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- <text id=93TT0500>
- <title>
- Nov. 08, 1993: Federico Fellini:1920-1993
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Nov. 08, 1993 Cloning Humans
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- OBITUARY, Page 95
- Ringmaster And Clown
- Federico Fellini, 1920-1993
-
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>By RICHARD CORLISS
- </p>
- <p> Most directors are content to Xerox the world. Federico Fellini
- created his own world on film, and it has taken the rest of
- us a lifetime to appreciate the acuity of his vision.
- </p>
- <p> In La Dolce Vita (1960), 8 1/2 (1963), Amarcord (1974) and 20
- other films, overripe images spilled out of his cornucopia:
- clowns and courtesans, prelates and zealots, overripe creatures
- from a fantast's bestiary. At first they looked like outrageous
- cartoons of sensuality and sacrilege. But long before his death
- last week at 73, from complications after a stroke, it was clear
- they were previews of a moral system spun wildly off its axis.
- For 30 years and more, the word Felliniesque has defined not
- just the director's work but a style at the peacock end of film,
- photography, fashion, advertising, high life and street life.
- </p>
- <p> The times are surreal enough now; we can appreciate Fellini
- as a prophet and documentarian of every cultural excess of the
- late 20th century. There's no question that Fellini was in part
- satirizing his milieu. But because he was incapable of a stillborn
- frame of film, his pictures celebrate what they criticize; they
- amount to a cautionary blueprint for survival in the atomic
- age. If you've been very lucky or very naughty, then life for
- you is like a Fellini movie.
- </p>
- <p> His work and his world were bigger than life, from the days
- when young Federico came from Rimini to Rome, sketching caricatures
- on Via Veneto tablecloths. And so in his later films, faces
- are pressed against the window of the camera lens; people talk
- too loud or too much; makeup is applied with a trowel; actors
- are encouraged to go over the top, to skywrite their emotions
- on the screen.
- </p>
- <p> As a boy Fellini really did run away to join a traveling circus.
- He was sent home within a few days, but his heart stayed there.
- In a Fellini film, life is a circus without surcease. Come inside,
- children of all ages, where (in Amarcord) the snowflakes are
- as fat as pancakes, where (in The Nights of Cabiria, 1957) streetwalkers
- dance like schoolgirls and (in Juliet of the Spirits (1965),
- God may be waiting for you in the attic.
- </p>
- <p> Fellini once played God: he was the vagabond whom a peasant
- (Anna Magnani) mistakes for Jesus in Roberto Rossellini's The
- Miracle (1948). For Fellini, however, God was a goddess and
- woman was the world--everything in the world that excites
- and frightens, forbids and enchants. To Marcello in La Dolce
- Vita, woman is "mother, sister, daughter, lover, angel, home."
- How small and sad and funny men are in comparison! At one end
- of the spectrum they are like the midget bluenose in Boccaccio
- 70 (1962) overwhelmed by Anita Ekberg as a sexual giantess--it's the attack of the 50-ft. libido. At the other end they
- are like Guido in 8 1/2 cracking the whip in a vain attempt
- to tame his harem menagerie.
- </p>
- <p> In some of his later extravaganzas, Fellini's Casanova (1976)
- and City of Women (1979), woman was a dream flowering into nightmare,
- and unfortunate man was Phallus in Wonderland. Fellini was not
- the sort of artist to mature as he grew older; he was emotionally
- a child, an avid teenager, like all the overage boys in his
- movies. And so, in some of the late ones, he tilted from parody
- to self-parody. It was inevitable, perhaps, that he would find
- it difficult to distinguish between being Fellini and doing
- Fellini.
- </p>
- <p> Early or late, prime or decadent, these films are unmistakably
- those of an Italian male of the late 20th century. Italian,
- yes, but also universal. No European filmmaker has been imitated
- so flatteringly on Broadway (Cabiria and 8 1/2 both found their
- way to the musical stage) and in Hollywood (Paul Mazursky, Bob
- Fosse and Woody Allen have all done their own confessional glosses
- on 8 1/2). Male, yes, but with a stethoscope auditing the heart
- of a woman. La Strada, Cabiria, Juliet and Ginger and Fred (1983)
- are four sympathetic diagnoses of vital women used by weak men.
- They are also, of course, dynamic showcases for the talents
- of Giulietta Masina, who for 49 years was Signora Fellini. In
- his films she was the average, put-upon feminine spirit, just
- as Marcello Mastroianni was the gallantly anguished soul of
- modern man.
- </p>
- <p> Where can these warring sexes find equality and transcendence?
- Only on the stage, or at the circus, or in the movies--in
- the gaudy popular arts from which Fellini's gaudy, sophisticated
- art emerged. A girl might dance with her cartoon hero made flesh;
- stokers on a great ship might feel a little better hearing the
- friendly competition of high notes from opera stars many decks
- above them. And for Guido in 8 1/2, it is the knowledge that
- on celluloid he can do anything: reunite lovers, reconcile families,
- turn dream into drama and lead all life's players in a dance
- around the center ring. Who else has such sorcerer's power?
- And who, besides Fellini, used that power with such wondrous
- recklessness?
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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