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| Marcello Mastroianni | Guido Anselmi |
| Claudia Cardinale | Claudia |
| Anouk Aimée | Luisa Anselmi |
| Sandra Milo | Carla |
| Rossella Falk | Rossella |
| Madeleine Le Beau | French Actress |
| Mario Pisu | Mezzabotta |
| Barbara Steele | Gloria Morin |
| Neil Robinson | Agent for French actor |
| Mino Doro | Claudia's agent |
| Eugene Walter | The Journalist |
| Eugene Walter | The Journalist |
| Gilda Dahlberg | Journalist's Wife |
| Annie Gorassini | Producer's Girl Friend |
| Ian Dallas | Mindreader |
| Guido Alberti | The Producer |
| Mario Conocchia | Producer |
| Cesarino Miceli Picardi | Production Inspector |
| John Stacy | Accountant |
| Mark Herron | Luisa's Admirer |
| Rosellin Como | Friend |
| Matilda Calnan | Older Journalist |
| Eddra Gale | La Saraghina |
| Georgia Simmons | Anselmi's grandmother |
| Edy Vessel | Model |
| Annibale Ninchi | Anselmi's Father |
| Giuditta Rissone | Anselmi's Mother |
| Maria Antonietta Beluzzi | Screen-Test Candidate for La Saraghina |
| Caterina Boratto | Fashionable Woman |
| Olimpia Cavalli | Miss Olympia |
| Dina de Santis | Two Young Girls in Bed |
| Tito Massini | The Cardinal |
| Polidor | Clown in the Parade |
| Jean Rougeul | Writer |
| Federico Fellini | Director, Screenwriter |
| Leo Cattozzo | Editor |
| Otello Fava | Makeup |
| Ennio Flaiano | Screenwriter |
| Piero Gherardi | Costumes/Costume Designer, Production Designer |
| Adrianna Olasio | Editor |
| Tullio Pinelli | Screenwriter |
| Angelo Rizzoli | Producer |
| Brunello Rondi | Screenwriter |
| Nino Rota | Score Composer |
| Gianni Di Venanzo | Cinematographer |
| Lina Wertmüller | Asst. Director |
I've become a bigger fan of Federico Fellini, but not because of this film. While the film drones on for what seems like forever, the audience follows the trials and tribulations of the director/producer of a proposed film. That is, the movie is a film about film . . . confused?
Well, add to this Fellini's penchant for symbolism, and you end up with an almost Bergmanesque montage that just won't go away. I've loved film for years, but one of the greatest attributes of a film is its evanescence. A good movie should appear, present its story/philosophy/plot, then get out of the way.
Like a lengthy infomercial, 8-1/2 seems to go on and on and on, while the audience is subjected to Fellini's dream sequences, fantasy characters, and a psychoanalysis of Mastroianni's character.
For cinemaphiles who have been this route before, suffice it to say that I would rather sit through Bergman's "Scenes from a Marriage" three times, than try to endure 8-1/2 again . . .
1 out of 2 people found this review helpful.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.Anonymous
Posted October 1, 2010
In 8 1/2, Fellini had created an abstract composition --a making of a film within a film. Mercello (Fellini's alter-ego) is commissioned to make a film; altho (like in Woody Allen's Stardust Memories) he wants the film to have ''meaning.'' He doesn't want his pics to cater to general moviegoers, an interesting foreshadow of the US movie industry today --altho Fellini didn't specifically intend this. A nice yet overlong climax where Fellini represents life as a circus. Altho an amusing film,it is extremely difficult to watch Fellini's masterwork. It took me several viewings to enjoy (& understand ) this film. But like many great cinematic works, several viewings are necessary. Therefore, we can distingush from what we call a film to a movie; respectively, education from entertainment. Not to say that 8 1/2 was simply pedagogic. A lot of humorous anecdotes make there way in this picture. But movie people would feel awkward watching a film like 8 1/2. Unless, you are a ''cinema'' buff. . . give it a try.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.Anonymous
Posted January 14, 2010
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Posted December 25, 2008
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Posted September 24, 2009
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Posted October 27, 2008
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Posted July 27, 2010
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Posted November 7, 2011
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Posted July 24, 2010
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Posted June 30, 2010
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Posted October 25, 2008
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Posted January 14, 2010
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Posted January 26, 2010
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Posted November 10, 2010
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Posted November 6, 2010
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