federico Fellini
      • Tullio Pinelli
    • Stars
      • Roberto Benigni
      • Paolo Villaggio
      • Nadia Ottaviani
    • 19User reviews
    • 20Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 5 wins & 9 nominations total

    Photos131

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    Top cast46

    Edit
    Roberto Benigni
    Roberto Benigni
    • Ivo Salvini
    Paolo Villaggio
    Paolo Villaggio
    • Gonnella
    Nadia Ottaviani
    • Aldina
    Marisa Tomasi
    Marisa Tomasi
    • Marisa
    Angelo Orlando
    Angelo Orlando
    • Nestore
    Sim
    Sim
    • Oboe player
    Syusy Blady
    • Susy
    Dario Ghirardi
    • Journalist
    Dominique Chevalier
    • 1st Micheluzzi Brother
    Nigel Harris
    Nigel Harris
    • 2nd Micheluzzi Brother
    Vito
    • 3rd Micheluzzi Brother
    Daniela Airoldi
    Daniela Airoldi
    Stefano Antonucci
    Ferruccio Brembilla
    Stefano Cedrati
    Stefano Cedrati
    Giampaolo Cocchi
    Roberto Corbiletto
    Giordano Falzoni
    • Director
      • Federico Fellini
    • Writers
      • Ermanno Cavazzoni
      • Federico Fellini
      • Tullio Pinelli
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews19

    6.33.5K
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    Featured reviews

    7Quinoa1984

    "It seems my whole life is just this night" - Fellini still had it till the end, even if it wasn't his best

    Probably the only time in cinema where Michael Jackson ("The Way You Make Me Feel" specifically and an inspired dancr sequence) gets a transition into the Blue Danube waltz, and rhsn back again so that's certainly something!

    Plotless, rambling, and has more than a few moments where Fellini and his crew place actors and light and setting and music just so to make cinematic poetry: memories as stanzas broken up by the little bits where story appears to be taking place. It sounds contradictory, but what keeps it from being among the filmmaker's best is what is still very interesting about it: Benigni is s man who (after a little time to surmise) is out from a mental hospital and is wandering from town to town, looking for a woman that he adores from his past and interacts with other characters who have their own histories and mysteries and whatnot... And that's it, that's the movie - and all the while, to the director's credit, he gets a real performance out of his star and not merely circus shtick (which is what I assumed many years ago when I first heard of this that it would be).

    As with many Fellini, it may just be too much to take in in one sitting, but on the other hand Im not sure I... Care that much about this character and his search for this woman who really doesn't want to see him. And yet, there are brilliant scenes and flashes of greatness through out, wild bits like the one man who gets married and when his wife has sex with him it becomes like being on an actual train that rocks and rolls and creates panedemonium and smoke, or the Blue Danube dance and everyone at the dance breaking out in applause, or that shot where all of those figures with big black garbage cans walk in formation into town. And other times, just as impressively, Fellini slows his usual madman roll snd lets Delli Colli keep the camera more still (or occasionally, something I don't remember from him before, handheld).

    At its most enlightening and satisfying, it's a melancholy but entertaining journey through memory and not even desire so much as longing, like tbe ending with Benigni looking up at the moon. It's also about twenty minutes too long (that long sequence in the town square where, uh, suddenly there's a big screen up showing people crying and begging to a fake moon - it really dragged to nothing satisfying), and I wish there was a little more time to understand what the Prefect character was all about as a lost soul. But, even with its flaws, it's still a lovely experience because it's Fellini finding ways to rediscover his passions and interests in exploring memory, regret and the desire to want to fly in the sky, figuratively and literally.
    7christopher-underwood

    A sad farewell indeed.

    This is a sad swan song from the director. In many ways. It is a rambling affair, too wordy and shot as if on sound stage with harsh and uncompromising light. Yet there is something about the (oh so Italian!) characters that come and go we imagine, throughout the overlong running time, that the whole will spark into life. It doesn't but what is so sad is that there are, now and again, moments that jump out as trademark Felliniesque visions. Flimsy white lace costumes revolve in unison, a beauty contest promises to burst forth, a group of unfortunates gather to catch a glimpse of 'pussy' as a neighbour undresses and finally a tethered moon brought to Earth. But overall and despite treasurable seconds this stands as a rather forlorn and unconsummated endeavour. A sad farewell indeed.
    Kirpianuscus

    bitterness

    The bitterness is the basic trait of this last Fellini. You discover all what you know or define as Felliniesque. You admire Roberto Begnini , being more prepared to remind scenes from his last Pinocchios. You feel pity and admiration about characters. And you feel the fall of a world, suggested, in so precise manner, by entire atmosphere defining a simple - baroque good bye. A film only reminding themes, characters, idiosincrasies. And the bitterness as basic virtue.
    7jrglaves-smith

    Fellini's last film not quite vintage but still striking.

    It is a pity that Fellini's last film is not better known as it represents something of a return to form after a series of disappointments. .Fellini's visual imagination is still intact but some of the wonderful precision of imagery is no longer present. Perhaps by the end of his career too many of his old collaborators had died or retired. The best part is the first half hour seen entirely from the perspective of the insane central characters. Their obsession with the moon provides the alibi for many evocative night shots, (I've often thought that one thing that distinguishes great film makers is how they film the night), as well as the spectacular climactic sequence when they imagine that they have trapped the moon. Elsewhere there is typical Fellini fun with the crowning of 'Miss Flower' complete with an outsize King and Queen of the Gnocci and a final shower of flower on all the contestants. 'La voce della Luna' shares much of 'Ginger and Fred's' distaste for the contemporary world summed up in a sequence in which a disco rave is interrupted by a Strauss waltz. This is far more poetic and unexpected than anything in the predictable 'Ginger and Fred'. Those worried by the narrative incoherence of Fellini can bury their boring heads in a screen writing manual. Perhaps the current international popularity of Roberto Benigni, little known outside Italy when the fim was made may yet allow this flawed but haunting film to gain the audience it deserves.
    10rockisforever

    Visual poetry

    This is one of Fellini's best movies, and one of the most underrated pictures of all time. This masterpiece includes all the main themes of Fellini's career. It doesn't follow a "prose style", but a "lyric style". It's like a visual poem. In fact this film narrates the journey of Ivo Salvini (Roberto Benigni) through dreams and memories, which actually belong to the great director. As a matter of fact Salvini, alter ego of Fellini, says: "I love to remember, maybe more than living". The protagonist wanders in the countryside, asking himself about life, and meets Gonnella (Paolo Villaggio), who feels himself oppressed by the giant and factitious society, made of useless appearance. The noisy square is the symbol of a chaotic society (circensian, as Fellini would say), where the individuality is dead, superseded by an alienated mass. This crowd is insensitive to the voice of inner being, to the voice of the moon. In this film the noise contrasts with the silence, the loud public square contrasts with the noiseless countryside, which helps along subjectivity. The omnipresent television clashes with the moments of poetry, like the scenes of Benigni reciting poems of the Italian romantic poet Giacomo Leopardi. Poetry wins over the modern society, which doesn't listen the voice of inner being, deafened by the noise of the Machine. Poetry is like a flight, like a dance, like music (the waltz scene in the disco is wonderful). At the end only the most misunderstood people can catch the moon, that glow of infinite. Nobody can explain what happens. Maybe it's not necessary to explain. It's enough to keep silence and listen. Benigni and Villaggio are two great actors, the soundtrack by Nicola Piovani is impressive and touching, the set design by Dante Ferretti has a beautiful imagery, and the direction of the master is outstanding as usual. All that enables us to listen for a moment the voice of the moon.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Even the original (Italian) dialogue was re-dubbed in order to increase the feeling of unreality. However, this is not a unique feature for this particular movie among Fellini's. On the contrary, it was very common for him to ask his performers to speak out loud randomly chosen numbers instead of the actual script text. Then the main cast would re-dub itself, the supporting cast being most of the time re-dubbed by a few specialized actors. It has to be said that in Italy direct sound wasn't much in use until the French 'Nouvelle Vague' made a massive use of it, in the name of realism, and thus became an example for the Italian film industry. Re-dubbing remained nonetheless a common practice, and an excellent one at that until the 1980s, and Fellini took advantage of its possibilities to increase the feeling of unreality in all of his movies by asking his dubbers (all of them) not to perfectly lip-sync. The only exceptions to this technique are his very early works, where the famous dreamlike world and sensitivity of the director aren't still outlined.
    • Connections
      Featured in Verso la luna con Fellini (1990)
    • Soundtracks
      The Way You Make Me Feel
      Written & performed by Michael Jackson

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    FAQ16

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • May 18, 1990 (France)
    • Countries of origin
      • Italy
      • France
    • Languages
      • Italian
      • Japanese
    • Also known as
      • The Voice of the Moon
    • Filming locations
      • Stabilimenti Cinematagrafici Pontini, Rome, Lazio, Italy(Studio)
    • Production companies
      • Cecchi Gori Group Tiger Cinematografica
      • Films A2
      • La Sept Cinéma
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Gross worldwide
      • $23,222
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 2h 6m(126 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.66 : 1

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