For most of its running
time, Orchestra Rehearsal is
decidedly restrained, seeing as how it was made by Federico Fellini. Opening as
a faux documentary, with the film camera standing in for the viewpoint of a crew
making a TV special about the activities of a Roman orchestra, the picture
progresses from light comedy to heated labor-themed satire and finally to a
dose of Fellini’s signature overwrought symbolism. On one level, the movie is a
simple study of group dynamics and a celebration of the intricate process by
which orchestras create classical-music performances. It’s a valid endeavor
made with intelligence and skill, but some of Fellini’s storytelling choices
dull the picture’s impact.
He spreads the focus around multiple members of the
orchestra, with only the conductor receiving a measure of special attention
because he’s ostensibly the villain driving the film’s slender excuse for a
plot. Therefore, the movie doesn’t have a main character (beyond the collective
entity of the orchestra), so the storytelling feels diffuse—each time Fellini
lingers on remarks from this musician or that musician, the overall thrust of
the piece falters. Even more problematically, at least in terms of generating
conventional cinematic momentum, Fellini’s efforts to raise the stakes toward
the end of the picture falter because viewers haven’t formed any special
connections with the individuals who populate the story. Given its very short
running time (the movie is only 70 minutes long), Fellini would have been
better served presenting the piece as a slice of life without aspirations to
dramatic impact.
In any event, the action takes place inside the tomb beneath a
13th-century church. As an orchestra workshops several numbers for an upcoming
concert, musicians bitch about their ostentatious conductor, debate which
instrument is most important, and organize to defend the rights they previously
gained through unionization. Some of this stuff is funny, as when two musicians
fight about the personal space surrounding their chairs, and some of it is
idiosyncratic, as when a male cellist derides the violin as an excessively
feminine instrument. The movie sets up its premise fairly efficiently, then
bounces from one random episode to the next until resolving into a melodrama
once the conflict between the conductor and the musicians explodes. Fellini
distributes screen time capriciously, lingering, for instance, on vignettes
featuring an attractive female pianist. And once the final act arrives, Fellini
succumbs to his customary appetite for cinematic excess, using flamboyant
violence, grotesquerie, oversized props, and provocative sexual imagery to make
points that could have been articulated more subtly. It’s hard to reconcile
this overly stylized material with the talky stuff that came before.
Orchestra Rehearsal: FUNKY
No comments:
Post a Comment