| Index | 9 reviews in total |
17 out of 18 people found the following review useful:
what a way to go!, 25 June 2001
Author:
(spookygrinder@aol.com) from Los Angeles, CA
I don't know what the reviewers were thinking, but with Ebert leading the
pack, it might be safe to say that they weren't thinking at all.
Intervista is an amazing film. It takes the shape of a fake documentary,
in
which Fellini looks at, and pokes fun at, his entire career. In the end it
is an homage, not to himself, as other reviewers have suggested, but to
film
itself. Praise for a medium which never ceases to amaze viewers and film
makers alike with it's capacity to project and create our dreams.
13 out of 14 people found the following review useful:
To sum up a life of film making, 8 November 1999
Author:
batzi8m1 from Watsonville, California
So to sum it all up, Fellini seems to be saying in this film, he lived for movies. Like a long train ride as a passenger, a lover, a player, a commentator he lived through it all and had his moments. When Marcello Mastroianni says to Anita Eckberg while watching the fountain scene from La Dolce Vita with the party at her mansion that for one moment they made magic, it seemed to sum it all up. For the actors, the film maker and for us the audience, there were moments that were magic. This film is a great movie makers collage of his memories of his life. If it had been cinematic itself it would have taken away from the message. Life at its very best can yield a few magic moments, and those lucky enough to make those moments of magic can appreciate the rest of it all that serves as the backdrop. Like the film studio around which Fellini's life revolved and which gave him all those great memories he shared with us here.
10 out of 10 people found the following review useful:
Elegiac "rememberance" of times past, great companion piece to "Amarcord", 26 May 2005
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Author:
roger-212 from United States
An elegiac look-back by the Maestro on where his films were shot
(Cinecitta), Intervista has the most meta-fictional plot devices
Fellini's used yet.
--It features Fellini himself, shooting a film "recounting" a location
(as in "Roma") but here he is more forefront. --The rather casual
stream-of-consciousness meandering of the happenings hearkens to
"Amarcord," which is similar to this, with a wistful look back on the
past, with fascists, bus rides, buxom women, etc. "Intervista" truly
seems like an alternate draft of "Amarcord" with Fellini personally
added. --The "young Fellini" going on an interview, being shot by
Fellini during an interview in present day, and the playful and
insistent 3rd-wall being broken every so often.
--And of course Marcello and Anita as themselves.
For fans of Fellini, this is an absolute must-see. Its reflection on
his work, himself, and making films makes it one of the most playful,
subversive, and autobiographical films in Fellini's late career.
(Originally a t.v. production, it displays a smaller scale that can
only be attributed to the budget (too bad) and a need to make things
"play" on a smaller screen. Although very similar to "A Director's
Notebook", another filmic essay (that was a rough draft for "Roma"),
this one is more assured and stands on its own. )
11 out of 12 people found the following review useful:
a magic, nostalgic film, 13 April 2003
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Author:
Jaap Parqui (jaapparqui@zonnet.nl) from Leiden, the Netherlands
Intervista is one of the best films I've ever seen. The strong sense in
all
Fellini films that reality is like a big, sad circus is even stronger in
this film because fact and fiction, past and present become so confused.
The
fictitious carnival appears to be reality. And isn't that maybe quite a
realistic view?
There is not only the usual sense of nostalgia: because the film looks
back
at decades of Fellini nostalgia, the nostalgia is double. Who can watch
the
older Anita and Marcello looking back at La Dolce Vita with dry eyes? The
only possible critic could be that the film is, like all Fellini movies,
little coherent, but then, isn't that as well like life
itself?
Intervista maybe isn't the most famous Fellini films, it certainly is one
of
the better ones and with that one of the best films in cinematographic
history.
9 out of 10 people found the following review useful:
Wow--such a low rating for such a nice little film!, 10 August 2007
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Author:
planktonrules from Bradenton, Florida
This was the second to last film the famed director, Fellini, made and
it was his most personal. Instead of being a traditional film, this is
much more like having a personal visit with him as he shows you around
Cinecittà Studios in Rome. Sometimes he talks to the camera (or in many
cases, the fictional Japanese crew interviewing him--a plot device to
represent the audience), sometimes you just watch somewhat random
scenes as they are shot and other times you watch Fellini and his
friends as they reminisce--such as when Marcello Mastroianni pops by
the set and Fellini, impulsively, takes him on a road trip to see Anita
Ekberg. While this all seems unscripted and at the spur of the moment,
it was all staged for the film but it has a real home movie quality
about it. At Ekberg's home, all of Fellini's guests view scenes from LA
DULCE VITA (starring Mastroianni and Ekberg) and there is a very strong
nostalgic air about the party.
The total effect of all these elements was a lot like climbing inside
Fellini's mind and it also gave a lot of amazing insights into the film
making process. Because of this it was a lot like Truffaut's DAY FOR
NIGHT, though a bit different because DAY FOR NIGHT stuck more to a
traditional script (a movie about a movie being filmed) and seemed a
lot less frivolous and fun. Fellini's is more of a "warts and all" and
appears to be more spontaneous and ad-libbed--though because of some of
the grand sets and the visit to Ekberg's, it obviously was staged to
look spontaneous. My advice is to see this film and DAY FOR NIGHT. DAY
FOR NIGHT is rated higher, but because of all the sentimentality of
INTERVISTA, I preferred it slightly.
While I have never been a huge fan of Fellini, I have seen most of his
films and really enjoyed having some insights into his psyche. Most of
it came as no surprise (such as the use of phallic imagery--Fellini's
sexuality was never repressed in his films), but some was very sweet
and charming. It was nice to see him as both director and actor--so why
is the film rated so poorly??!!
By the way, when the film was made, Miss Ekberg was 56 years-old and
Mr. Mastroianni was 63. I was rather irritated with an IMDb review that
complained about her being "obese" and him being "wrinkled". This was
cruel and shallow, as most women would die to look that ravishing at 56
and most men would love to be a charming old rogue at 63! What do you
expect at that age? Hmm? To quote Ekberg in a recent interview, "I'm
very much bigger than I was, so what? It's not really fatness, it's
development." Bravo.
PS--If you like this film, try watching Vincenzo Mollica's documentary
on the film that's included on the DVD for INTERVISTA. It does a nice
job of explaining some of the plot elements and features clips not only
from this movie but several other Fellini films. My favorite part was
learning that Miss Ekberg's plunge into the Trevi fountain in LA DULCE
VITA was done in February!!
7 out of 7 people found the following review useful:
In Which Fellini does for Cinecitta what he did for Rome in "Roma", 28 September 2004
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Author:
Chris Bright from London
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
"Intervista" means interview and naturally that's not at all what this
is.
Fellini does start off with a fictional interview with a Japanese TV
crew but the movie develops to include a recreation of his own first
trip to Cinecitta (as a journalist to interview a famous actress), a
look at the process of making a Fellini film, reminiscences of his own
previous movies, cinema in general and the music of Nino Rota,
sideswipes at TV and advertising and the silly questions asked by
journalists.
We jump about between several layers of 'reality' - the fake
'interview', the '30's recreation, the creation of that recreation,
real people playing more or less fictionalised versions of themselves.
At one point we have Fellini-surrogates Mastroianni and Rubini, and
Fellini himself, all in a car together.
The film lacks the epic sweep and spectacle of "Roma", perhaps due to
its genesis as a TV film, and much of it will mean little to those
unfamiliar with Fellini's earlier work. Nonetheless, there is much to
enjoy, from Rubini and Mastroianni's discussion of masturbation,
through the scenery-painters' rather blunt dialogue, to the rightly
acclaimed and very poignant scene of Mastroianni and Ekberg revisiting
"La Dolce Vita".
In fact the Mastroianni/Ekberg scene probably sums up the whole film -
a wistful look back at past glories and a perhaps rather rueful look at
where Fellini, and the rest of us, had arrived at by 1987.
7 out of 8 people found the following review useful:
The End of a Golden Era, 29 November 2008
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Author:
Claudio Carvalho from Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
While shooting a movie about his arrival to Cinecittà to interview a
famous star, Federico Fellini is interviewed by the Japanese
television. Fellini highlights and revisits the beginning of his career
portrayed by the young actor Sergio Rubini in the early 40's. Then he
casts new characters for his next movie, "Amerika", from Franz Kafka.
Later Marcello Mastroianni performing Mandrake visits Fellini and his
producers, cast and crew and together they pay a visit to Anita Ekberg
in her country cottage. Last but not the least, Fellini foresees the
end of the golden era to the cinema industry with the competition of
the television.
The beautiful and simple "Intervista" is a nostalgic "movie of a
documentary of a film-making" that envisions the increasing competition
to the television in this segment and consequent end of the golden era
of the cinema industry and mostly of the movie theaters. The climax of
the story is certainly with the unforgettable and most famous scene of
the Italian cinema with Marcello Mastroianni and Anita Ekberg in the
fountain of "La Dolce Vita". I would give a penny for the thoughts of
Anita and Marcello while seeing that magic moment of their youth again.
My vote is eight.
Title (Brazil): "Entrevista" ("Interview")
6 out of 9 people found the following review useful:
Mixed bag; brilliant moments, 5 October 1998
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Author:
Ron Geatz (rgeatz@aol.com) from Washington, DC
Watching Fellini's "Intervista" is a mixed bag--sadness, frustration because it is not better... coupled with moments of brilliance. I'm not sure there is a more poignant moment in the movies than the scene of a wrinkled Marcello Mastroianni and obese Anita Ekberg wistfully watching their former youthful black & white selves in "La Dolce Vita" being projected on a makeshift screen. That scene alone is a richly-charged commentary on time, memory, regret, self-delusion, love, missed opportunity, life and death--unlike any other I have ever seen.
1 out of 11 people found the following review useful:
Horrid, 12 September 2008
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Author:
Cosmoeticadotcom (cosmoetica@gmail.com) from United States
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
Old men tend to make art that is shallow, imitative of their earlier, better works, and which would never garner an ounce of praise were it not for their backlog of greater works somehow letting their patina still rub off. In America, the best proof of this nostrum is the awarding of the lifetime Academy Award to a film director, or actor. Apparently, Europe is not immune to such worthless laurels either, for, in 1987, Federico Fellini's disastrously bad film Intervista won the Cannes Film Festival's Fortieth Anniversary Award and the Grand Prize at the Moscow Film Festival. In it, one can see many pastiches from earlier Fellini films, much as Ingmar Bergman cribbed ideas and scenes from his earlier masterpieces for his disastrously bad last film Saraband, the way Akira Kurosawa tossed random ideas together for Dreams, and the way Woody Allen has constantly reworked themes from his 1970s and 1980s great films into his last decade's worth of mostly mediocrities. That said, even the worst of Allen's recent films, like The Curse Of The Jade Scorpion, were better than Intervista. Fellini might take some solace in the fact that Intervista is a better film than Bergman's incest-ridden Saraband, but it's a minor comfort, at best, and this shoddy film still falls well shy of even Dreams.
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