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¡El fantástico mundo de Fellini en su obra maestra!
Historia de un hombre que un día se da cuenta de que apenas reconoce a las personas con las que ha vivido durante años, hasta el punto de que su propia esposa e hijos le parecen extraños y todo lo que lo rodea le resulta opaco e indiferente. Se lanza entonces a la búsqueda desesperada de algún punto de referencia para recuperar su identidad y no hundirse en el caos. Emprende así, a través de las ilimitadas regiones de la memoria, un viaje que lo conduce a la infancia, a la época en que era un niño que vivía en un pequeño pueblo costero; a la Italia de los años treinta, cuando el fascismo había alcanzado el punto culminante de su apogeo.
Avis de la communauté (4)
At first I thought it was a badly aged film that tries to portray the life of a people from a fascist Italy. However, little by little, one enters the film and notices that it does not matter the year in which you see them. They are the phases of life, or in other words: how ridiculous our existence is, how we let go out sexual impulses in youth, our absurd ideologies. I don't know how to explain it, however I can see a subtle criticism hidden. I mean, it does not matter when it is recorded, this kind of films will always be "old", because we have the impression of living in the "future", of being the modern generation, but it only changes our environment, because as far as we are concerned as humans ... _nihil novum sub sole_.
Like a warm nostalgia blanket, even for a period I have no experience or familiarity with. This felt like Uncle Fellini just telling stories and I was sort of here for it and sort of not.
Feels like watching someone’s memory projected on screen: absurd, nostalgic, messy, and beautiful. Amarcord isn’t about plot or structure. It’s about vibes, people, feelings, and Fellini’s magic way of turning chaos into cinema. Maybe not his strongest film, but definitely one of his most personal. The characters are exaggerated, the tone jumps between comedy and melancholy, and the narrative is loose. Yet somehow, it all works. It’s a love letter to a past that may have never existed, but still feels familiar. A film you don’t need to understand. Just experience it.
Summit film of all Fellini's concerns.