La Dolce Vita
TITLE
La Dolce Vita
DIRECTOR
Federico Fellini
COUNTRY
Italy, France
YEAR
1960
DURATION
176′
GENRE
Comedy, Thriller
Overview
La Dolce Vita
Marcello, a gossip columnist, has an aspiration to turn himself into a serious writer. However, he finds himself at the centre of Rome's elite social scene, attracting the attention of several women.
DIRECTOR BIOGRAPHY - Federico Fellini
Federico Fellini is the most famous Italian director and as such he cannot be classified in a well-defined genre, even if the first part of his production is influenced by neorealism. Fellini is a visionary poet, he makes dreamlike films that are difficult to categorize and makes autobiography his most marked stylistic feature. Escape to Rome Born in Rimini in a lower-middle-class family, he soon shows a desire to escape to the capital, which is well exposed in I Vitelloni (1953), a truthful portrait of provincial life through the days of five layabouts who invent everyday life. Winter in Rimini is only boredom and regret for lost time, between friends who get married, escapades, frustrated aspirations, broken dreams. Fellini moves to Rome, works as a humorous illustrator in magazines such as "Marc'Aurelio", begins to work on the radio and as a screenwriter. In 1943 he married Giulietta Masina , whom he had met on the radio, and sold comic drawings to make a living, until Roberto Rossellini called him to collaborate on Rome, Open City . The most important director of neorealism established a fruitful relationship with the young Fellini, and wanted him alongside him for Paisà , L'amore (he wrote the episode Il miracolo ) and Francesco giullare di Dio . Fellini also wrote screenplays for other directors such as Lattuada , Germi and Comencini , but it was only in 1950 that he directed his first film in collaboration with Alberto Lattuada . It was Luci del varietà , a story of the illusions and disappointments of a comedian in a small vaudeville company. Fellini's first film with independent directing responsibility was Lo sceicco bianco (1952), starring a very young Alberto Sordi who played a mean star of photo stories
Credits
- DirectorFederico Fellini
- ScreenplayFederico Fellini
- Cinematography Otello Martelli
- Cast
- Editing Leo Catozzo
- Producer/s Giuseppe Amato, Angelo Rizzoli
- Production Company
- Distributor/s
- Project TitleLa Dolce Vita
- Project TypeComedy, Thriller
- Completion Date2 January 1960
- Country of originItaly, France
- Country of filmingItaly, France
- LanguageItalian
- First-time Filmmaker No
- Student ProjectNo
Federico Fellini
Federico Fellini is the most famous Italian director and as such he cannot be classified in a well-defined genre, even if the first part of his production is influenced by neorealism. Fellini is a visionary poet, he makes dreamlike films that are difficult to categorize and makes autobiography his most marked stylistic feature. Escape to Rome Born in Rimini in a lower-middle-class family, he soon shows a desire to escape to the capital, which is well exposed in I Vitelloni (1953), a truthful portrait of provincial life through the days of five layabouts who invent everyday life. Winter in Rimini is only boredom and regret for lost time, between friends who get married, escapades, frustrated aspirations, broken dreams. Fellini moves to Rome, works as a humorous illustrator in magazines such as "Marc'Aurelio", begins to work on the radio and as a screenwriter. In 1943 he married Giulietta Masina , whom he had met on the radio, and sold comic drawings to make a living, until Roberto Rossellini called him to collaborate on Rome, Open City . The most important director of neorealism established a fruitful relationship with the young Fellini, and wanted him alongside him for Paisà , L'amore (he wrote the episode Il miracolo ) and Francesco giullare di Dio . Fellini also wrote screenplays for other directors such as Lattuada , Germi and Comencini , but it was only in 1950 that he directed his first film in collaboration with Alberto Lattuada . It was Luci del varietà , a story of the illusions and disappointments of a comedian in a small vaudeville company. Fellini's first film with independent directing responsibility was Lo sceicco bianco (1952), starring a very young Alberto Sordi who played a mean star of photo stories