Fellini Satyricon
MGM/UA (1969)
Comedy, Drama, Fantasy, Foreign, Queer Themes/Interest, History, Music, Romance
In Collection
#557
7*
Seen ItYes
(9/6/2016 Home)
027616860408
IMDB   6.9
138 mins Italy / Latin
DVD  Region 1   US - R
Martin Potter Encolpio
Hiram Keller Ascilto
Max Born Gitone
Salvo Randone Eumolpo
Mario Romagnoli Trimalcione
Magali Noël Fortunata
Capucine 1931 Trifena
Alain Cuny Lica
Fanfulla Vernacchio
Danika La Loggia Scintilla
Giuseppe Sanvitale Abinna
Lucia Bose La matrona
Joseph Wheeler Il suicida
Hylette Adolphe La schiavetta
Tanya Lopert L'imperatore
Gordon Mitchell Il predone
Genius Hermeros / liberto arricchito
George Eastman Minotauro
Marcello Di Falco Proconsole
Elisa Mainardi Arianna
Donyale Luna Enotea
Carlo Giordana Il capitano
Marie Párová
Inna Alexeievna Old Woman
Carole André
Director/Choreographer
Federico Fellini
Producer Alberto Grimaldi
Writer/Composer Federico Fellini
Brunello Rondi
Bernardino Zapponi
Petronius
Cinematography Giuseppe Rotunno
Music Nino Rota
Tod Dockstader
Ilhan MIMAROGLU
Andrew RUDIN


A series of disjointed mythical tales set in first century Rome.
Edition Details
Release Date 2001
No. of Discs/Tapes 1
Personal Details
Purchase Date 9/4/2016
Location Personal Library
Owner Deitz
Store Amazon
Purchase Price $26.00
Links ++ Review: Jim Clark's Reviews
+ Review: NY Times (1970)
+ Review: Roger Ebert (2001)
• Wikipedia: Felini Satyricon
Fellini Satyricon at Core for Movies
TheMovieDb.org
IMDB

Notes
I viewed my first Fellini film in 1960, as a young college student attending the University of Maryland -- La Dolce Vida -- Now, over 55 years later, the event is still vivid in my mind -- I remember being totally confused, but in love with the film -- And with Fellina -- Certain scenes remain vivid in my mind -- But my life took a different path, and I did not revisit Fellini until many years later -- It came rushing back on viewing Fellini Satyricon -- Petronius's Satyricon was written during the Nero's reign, and what survives are largely disconnected fragments -- Fellini's Satyicon apparently is largely faithful to Petronius (with a couple of additions) which are then viewed through Fellini's imaginative genius --
The story begins with a prologue where two male student lovers (Encolpius and Ascyltus, Encolpius is ostensively the narrator), and a male slave youth (Gitón), lover to both), have a spat, decide to separate, and allow Gitón to chose which of the pair he will stay with -- He choses Ascylpius -- Encolpius is heartbroken --
The remainder of the film is basically Encolpius's road-trip of discovery -- Remember. Petronius' Satyricon is fragmentary and there is no connecting link between the scenes, much like visiting an gallery of a particular artist's work, going from picture to picture, and sensing that they are connected but that the connection is left to your imagination -- The joy is in each scene individually -- Like Petronius' manuscript, Fellini ends the film mid sentense.