
| I vitelloni | |
|---|---|
Italian theatrical poster |
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| Directed by | Federico Fellini |
| Produced by | Jacques Bar Mario De Vecchi Lorenzo Pegoraro |
| Written by | Screenplay: Federico Fellini Ennio Flaiano Story: Ennio Flaiano Tullio Pinelli Federico Fellini |
| Starring | Franco Interlenghi Alberto Sordi Franco Fabrizi Leopoldo Trieste Riccardo Fellini |
| Music by | Nino Rota |
| Cinematography | Carlo Carlini Otello Martelli Luciano Trasatti |
| Editing by | Rolando Benedetti |
| Distributed by | Janus Films |
| Release date(s) | August 26, 1953 (Premiere at Venice) |
| Running time | 103 minutes |
| Country | Italy France |
| Language | Italian |
I vitelloni (1953) is an Italian and French comedy drama film directed by Federico Fellini. The plot was initially written by Ennio Flaiano and was based on the life of a group of young men in Pescara (Flaiano's hometown). Fellini decided to adapt the plot of the movie in his hometown of Rimini that, like Pescara, is a small coastal town on the Adriatic Sea.[1]
The film centers around a group of five young men in the small town: skirt chaser Fausto, intellectual Leopoldo, child-like Alberto, thoughtful and mature Moraldo, and background player Riccardo.
This was Federico Fellini's first successful motion picture after the critical and commercial flop of his second film The White Sheik (1952). It also brought Alberto Sordi to fame, who had suffered from his title role in The White Sheik.
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The film opens with a beach-side beauty pageant. The winner, Sandra (Leonora Ruffo), suddenly becomes upset and faints, and it is revealed that she is pregnant. The father is skirt chaser Fausto (Franco Fabrizi), who, under pressure from his father, has little choice other than to marry her. After the wedding and honeymoon, Fausto gets a job and settles down with Sandra.
He cannot give up his old ways, though, and constantly pursues other women, sometimes even in his wife's presence. She eventually gets fed up with this and takes the baby and runs away.
Fausto and the other guys go on a desperate search across the countryside for her. In the end, Fausto is reunited with his wife and child, and all is well.
As this is going on, the other members of the group are involved in various other activities, mostly involving partying and women.
At the end of the film, when Moraldo is saying good-bye to the young boy from the train, his line, "Good-bye, Guido" is actually the dubbed voice of Fellini. It is believed that he did this to emphasize the fact that the film was autobiographical.
Fellini had to fight with the producers in order to cast Alberto Sordi in this film. After The White Sheik it was believed that the general public had no interest in this actor, and that his face on the posters would be bad for ticket sales. Fellini also had to fight with Alberto Sordi himself since the actor had decided to leave movies altogether and pursue his stage career instead. After I vitelloni was released the audience fell in love with his performance and from there began the career of one of post-war Italy's most significant and popular comedians.
The film's title literally translates into "big calves," this is in reference to the protagonists of the film who, although thirty-somethings, and therefore old enough to be considered "ox," still haven't settled down nor found a job nor have any intention of doing so, and therefore still act like very old (or "big") "calves," hence the name."[2]
Yet, LaSalle's declaratory definition is misleading especially when the word 'vitelloni' does not "literally translate into 'big calves'" but instead into 'big intestine.' The origin of the film's title is to be found in a 1971 letter by Ennio Flaiano who co-wrote the screenplay with Fellini and Tullio Pinelli. Flaiano wrote, "I believe the term is a corruption of the word 'vudellone', the big intestine, or a person who eats a lot. It was a way of describing the family son who only ate but never 'produced' - like an intestine, waiting to be filled." [3] This definition by Flaiano was confirmed by Tullio Pinelli in a 2001 filmed research interview for the documentary, Fellini: I'm a Born Liar (2002). Pinelli explains that the "dialectical neologism 'vitellone' was based on 'vudellone' which meant a 'large intestine' in Pescara, Flaiano's hometown."[4]
When the film was re-released in 2003 a slew of critics once again reviewed the film. Mick LaSalle, who writes for the San Francisco Chronicle, said, "It's a film of sensitivity, observation and humor - a must-see for Fellini enthusiasts and a worthwhile investment for everyone else. Those less taken by the maestro may find I vitelloni to be a favorite among his works."[5]
The Chicago Tribune's critic Michael Wilmington was happy the film had been re-released, and wrote, "In Italy, this remains one of Fellini's most consistently loved movies. It should be in America as well - a mistake one hopes will be rectified by the newly restored re-release by Kino International opening Friday at the Music Box. If you still remember that terrific drunk scene, Alberto Sordi's pre-Some Like It Hot drag tango or the way the little boy balances on the train track at the end, you should know that this picture plays as strongly now as it did in 1956 or whenever you first saw it. I know I had a ball watching I vitelloni again. It reminded me of the old gang."[6]
The film was first presented at the Venice Film Festival on August 26, 1953. It opened wide in the country on September 17, 1953. In France it opened on April 23, 1954.
In the United States it opened wide on November 7, 1956. The picture was re-released in various countries in mid 2003.
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