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8½

  • 1963
  • T
  • 2h 18min
VALUTAZIONE IMDb
8,0/10
130.224
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
POPOLARITÀ
2844
151
Marcello Mastroianni, Anouk Aimée, Claudia Cardinale, Rossella Falk, Sandra Milo, and Barbara Steele in 8½ (1963)
Trailer for 8 1/2
Riproduci trailer1:57
4 video
99+ foto
Commedia darkDramma del mondo dello spettacoloDramma psicologicoEpicoDramma

Un regista cinematografico tormentato si ritira tra i suoi ricordi e le sue fantasie.Un regista cinematografico tormentato si ritira tra i suoi ricordi e le sue fantasie.Un regista cinematografico tormentato si ritira tra i suoi ricordi e le sue fantasie.

  • Regia
    • Federico Fellini
  • Sceneggiatura
    • Federico Fellini
    • Ennio Flaiano
    • Tullio Pinelli
  • Star
    • Marcello Mastroianni
    • Anouk Aimée
    • Claudia Cardinale
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • VALUTAZIONE IMDb
    8,0/10
    130.224
    LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
    POPOLARITÀ
    2844
    151
    • Regia
      • Federico Fellini
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Federico Fellini
      • Ennio Flaiano
      • Tullio Pinelli
    • Star
      • Marcello Mastroianni
      • Anouk Aimée
      • Claudia Cardinale
    • 342Recensioni degli utenti
    • 148Recensioni della critica
    • 93Metascore
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
    • Vincitore di 2 Oscar
      • 19 vittorie e 9 candidature totali

    Video4

    8 1/2
    Trailer 1:57
    8 1/2
    8 1/2
    Trailer 4:01
    8 1/2
    8 1/2
    Trailer 4:01
    8 1/2
    8 1/2 NEW Trailer
    Trailer 1:59
    8 1/2 NEW Trailer
    '8 1/2' Anniversary Mashup
    Video 1:01
    '8 1/2' Anniversary Mashup

    Foto214

    Visualizza poster
    Visualizza poster
    Visualizza poster
    Visualizza poster
    Visualizza poster
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    Visualizza poster
    + 207
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    Interpreti principali82

    Modifica
    Marcello Mastroianni
    Marcello Mastroianni
    • Guido Anselmi
    Anouk Aimée
    Anouk Aimée
    • Luisa Anselmi
    • (as Anouk Aimee)
    Claudia Cardinale
    Claudia Cardinale
    • Claudia
    Sandra Milo
    Sandra Milo
    • Carla
    Rossella Falk
    Rossella Falk
    • Rossella
    Barbara Steele
    Barbara Steele
    • Gloria Morin
    Madeleine Lebeau
    Madeleine Lebeau
    • Madeleine - l'attrice francese
    Caterina Boratto
    Caterina Boratto
    • La signora misteriosa
    Eddra Gale
    Eddra Gale
    • La Saraghina
    • (as Edra Gale)
    Guido Alberti
    • Pace - il produttore
    Mario Conocchia
    • Conocchia - il direttore di produzione
    Bruno Agostini
    • Bruno - il secondo segretario di produzione
    Cesarino Miceli Picardi
    • Cesarino - l'ispettore di produzione
    Jean Rougeul
    Jean Rougeul
    • Carini - il critico cinematografico
    Mario Pisu
    • Mario Mezzabotta
    Yvonne Casadei
    • Jacqueline Bonbon
    Ian Dallas
    Ian Dallas
    • Il partner della telepata
    Mino Doro
    Mino Doro
    • L'agente di Claudia
    • Regia
      • Federico Fellini
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Federico Fellini
      • Ennio Flaiano
      • Tullio Pinelli
    • Tutti gli interpreti e le troupe
    • Produzione, botteghino e altro su IMDbPro

    Recensioni degli utenti342

    8,0130.2K
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    Recensioni in evidenza

    9kyle_c

    Fascinating

    I certainly wouldn't be saying anything new if I said that "8 1/2" is one of the most unique, fascinating, and personal pieces ever committed to film. It has consistently hailed as such, and its influence on film is far reaching and undeniable. It is certainly not one of the most entertaining movies of all time, and is actually quite long and difficult. But it is an incredible piece of filmmaking, and a gripping look at the difficulties of creating not just a movie, but art in general.

    Guido (Marcello Mastroianni) is a popular movie director who is working on his new film. Along the way, he struggles with his screenwriter, producer, wife, and mistress. Each presents a different problem and obstacle. More and more difficulties arise, not just in his attempts to complete the movie, but in his own mind.

    Guido, although flawed, is completely fleshed out, and draws sympathy from the audience. Yes, he is an adulterer, but he loves his wife. We see all of his personal desires and agony. We see how he suffers when he struggles with his desire to create the ultimate piece of art, one that offers something to everybody.

    The movie is technically wonderful. The movement of the camera, the lighting, and the direction in general is top notch. The movie mixes in dreams with reality to create a dreamlike world, and put us closer into Guido's own mind.

    Somebody who is looking for a movie as a two hour piece of entertainment will not enjoy this. But if you enjoy a movie that truly satisfies when it is finished, this is for you. It is quite long, and somewhat loose, but that is part of the interest. Moviemakers, or artists in general, will find that this film has a great deal to offer.
    Lechuguilla

    A Five Martini Cinematic Experience

    Intellectuals have written volumes on this strange film by Italian New Wave director, Federico Fellini. I am not an intellectual, so my review will be brief. At its most basic, "8 1/2" (a.k.a. "Otto e mezzo") concerns Guido, a film director (supposedly a surrogate for Fellini himself), who is having what amounts to a midlife crisis. Guido is frustrated in his film-making, and by his relations with other people in his life. But the film's story does not proceed in a traditional, linear fashion. Fellini more or less abandons logical narration, in favor of "open form" narration, wherein the story's causal chain of events is broken.

    Thus, trying to figure out what is going on in this film can be hard. Guido's fantasies, memories, dreams, and reality co-mingle in a kind of cinematic stew. Fellini presents viewers with a kaleidoscope of surreal B&W images of ordinary objects and eccentric, chattering characters which interact with Guido and with each other, in ways that defy logic, and give breathtaking meaning to the term symbolism. Followers of psychologist Carl Jung would have a field day. In style, the film is flamboyant. In substance, the film is maddeningly subliminal. And yet, even the most metallic cynic, Pauline Kael notwithstanding, must surely appreciate the rareness of Fellini's probing introspection.

    Given the bizarre, unstructured content of "8 1/2", I wonder about the issue of necessity. Suppose Fellini had added an extra ten minutes to the screenplay, or deleted ten minutes. Would that have made any difference? Apart from Guido, if this or that character had been deleted, how would that have changed the story's significance? And if, as some have suggested, the film is a mirror image of Fellini's own confused psyche, can the story be construed as an intuition of his future film-making?

    "Otto e mezzo" is not for everyone. Like a Zen koan, "8 1/2" invites frustration. It is above all else a celebration of ambiguity and abstraction, a cinematic experience to ponder, especially on the heels of four or five martinis ... or 8 1/2, if you really want to induce immense intellectual insight. Cheers.
    10gftbiloxi

    A Masterpiece

    Frederico Fellini's masterwork 8 ½ is difficult to approach largely because of its reputation. Many critics also state that the film is so complex that it requires multiple viewings to understand, and this is likely to intimidate many viewers. But in truth, and in spite of its surrealistic flourishes, 8 ½ is more straight-forward than its reputation might lead you to believe.

    The storyline itself is very simple. A famous director is preparing a new film, but finds himself suffering from creative block: he is obsessed by, loves, and feels unending frustration with both art and women, and his attention and ambition flies in so many different directions that he is suddenly incapable of focusing on one possibility lest he negate all others. With deadlines approaching the cast and crew descend upon him demanding information about the film--information that the director does not have because he finds himself incapable of making an artistic choice.

    What makes the film interesting is the way in which Fellini ultimately transforms the film as a whole into a commentary on the nature of creativity, art, mid-life crisis, and the battle of the sexes. Throughout the film, the director dreams dreams, has fantasies, and recalls his childhood--and this internal life is presented on the screen with the same sense of reality as reality itself. The staging of the various shots is unique; one is seldom aware that the characters have slipped into a dream, fantasy, or memory until one is well into the scene, and as the film progresses the lines between external life and internal thought become increasingly blurred, with Fellini giving as much (if not more) importance to fantasy as to fact.

    The performances and the cinematography are key to the film's success. Even when the film becomes surrealistic, fantastic, the actors perform very realistically and the cinematography presents the scene in keeping with what we understand to be the reality of the characters lives and relationships. At the same time, however, the film has a remarkably poetic quality, a visual fluidity and beauty that transforms even the most ordinary events into something slightly tinged by a dream-like quality. Marcello Mastroianni offers a his greatest performance here, a delicate mixture of desperation and ennui, and he is exceptionally well supported by a cast that includes Claudia Cardinale, Anouk Aimee, and a host of other notables.

    I would encourage people not to be intimidated by the film's reputation, for its content can be quickly grasped. When critics state the film requires repeated viewing what they actually seem to mean is that the film holds up extremely well to repeated viewing; each time it is seen, one finds more and more to enjoy and to contemplate. Even so, I would be amiss if I did not point out that people who prefer a cinema of tidy plot lines and who dislike ambiguity or the necessity of interpreting content will probably dislike 8 ½ a great deal. For all others: strongly, strongly recommended.

    Gary F. Taylor, aka GFT, Amazon Reviewer
    8amaklp

    8½/10

    What can anyone say about this film? It's one of a kind, and simple words can't really describe it.

    The famous Italian director Federico Fellini presents us the journey of the highly surrealistic thoughts of a filmmaker, who suffers from, what we could call, Director's block. The protagonist, who seems constantly tired, is surrounded by many different people, friends, associates, priests and mostly... women; struggling with his weird fantasies of the current events of his life and memories of his childhood. All of these scenes take place in many different phantasmagoric sets, where multiple, for the most part random, conversations occur simultaneously, making him continually engaged and, in a way, frustrated.

    The production design is exceptional, with huge sets and dreamlike settings, while the cinematography (Fellini's last black and white film) is very unique and teases the viewer with alternate focusing and artsy compositions. The music theme is for the most part classical symphonies from Tchaikovsky, Wagner and Chopin, beautifully edited with the rhythm of the film.

    This is a drama with many subtle doses of comedy and a surreal analysis of the thoughts, relationships, affairs, fears, dreams and memories of the protagonist. Some viewers can find a bit annoying the randomness of the script and editing, where mostly unexplained things occur, but others can completely immerse in this insane trip and fully enjoy it.

    If you've seen some movies of Charlie Kaufman, a good explanation of what to expect is a wedding between Adaptation and Synecdoche, New York. If you haven't seen any of those, then you can go ahead and experience something you've never had before!
    buster-crashtestdummy

    "I really have nothing to say, but I want to say it anyway".

    Fellini's films is one of the main reasons I came to love movies in the first place. I first saw 8 1/2 several years ago. I remember it quite clearly: I went to see it with a small group of fellow students at a friend's house. It was at the beginning of a now already long-since destroyed relationship. It was a cold day in early January. As the film started, a girl who was there, who happened to be a make-up artist and hairdresser by profession, remarked on the odd juxtaposition in the opening scenes of hair-styles and dresses from different eras, the 30's and the 60's. Surely, this was a strange anachrony?

    My friend calmly remarked: "Time doesn't exist."

    Heck, I won't pretend to know just what he meant by that, perhaps it wasn't as profound as it sounded. In any case, after that, no one spoke. For the next couple of hours, I certainly lost track of place and time, as I was hypnotized, mesmerized and amazed by the images on the screen. Since then, I've always kept a copy of it within reach (even though I am one of those people who can usually never hang on to my possessions for any length of time), and it has lost none of its power to continually amaze me. I've seen it more times than I can count, and yet, it must always be seen again. It's a movie about which everything seems to have been said, and yet, everything still remains to be said. Thanks to the wonders of DVDs and MPEG encoding, I can keep it one mouse-click away whenever I'm working on my computer. I must admit that by now, its already from the outset discontinuous and jumbled content has been spread all over the place for me. Unlike Woody Allen, I'm not anal. I've never had a compulsion to have to watch movies straight from beginning to end, without interruptions. Of course, that's how I watched 8 1/2 the first few times, but now it seems that I'm always chopping it up, skipping at will between my favorite sections, always moving around it and rearranging it in new and unexpected ways. I hope Fellini, in his Heaven, forgives me for it, because it seems to me that I'm in a way just continuing what he began. 8 1/2, even in its purest state, does of course blow the traditional temporal narrative, with a defined beginning, middle and end and a causal relationship between its parts, to complete smithereens, and in the jumbled landscape that is left behind, nothing can ever be as it was before, as what we are left with is a completely new world, of new possibilities and new kinds of beauty. It's a story of dream-logic, held together by different kinds of connections that transcend temporal sequence and causal relationships. It's a film that never begins, and still has always been there.

    It's a movie about the most glorious success that can only be brought around through complete failure. It's about how we can only find ourselves when we let go of ourselves - and discover that the only place we can fall is into ourselves, our true selves. It's the ultimate self-referential masterpiece, and the ultimate piece of self-reference, as it is, of course, about nothing except itself.

    It really is, in my opinion, the best movie in the world, and by now I can't even imagine a world without it. That's really all I want to say.

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    Trama

    Modifica

    Lo sapevi?

    Modifica
    • Quiz
      8½ (1963) was shot, like almost all Italian movies at the time, completely without sound recording on set. All dialogue was dubbed during post production. Federico Fellini was known for shouting direction at his actors during shooting, and for rewriting dialogue afterwards, making a lot of the dialogue in the movie appear out-of-sync. (Source: High-def Digest)
    • Blooper
      When Guido visits the cardinal in the mud bath, the cardinal is sitting in a chair, fully dressed in his cassock, as two attendants use a sheet to form a curtain around him; however, as the camera cuts to a closer angle, the cardinal is suddenly undressed to the waist.
    • Citazioni

      Claudia: I don't understand. He meets a girl that can give him a new life and he pushes her away?

      Guido: Because he no longer believes in it.

      Claudia: Because he doesn't know how to love.

      Guido: Because it isn't true that a woman can change a man.

      Claudia: Because he doesn't know how to love.

      Guido: And above all because I don't feel like telling another pile of lies.

      Claudia: Because he doesn't know how to love.

    • Versioni alternative
      In the American theatrical release version, Rodgers & Hart's "Blue Moon" can be heard twice: the first time, when it's played by strolling strings near the shopping plaza where Guido meets up with his wife, Luisa; the second time, when Guido goes out for a drive with the "real" Claudia. However, in the original Italian release, the song played in both scenes is "Sheik of Araby." The Criterion laserdisc features "Blue Moon," but it's "Sheik of Araby" on the DVD, possibly due to the use of different source materials.
    • Connessioni
      Edited into Bellissimo: Immagini del cinema italiano (1985)
    • Colonne sonore
      The Ride of the Valkyries
      from "Die Walküre"

      Composed by Richard Wagner

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    Dettagli

    Modifica
    • Data di uscita
      • 16 febbraio 1963 (Italia)
    • Paesi di origine
      • Italia
      • Francia
    • Siti ufficiali
      • Gaumont (France)
      • Official site
    • Lingue
      • Italiano
      • Francese
      • Inglese
      • Tedesco
    • Celebre anche come
      • La bella confusione
    • Luoghi delle riprese
      • Tivoli, Roma, Lazio, Italia(location)
    • Aziende produttrici
      • Cineriz
      • Francinex
    • Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro

    Botteghino

    Modifica
    • Lordo Stati Uniti e Canada
      • 245.681 USD
    • Fine settimana di apertura Stati Uniti e Canada
      • 11.947 USD
      • 11 apr 1999
    • Lordo in tutto il mondo
      • 347.423 USD
    Vedi le informazioni dettagliate del botteghino su IMDbPro

    Specifiche tecniche

    Modifica
    • Tempo di esecuzione
      • 2h 18min(138 min)
    • Colore
      • Black and White
    • Mix di suoni
      • Mono
    • Proporzioni
      • 1.85 : 1

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