An oddity in Federico Fellini’s filmography, quasi-documentary
The Clowns was made for Italian
television but also released theatrically in Europe and the U.S. Part
dramatization, part investigation, part memory play, and part phantasmagoria,
the movie smothers its informational value with sonic and visual excess, and
yet it’s not enough of a dreamlike experience to qualify as a full-on Fellini
freakout. Like many of Fellini’s lesser efforts, it seems to reveal a director
so preoccupied with his own mythology that he felt obligated to deliver
voluptuous style whether or not voluptuous style was suitable to the project at
hand. The movie isn’t so overbearing as to induce a screaming headache, but
it’s close. And to say that The Clowns
should contain fewer scenes of participants telling Fellini he’s wonderful would be
an understatement. Anyway, the picture begins with a beautifully rendered scene
that the filmmaker pulled from his past. As a little boy watches from his room
late at night, a circus tent emerges seemingly from nowhere, since all the
workers raising the tent are inside. The next day, the little boy wanders into
the tent, encountering a magical world of animals, freaks, and, of course,
clowns. Never one to leave well enough alone, Fellini quickly goes over the top
at this point, presenting a parade of chalk-faced screamers who seem more
monstrous than delightful. And, indeed, as the narration explains, Fellini was
scared of clowns when he first saw them.
Eventually, the film drifts into
reportage about the history of clowns and the fading popularity of circuses in
general. Fellini and his crew speak with ex-clowns, some of whom are still hams
and some of whom seem like bitter men full of regret. The filmmakers also track
down rare footage of early clowns in action. Overwhelming this valuable
material is nonsense. In one staged vignette, Fellini encounters his La Dolce Vita leading lady, Anita
Ekberg, while she tries to purchase a jungle cat as a pet. And throughout the
picture, Fellini has a sexy blonde assistant stand in front of the camera to
read narration like some sort of nonfiction-cinema siren. After being
bludgeoned for 90 minutes with these sorts of distractions, as well as
histrionic spectacle—including surrealistic performance sequences and a whole
lot of World War II imagery—it’s tempting to ask why Fellini bothered exploring
a topic that he clearly felt needed bells and whistles in order to sustain
interest. Had the director gotten out of his own way and simply presented the
world of clowns without adornment, The
Clowns might have been less distinctive. Yet it might also have been more
memorable and useful.
The
Clowns: FUNKY
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