Italy drama
1954
bw 94 min.
Director: Federico Fellini
CLV: $49.95 - available
           1 disc, catalog # CC1129L
VHS: available from Home Vision Cinema
A low-key mood study about a broken-down carnival strongman and his
half-wit assistant traveling through the bleak backwaters of post-war
Italy wouldn't, at first glance,
appear to have much going for it in the way of international critical
and commercial appeal. But from the moment of its release in 1954, it was clear that La Strada
had everything.
An immediate box office hit, La
Strada won the Academy Award for Best Foreign Film. In Italy it catapulted its
director, Federico
Fellini, to the front ranks of that country's greatest filmmaking
talents. It revived the acting fortunes of its American star Anthony Quinn, and
made his co-star, Giulietta Masina, a world-wide sensation. Nino
Rota's haunting musical theme
for La Strada poured from countless radios, juke boxes and
record players. But far more important than these particulars of first
rank success was the simple fact that this uniquely bittersweet comedy-drama touched people's hearts in
a way few films have managed to do. And, there is no question that it
will continue to do so for years to come.
Federico Fellini began his
career working with a traveling theater troupe before becoming (in
succession) a radio gag writer, a cartoonist, a scriptwriter and
assistant for such established Italian talents as Roberto
Rossellini and Pietro Germi. His first features, The White
Sheik (1952) and I
Vitelloni (1953) suggested he
was aiming to establish himself as a comic filmmaker. La Strada
consequently came as a surprise.
The "Neo-realist"
school of filmmaking (Rossellini's Open City and DeSica's Bicycle
Thief) had accustomed critics and audiences to dealing with the darker and
more depressed areas of the post-war Italian scene, but La Strada was
different. These characters are certainly recognizable as human flotsam and
jetsam, but no one would call them "ordinary." Marginal in the extreme, they wind
their way across a landscape so barren as to resemble one of De Chirico's eerily
surrealistic canvases. Likewise, Fellini's treatment of their adventures and
interactions doesn't aim for a sense of commonality on the level usually
associated with naturalism. There's an odd touch of fantasy hanging about this
child-like waif and the sullen brute who keeps her, and more than a touch of the
magical to the circus high-wire walker known as The Fool, who they meet along the
way.
It is clear that Gelsomina (Giulietta Masina) is mentally retarded. It is
also clear that this mental state hasn't destroyed her sense of self. Zampano
(Anthony Quinn) may have bought her from her mother like a common slave, but it
is Gelsomina who comes to understand the world and her place in it, not her
brutish keeper. "Why do you want me?" Gelsomina asks Zampano -- she's not pretty,
she's not talented and he clearly doesn't love her. But it is also clear that a
man even on as low a level of the totem pole as Zampano needs something he can
call his own -- and that something is Gelsomina. The Fool (Richard Basehart)
helps Gelsomina come to grips with this fact, and her place in the world as well.
A catalyst in other characters' lives, he gives Gelsomina hope. But his merciless
teasing of the humorless Zampano precipitates the disaster that brings La
Strada to its tragic climax.
Fellini's treatment of all of this is
effortless and elegant. These particular characters may carry universal weight,
but they're never allowed to degenerate into cardboard symbols. Giulietta
Masina's clown-like face and comic timing inevitably recall Chaplin. But neither
the actress nor her director press the point. La Strada never presses any
point. Like the characters' realizations about themselves and the world, the
meaning of La Strada slips over you gradually, simply,
unforgettably.
Note: As two of the film's stars, Anthony Quinn and Richard
Basehart, were English-speaking performers, an English language version of La
Strada was prepared by the filmmakers and is presented here simultaneously
with the Italian one. If you press "Audio 1," you will hear the Italian language
version (in which Quinn and Basehart are dubbed) with English subtitles. On
"Audio 2," the English language version can be heard with Quinn and Basehart
speaking in their own voices, and the other performers dubbed into English. --
DAVID EHRENSTEIN
Credits
Director: Federico Fellini
Producers:
Carlo Ponti, Dino De Laurentiis
Screenplay: Federico Fellini, Tullio
Pinelli
Photography: Otello Martelli, A.I.C.
Editor: Leo Catozzo, Lina
Caterini
Sound: A. Calpini, R. Boggio
Music: Nino
Rota
Transfer
This edition of La Strada was transferred
from a 35mm master print. The soundtrack was mastered from the Italian language
and the English language tracks, on separate audio channels.