Revered Italian filmmaker
Federico Fellini dialed down his flamboyant style for Amarcord, arguably the last unqualified artistic success of his
career. A gentle dramedy somewhat in the vein of François Truffaut’s most
nostalgic features, Amarcord
(translation: “I remember”) provides a fanciful vision of Fellini’s adolescence
in a small Italian town during the years immediately preceding World War II.
Essentially a loose compendium of colorful episodes woven around the maturation
of the lead character, Amarcord
tackles a wide range of themes in lieu of a proper plot, so the film requires
great patience on the part of the viewer. (In addition to the stop-and-start
structure, the movie lumbers through an excessive 124-minute running time.)
Within
the picture’s vignettes are moments of humor, insight, juvenile ribaldry, political
satire, and warmth. Viewers who are interested in Fellini’s biography and/or
this fraught period of Italy’s history will, naturally, derive more from the
experience than those merely craving entertainment. Speaking as someone
with zero tolerance for the cartoonish style of Fellini’s later films, I can
report that I was surprisingly engaged by many sequences, even though I found
the movie as a whole underwhelming. Yet mine appears to be a minority opinion—during
its original release, Amarcord earned such accolades as the last of Fellini’s several
Oscars for Best Foreign Language Film.
Major characters include Titta (Bruno
Zanin), a teenager learning life lessons from eccentric neighbors and relatives;
Aurelio (Armando Brancia), Titta’s hot-tempered father; Lallo (Nando Orfei),
Titta’s lovelorn uncle; Gradisca (Magali Nöel), the town’s most glamorous
woman; and Giudizio (Aristotle Caporale), the village idiot who periodically
breaks the fourth wall by directly addressing the audience. Some of the
re-created memories in Amarcord
convey a beautiful sense of community-wide romanticism, like the sequence in
which town residents paddle boats into the ocean so they can
view the passage of a newly christened Italian ocean liner. Other episodes are
more whimsical, such as the sequence of Lallo climbing into a tree and
screaming “I want a woman!” over and over, despite relatives’ attempts to
talk him down. Predictably, many scenes reflect the director’s fetish for
ample-sized women. In one such passage, a massively endowed store clerk nearly
smothers Titta to death with her, well, tittas.
Amarcord features so many recurring images and themes that it’s as
dense as a novel, which means it’s probably a fascinating film to dissect. However, this also means that many elements get short
shrift, notably the political commentary.
Still, cinematographer Giuseppe Rotunno and composer Nino Rota help create
unity, and the spirited performances lend vitality. Thus, even though the film’s
simple pleasures occasionally get obscured by nonsense (such as a pointless
musical number in a harem), Amarcord
may be the most accessible and worthwhile of Fellini’s ’70s movies.
Amarcord:
FUNKY
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