domingo, 13 de junio de 2010

La dolce vita (1960)

La dolce vita (1960) is a film directed by Federico Fellini. It is considered the film that marks the separation between his previous and subsequent neorealist Symbolist period.

Start with the Dolce Vita Fellini is talking about me as I go straight to The Dark Side of the Moon to talk about Pink Floyd, or start talking about songs of the Beatles Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds.

La Dolce Vita is certainly one of the most emblematic works of Fellini, it is also one where he began to create a style, or rather, a most unusual narrative, one that would mark the house in his later works.

La Dolce Vita tells the story of Marcello (played by Marcello Matroianni), a journalist specializing in Roman high society. Basically it is that, without many frills, has a number of different episodes but with some cause and effect relationships between them, over seven days, or rather, seven nights, from dusk until dawn.

A parade through its many characters, Fellini portrays the miseries of modern Roman society (60 years, eye), its decline and its contrast with traditional Italian life.
Marcello, in the midst of conflict between life in high society and his desire to transcend his true passion, literature, lead us by the hand along his journey, showing us a very naked vision of a society that is consumed in their own frivolity.



Fontana de Trevi, cinema style

0 comentarios:

Publicar un comentario