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IMDbPro

Ginger et Fred

Original title: Ginger e Fred
  • 1986
  • Tous publics
  • 2h 7m
IMDb RATING
7.2/10
5.8K
YOUR RATING
Marcello Mastroianni and Giulietta Masina in Ginger et Fred (1986)
Amelia and Pippo are reunited after several decades to perform their old music-hall act on a TV variety show.
Play trailer1:45
1 Video
40 Photos
SatireComedyDrama

Amelia and Pippo are reunited after several decades to perform their old music-hall act on a TV variety show.Amelia and Pippo are reunited after several decades to perform their old music-hall act on a TV variety show.Amelia and Pippo are reunited after several decades to perform their old music-hall act on a TV variety show.

  • Director
    • Federico Fellini
  • Writers
    • Federico Fellini
    • Tonino Guerra
    • Tullio Pinelli
  • Stars
    • Marcello Mastroianni
    • Giulietta Masina
    • Franco Fabrizi
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.2/10
    5.8K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Federico Fellini
    • Writers
      • Federico Fellini
      • Tonino Guerra
      • Tullio Pinelli
    • Stars
      • Marcello Mastroianni
      • Giulietta Masina
      • Franco Fabrizi
    • 28User reviews
    • 26Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 1 BAFTA Award
      • 18 wins & 18 nominations total

    Videos1

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 1:45
    Official Trailer

    Photos40

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    Top cast99+

    Edit
    Marcello Mastroianni
    Marcello Mastroianni
    • Pippo 'Fred' Botticella
    Giulietta Masina
    Giulietta Masina
    • Amelia 'Ginger' Bonetti
    Franco Fabrizi
    Franco Fabrizi
    • Aurelio, 'Ed Ecco A Voi' Host
    Friedrich von Ledebur
    Friedrich von Ledebur
    • Admiral Aulenti
    • (as Frederick Ledebur)
    Augusto Poderosi
    • Evelina Pollini
    Martin Maria Blau
    • Florenzio
    Jacques Henri Lartigue
    • Brother Gerolamo
    • (as Jacques Henry Lartigue)
    Totò Mignone
    • Totò
    • (as Toto Mignone)
    Ezio Marano
    • Author
    Antoine Saint-John
    • Bandaged man
    • (as Antoine Saint Jean)
    Friedrich von Thun
    Friedrich von Thun
    • Kidnapped Industrialist
    • (as Frederich Thun)
    Antonino Iuorio
    • Production Inspector
    • (as Antonio Iuorio)
    Barbara Scoppa
    • Barbara, TeleFlash Reporter
    Elisabetta Flumeri
    • Journalist
    Salvatore Billa
    Salvatore Billa
    • Clark Gable
    Ginestra Spinola
    • Clairvoyant
    Stefania Marini
    • Stefania, TV Secretary
    Francesco Casale
    • Catanzaro
    • Director
      • Federico Fellini
    • Writers
      • Federico Fellini
      • Tonino Guerra
      • Tullio Pinelli
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews28

    7.25.7K
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    Featured reviews

    7nihilistdude2000

    A "modern" Fellini film - surprisingly good

    This wasn't a bad film, though those without previous knowledge of Fellini's films may not like it as much. Giuletta Masina and Marcello Mastroani give their usual great performances. I actually thought Marcello gave one of his better performances here, in that he displayed a great comedic timing. I am mostly familiar with Fellini's pre-1970 films so I was not sure how a film made in the 1980's would do (given how much cinema had changed from the 50's/60's to the 80's), but he still delivers an enjoyable film, thanks in large part to good acting by the two leads. I enjoyed the satirical attack on television and the modern era (advertisting, etc.), which I happen to strongly agree with. The TV show scene near the end contains your typical Fellini "magic" and aesthetics, so I enjoyed that as well. This is by no means comparable to Fellini's masterpieces, but is still a well-made and enjoyable film, and more accessible than some of his more outrageous stuff he's made in past years. 7/10.
    rudy-30

    A wonderful, if overlong romantic comedy.

    Fellini takes a stab at television in this wonderful satire. It's Christmas, and an Italian "Ed Sullivan" type show is having a special, by re-uniting acts that were featured years ago. There is a hilarious (for those in the know) swipe at Woody Allen, who has been parodying Fellini for years. It's a bit deliberately paced, but the chemistry between the stars makes it worthwhile.
    8ElMaruecan82

    Giuletta of the (sadly lost) Spirit...

    Fellini is perhaps the only director whose movies could never be adapted into books. The Maestro has invented a purely cinematic language to speak his own heart and tell his stories no matter how disjointed and anarchic they were for the discoverer, I guess his unique style would simply suffocate inside the restrictive format of words. Sure, drawings can give glimpses on his extravagant visions but still too static to convey the sense of fun and buoyancy he injects in his material. They could make interesting comic strips though but would they work the same without Nino Rota or Nicola Piavani's music?

    Fellini movies are made for either the stage or the screen, their delights are essentially visual and musical, their enjoyment works on a sensitive and emotional rather than intellectual level. This is the old magic formula that made glorious days of Hollywood and Broadway, providing the kind of entertainment books and radio couldn't, that era immortalized by Chaplin, Laurel and Hardy, Walt Disney cartoons and of course musicals, and one of the most emblematic moments of that long gone period is Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers dancing "Cheek to Cheek". That heavenly scene immortalized by countless homages, notably from "The Green Mile" and Woody Allen's "Purple Rose of Cairo".

    Fellini's "Ginger and Fred" is impregnated with a similar dose of nostalgia although we never see the legends, we don't need their last names, we don't need the lyrics to remember "Top Hat", we don't need Giuletta Masina to look like Ginger Rogers and she doesn't even pretend to be a lookalike while Marcello Mastroianni isn't exactly the thin and slender Astaire type. Yet the two Hollywood stars bright through the sole passion of Amelia (Masina) and Pippo (Mastroianni). Listen to her describing the choreography or her days of glory during interviews or Pippo, in one of the film's most inspired scenes, explaining the origins of tap dancing. Their listeners aren't always captivated but we know they're not talking to them but to us movie lovers fascinated by these Last Mohicans of Hollywood Golden Age... Italian style.

    The homage itself is pure Fellini style, any lesser director would have made this love letter to Hollywood a sort of solemn prosternation... watching "Ginger and Fred" made me realize how willing even good movies like "The Artist" or "La La Land" were to recreate the magic at the expense of their personal touch, sinning by moments of sentimental manipulation. "Ginger and Fred" is nostalgic all right, but it's exuberant and transgressive like any Fellini film. The director turns the couple into decoy protagonists in a crazy universe, an avalanche of debauchery that makes them totally outdated. Behind the nostalgia, there's a commentary on how far the art of entertainment went, becoming as decadent as his portrayal of Rome like in "Satyricon". Good directors flash the lost innocence before our eyes, Fellini focuses on the much groovier hell.

    What is the place of a tap dancing couple in a world where TV and pop electronic music waters its audience with a keleidoscope of sex, games, ads and random images designed to ignite masses lowest instincts? When Amelia is approached by an unimpressed journalist and driven to the hotel before the studio representation, she is surrounded by so many characters her frailty is enhanced: has-been artists, lookalikes, impersonators, dwarves... what have they in common? They're just weird, bizarre-looking or entertaining in a non-traditional way. It's eerie how Fellini prophecized the reality shows and their exploitations of wannabe celebrities and pseudo artists treated like freaks. There's a scene where Amelia is asked whether she's married to Pippo, if she was, that would have interested the audience even more. There's no place anymore for genuine interest, people want to be shocked, dazzled, or surprised, it's a giant leap made in five decades.

    Having a foot in each world and being a true ringmaster, Fellini reconciles these two schools of entertainment, allowing within that orgy of telegenic bizarreness a few breaks to Amelia and Pippo, I didn't mind these crazy vignettes as they're part of the Fellinian experience but sometimes they can be too exhausting and so I enjoyed these brief moments of truce where Amelia and Pippo shared a few memories. I loved their complicity all through their film and one of the masterstrokes was the blackout before the act, so we could breath a little and listen to them commenting the mess surrounding them. It's interesting to see that they're lucid about their status, but they are willing to give the audience what they want, for the sake of their art. For all its anarchical structure, carried by that catchy soundtrack, Fellini can't resist the temptation of sentimentalism and that's a wise choice, as he allows his two fetish actors to have a substantial role at the dawn of their career, he even recast Franco Fabrizi as the host show, he who starred in his early neo-realist films.

    In its "final show before the curtain closes" undertones, "Ginger and Fred" reminded me of Chaplin's "Limelight". The film has its slower moments but it's surprisingly grabbing and never dull or boring, Amelia and Pippo gravitate around these bizarre figures of entertainments like a Greek chorus we can relate to. At the end, they become Ginger and Fred in our hearts. And the film ends as it started, but at night in a deserted train station, with the two actors paying the kind of goodbyes that resonate like poignant farewells. But at long as they saw each other, that mess was all worth it, and since there's no Fellini film without the "film in the film" element, at least Il Dottore gratified us with a last reunion with his fetish actors: Masina and Mastroianni ... if only for that, "Ginger and Fred" deserves to be watched and appreciated.
    7susansweb

    A pleasant Fellini film for a change

    Before I saw this movie, I had heard how it was considered one of Federico Fellini's more accessible movies. If this was meant of Fellini's films from the sixties on, I can agree with that. The film is basically two things: one big jab at television and giving Giuletta Masina the opportunity to show everyone how adorable she is (she succeeds). The TV angle, however scathing it may have been in 1986; today with the plethora of reality TV shows, the film just seems prescient. The film's very basic storyline is Masina reuniting with old dance partner Marcello Mastroianni for a TV show. Filling in the rest of the movie (and sometimes obscuring the main story) are the many oddball characters scheduled for the TV show. As anyone familiar with Fellini knows, he loves outrageous people. In this film, for example, there are transsexuals, psychics, a midget troupe and a cow with many teats. The first part of the movie, at the hotel, is a little too much because everything is thrown at the viewer at once. The characters, television, Ginger and Fred, all vie for your attention and it can be overwhelming. Once at the studio, the film kind of settles down and one is able to enjoy the film and it's characters. Not one of Fellini's best but also not only for fanatics of Fellini either.
    10cwitt

    Fellini says: Love each other, Kill your television

    Ginger e Fred is much more a film about the Italian psyche than a film about an old dance team that reunites after 40 years to appear on a TV variety show. It takes place at Christmastime, and having spent Christmas in Rome, the fun-insane carnival atmosphere Fellini depicts is pretty accurate, but exaggerated for film. Walking around Rome I found subconscious playing back bits of the soundtrack and it was only then that I realized how much I love this film. It's also about people who time leave behind. And about two people who are tragically unable to say how much they do love each other. It's also very very funny. Fellini go the idea for the film after seeing his older films butchered on Italian TV. A highlight is an old woman who was paid not to watch TV for a month. She's brought into the studio a mental wreck, swearing she'll never do it again and promises to watch more and more TV.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Upon the film's release in the USA, Ginger Rogers sued the production and the distributors for 'misappropriation and infringement of her public personality'. The case was dismissed, the judgment stating that the film referred to her and Fred Astaire only obliquely.
    • Quotes

      Pippo Botticella: Unquestionably, we descend from the apes. The trouble is we can't get back to them, to their gift of instinct, of natural innocence.

    • Connections
      Featured in At the Movies: The Money Pit/Ginger and Fred (1986)
    • Soundtracks
      The Continental
      Music by Con Conrad

      Lyrics by Herb Magidson

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    FAQ18

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • January 22, 1986 (France)
    • Countries of origin
      • Italy
      • France
      • West Germany
    • Languages
      • Italian
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Ginger & Fred
    • Filming locations
      • Cinecittà Studios, Cinecittà, Rome, Lazio, Italy(Studio)
    • Production companies
      • Produzioni Europee Associate (PEA)
      • Les Films Ariane
      • France 3 Cinéma
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $837,623
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $22,725
      • Mar 30, 1986
    • Gross worldwide
      • $837,953
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 2h 7m(127 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.66 : 1

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