This major artistic biography of Federico Fellini shows how his
exuberant imagination has been shaped by popular culture,
literature, and his encounter with the ideas of C. G. Jung,
especially Jungian dream interpretation. Covering Fellini's entire
career, the book links his mature accomplishments to his first
employment as a cartoonist, gagman, and sketch-artist during the
Fascist era and his development as a leading neo-realist
scriptwriter. Peter Bondanella thoroughly explores key Fellinian
themes to reveal the director's growth not only as an artistic
master of the visual image but also as an astute interpreter of
culture and politics. Throughout the book Bondanella draws on a new
archive of several dozen manuscripts, obtained from Fellini and his
scriptwriters. These previously unexamined documents allow a
comprehensive treatment of Fellini's important part in the rise of
Italian neorealism and the even more decisive role that he played
in the evolution of Italian cinema beyond neorealism in the 1950s.
By probing Fellini's recurring themes, Bondanella reinterprets the
visual qualities of the director's body of work--and also discloses
in the films a critical and intellectual vitality often hidden by
Fellini's reputation as a storyteller and entertainer. After two
chapters on Fellini's precinematic career, the book covers all the
films to date in analytical chapters arranged by topic: Fellini and
his growth beyond his neorealist apprenticeship, dreams and
metacinema, literature and cinema, Fellini and politics, Fellini
and the image of women, and La voce della luna and the cinema of
poetry.
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