Tuesday, May 07, 2019

8 1/2

Fellini’s great film 8 1/2 (1963) is a dreamlike, surreal vision of a director, Guido Anselmo (Marcello Mastroianni), at mid-career and mid-life.  He fears he has exhausted his creative impulse and that he has nothing left to say.  His marriage is a shambles, and his wife is ready for divorce. When the film begins, after a dreamlike scene in which he is trapped in his car filling up with gas on an expressway, while everyone in the cars around him stare at him ominously, he is staying at a sanatorium or a rest home.  Either he recovering from nervous exhaustion or is an alcoholic trying to dry out. Though he is there for a rest, to recover, his entire film crew seems to have accompanied him, especially his producers, who are pressuring him to make decisions and to choose a cast for a new film.
Everyone is pressuring Guido—guilt about his marriage, memories of his parents and their extractions, childhood memories, women he has slept with or is sleeping with.  These figures appear and disappear, mostly in Guido’s fevered imagination, sometimes in reality.
Everyone is trying to compel Guido to do or be something he is not.  That struggle between the expectations and desires of others, in conflict with his own self, is at the core of the film.
8 1/2 doesn’t distinguish among dreams, memories, hallucinations, fantasies.  One can sometimes tell the difference, but not always, and such distinctions are irrelevant in the film—all these impressions and sensation, real or imagined, make up Guido’s life. He contends with them all.
Guido’s struggle is with his authentic self and his impulses.  As a director, he is constantly creating fictions, illusions, lies.  He lies to everyone constantly, including his wife, his producers, and women he wants to seduce (he suggests that there is a role for them in his films). He lies to himself.  The film he is being pressured to make involves a rocket ship and a plot about people in a post-atomic apocalyptic world escaping to another planet.  It’s not entirely clear to me whether the film is a genuine plan or a kind of inauthentic joke, the sort of commercial film his producers believe will earn money.  He doesn’t seem to think much of the film itself, but he feels pressured to make it. Symbols and images of fiction abound: masks, backdrops, portraits, clowns, the huge artificial launch tower from which the movie rocket ship is supposed to launch.
It’s difficult not to suppose that 8 1/2 is Fellini’s self-critique.  I don’t know  whether there is a factual basis for that notion, but Guido’s role as a famous director like Fellini supports the idea. The film that Guido is trying to make (or avoid making) is his own self-critique as well.  It uses material from his own life, his marriage, his doubts.  So that 8 1/2 is a meta film twice over: a director’s critique of his life and vocation in the form of a film about an artist making a film that is his own self-critique.
Cinematography is a major aspect of this film.  Fellini especially favors long shots down hallways or in a forest or an enclosed square. I never fully appreciated Marcello Mastroianni until I saw this film: he inhabits his character fully. Nina Rota’s score is a strong element as well.
The final scene is intriguingly glorious. This great film alone justifies Fellini’s reputation. It has influenced such filmmakers as Robert Altman, David Lynch,  Woody Allen, Terry Gilliam, and many others.[1]

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