The Michigan Daily - #uce4e., 4e. - Thursday, March 28, 1996 - 58 Fellini film festival hits Michigan Theater Italian director's spirit lives on through restored films By Neal C. Carruth Daily Arts Writer The spirit of Federico Fellini has descended upon Ann Arbor in the form of a month long retrospective of the late director's fascinating and i- fluential work. The Michigan Theater is one of just a handful of venues in the country to screen the carefully- restored prints spanning Fellini's en- tire career. Local audiences were given their first taste of the restored oeuvre last Friday with a screening of the Acad- emy Award winning "Amarcoiii" (1974). And this was but the first of the over 20 Fellini films that will be shown from the end of March to te middle of April at the Michigan The- ater. The restoration was initiated by Fellini, near the end of his life, be- cause of the poor condition of the original prints of his films. In particu- lar peril were prints from the 190s, like "Amarcord," whose once vibant colors had become dreary and washed- out. To undertake this monumetal and time-consuming task, which f- ten included returning to the origitnal negatives, Fellini enlisted his long- time friend, collaborator and adviser, Dr. Gianfranco Angelucci. Angelucci served as the dying director's surro- gate, returning the prints to their in- tended splendor and, in his words, "regenerating the Fellini inside rue." Sadly, the entire project was com- pleted only days after Fellini's death. In honor of Fellini's contribution to the art of film, Cinecitta Internatimnal, the Italian studio that produced most of his work, spearheaded this rtro- spective - which has already visited cities, including New York and Bos- ton. It was the work of the Italian Consulate in Detroit and othergrups, such as the University's Program in Film and Video Studies and the Michi- gan Theater Film Institute, that helped secure Ann Arbor's place as a stop on the tour. The Ann Arbor leg of the tour was distinguished by the presene of Angelucci, who attended the sceeen- ing of "Amarcord" and delivered re- marks, before the film, about his rela- tionship with Fellini. Earlier Friday afternoon, Angelucci spoke to me about Fellini's signifi- cance. "Fellini is a saint," he said. "The miracles of Fellini were the films. They were given to each of us to live our lives freer and more avare." Angelucci talked with reverence about Fellini, characterizing him not only as a saint, but also as a wizard and a magician. Angelucci first met "il maestro" after completing his thesis on the films of Fellini at the Art Institute of Bolo- gna in 1969. He assisted in the riting of several sequences of Felini's "Roma" (1972). From that time for- ward, he had an intimate role in the production of Fellini's films, contrib- uting both ideas and dialogue. Angelucci says this gave him fain op- portunity to share my life with Fadlini." Even while pursuing his own side projects in television, film and teach- ing, Angelucci was always closely involved with Fellini's work. This collaboration reached its pinnacle in 1987 when Angelucci wrote the en- tire screenplay for "Intervista." Both Angelucci and Fellini grew Director Federico Fellini is shown here working his magic on the film "Intervista." up in eastern Italy, Fellini in the sea- side resort town of Rimini. He was born there in 1920 and experienced a strict Catholic upbringing under the specter of Benito Mussolini's fascist regime. Fellini's childhood was domi- nated by an active imagination that manifested itself in interests in the circus, movies, comic strips and draw- ing. After aborted careers as a car- toonist and journalist, Fellini entered the film industry as a gag writer and script doctor. It was following the Allied libera- tion of Italy that Fellini began his collaboration with Roberto Rosselini on works such as "Open City" (1945). This partnership made it clear to Fellini that films have the potential for extraordinary power. He realized that he wanted to spend the rest of his life'in the cinema. Over the course of his career, Fellini won four Academy Awards for Best Foreign Film: For"La Strada" (1956), "The Nights of Cabria" (1957), "8 1/ 2" (1963), and "Amarcord" (1974). And in 1993, less than a year before his death, Fellini was honored by the Academy with a Lifetime Achieve- ment Award. He had developed a care- fully cultivated visual world that be- spoke the co-existence of an enchant- ing, lost innocence and a jaded, aloof sophistication. Fellini's work precipitated the ad- dition of the term "Fellini-esque" to the vocabulary of film. This notion gets at the sublime moments in his work when a startling or unusual ele- ment invades the taken-for-granted order of everyday life. One such in- stance in "Amarcord" is when a pea- cock suddenly displays its plume in the middle of a snow storm. In many ways "Amarcord" was the ideal film with which to start the fes- tival. This largely autobiographical tale of coming-of-age in fascist Italy has the mark of many traits that iden- tify Fellini's distinctive style. In full effect is Fellini's concern with vital- ity, an attribute notably missing in the work of some of the director's more self-consciously cerebral contempo- raries (i.e., Bergman). Also present is the aforementioned interest in images that have a phantas- magoric or hallucinatory power. And perhaps most telling is the extent to which the narrative is drawn from Fellini's own adolescence in pre-war Italy. Fellini, who once said that "the pearl is the autobiography of the oys. ter," saw all art as inextricably bound up with the artist's life. He therefore created numerous works that must have resonated for him in personal ways. Despite the intimacy of theme in Fellini, there are universal concerns present with which all viewers can relate. Indeed, his stature in Italy, at the time of his death, was unlike that which we generally accord artists in the United States. It is best evoked by Angel ucci, who said, that for 16 hours, more than 100,000 people filed through Fellini's favored Cinecitta studio, where his funeral was held. The music of Nino Rota, a longtime Fellini collaborator, resounded while the mourners "walked slowly to have only a mo- ment to stop and express their grati- tude to this big soul that was disap- pearing." 715 N. Ural roUniverssty 662-4Fr00 g I I DeliCiouress p/hbice. C~roisantAll Natural Frozen Dessert Mufn, oke, cnsFat Free 9 Calories per Ounce TOr wrk talCholesterol Free Low Lactose EYE EXAMS & EYE GLASSES POL*RamL LE GIORGIO ARMANI ~'' MARTY'S M ENSWEAR & FORMALWEAR CALVIN KLEIN e y e w e a r V STUDENT DISCOUNTS 320 S. State (Below Decker Drugs) " 6620194 rr The Michigan League Arr+c Fntrpa +4 and M-Carr ' please help us CELEBRATE OUR 27TH ANNIVERSARY! 4 DAYS ONLY THURSDAY MARCH 28TH - SUNDAY 31ST Every item in our store will be REDUCED.* ------------------- .- nu I