Film Review
One of the great paradoxes of Federico Fellini is that he would end up
making a film about a man for whom he had next to no sympathy, and
would spend three years and exhaust a colossal budget in doing
so. That film,
Casanova,
was to be the most problematic of Fellini's career. Beset
by production difficulties (filming was halted twice, three producers
followed in quick succession, reels of footage were stolen, etc.), it
is incredible that the film was ever completed. One of the
most ambitious films to have been staged at Cinecittà studios,
one sequence alone employed no less than six hundred extras. The
result evokes something of Fellini's antipathy for his subject and (to
borrow one line from the film) looks like a monumental tussle between
vulgarity and poetry.
In most screen depictions, Casanova is portrayed as something of a
Jack-the-Lad hero, a kind of benign Don Juan with the looks and
charisma that would instantly induce any member of the opposite sex to
swoop compliantly into his arms and his bed. Fellini's Casanova
(played to perfection by American actor Donald Sutherland) is very
different: an earthy and tormented creature whose amorous adventures
are likened to the predictable mechanical functioning of an 18th
Century automaton. This Casanova is not someone we can readily
identify with or like, although he does evoke sympathy and ultimately
emerges as a tragic victim of natural forces against which he is powerless.
The depravity, self-absorption and vacuity that define this version of
Casanova are reinforced by the film's distinctive visual design.
With its dominant grey tones and lack of natural light, the film
conjures up a stiflingly claustrophobic world not unlike an underground
nightclub in Soho during a blackout, where the libido-consumed hero is
forever trapped in an endless round of meaningless
self-gratification. There is a kind of sombre beauty in the
baroque settings and the way in which these are photographed. But
it is a beauty that is recognisably false and tawdry - a mockery rather
than a celebration of nature, strikingly evocative of a period in which
civilised man hid his squalor and shame beneath a thin mantle of genteel
gilted elegance.
In common with many of Fellini's later films, this is a lumbering,
highly stylised beast of film that, whilst unquestionably a work of
considerable artistic merit, is pretty indigestible. Watching
this film in one go is like trying to trawl the entire contents of the
Louvre and the Museé d'Orsay in a single day - not something you
would ever really want to attempt on an empty stomach, without a flask
of a suitable alcoholic restorative tucked away somewhere on your
person. However, whilst the film does place great demands on its
spectator, it is a piece that any devotee of cinematic art should indulge in
at least once - to appreciate its unique dream-like quality and its
highly personal depiction of a man reputed to be history's most
insatiable lover.
© James Travers 2008
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Next Federico Fellini film:
I Vitelloni (1953)
Film Synopsis
The debauched life of Giacomo Casanova is legendary, a succession of
erotic adventures with women who are no more to him than
instruments of pleasure. Casanova's scandalous exploits result in
him being arrested and imprisoned in Venice, but he escapes and takes
flight to Paris. Here, he falls under the spell of the Marquise
of Urfé, a strange mystic who coerces him into a lovemaking
ritual which she believes will transform her into a man. After an
all too brief romantic idyll with the beautiful Enrichetta, Casanova
finds himself alone and desolate in London...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.