the pebble’s purpose
by Douglas Messerli
Federico Fellini, Tullio Pinelli,
Ennio Flaiano (screenplay, based on a story by Fellini and Pinelli), Federico
Fellini (director) La Strada (The Road) / 1954, USA 1956
Fellini himself has described the filming of this seemingly simple story
as nearly impossible, resulting near the end of the shoot in a complete nervous
breakdown. Actor Anthony Quinn remembers it as a bone-wearying experience (“He
drove me mercilessly, making me do scene after scene over and over again until
he got what he wanted.”), but, Quinn continues “I learned more about film
acting in three months with Fellini than I’d learned in all the movies I’d made
before.” Fellini’s wife, Giulietta Masina (as Gelsomina) complained that the
director was being particularly mean to her during its shoot. And there are
moments, finally, when—as marvelous as she is playing the slightly retarded
naïf—Masina, as Roger Ebert notes, is a shade too conscious and knowing,
playing to her audience.
Zampanò, true to his appearance, rapes, whips, and psychologically
maltreats her as he leaves her waiting for his return home—a perfectly
ridiculous cart hooked up to a motorcycle—from his dalliances with other women.
Yet gradually Gelsomina does learn, not only to beat the drum while announcing
“the Great Zampanò,” and, after the performance to pass the hat; but also to
play a comic in the absurdly badly acted sketch which begins by the strongman
describing his rifle as a “fifle.” She even learns to play the trumpet.
What she also learns, however, is just
how painful life can be, behaving a bit like Fellini’s later high-spirited
prostitute in another of his “road” movies, Nights
of Cabiria. And she not only learns from Zampanò, but from a passing nun
that life, even an itinerant life, can contain great joy and nobility. From the
tight-rope-walking fool, Il Matto (a wonderful Richard Baseheart), she
discovers that she might be a credible performer and, more importantly, that
she does have a purpose in living, even if it is the role of a pebble in her
“husband’s” life.
Even when she attempts to speak up for herself, arguing that her
servitude to Zampanò is unconscionable, ultimately leaving him for a period,
she is still blindly attracted to another kind of a circus, in the form of a
religious procession of a small town’s patron saint, compelled to join up with
her brutish “husband” once again. Only when, after encountering the Fool once
more on the road—this time with the result of Zampanò’s beating and accidently
killing him—is Gelsomina completely transformed from a passive clown to a
figure of conscience, even if her new-found moral being carries with it an
aspect of insanity. Unable to cope with her insistent reminder that he is now a
killer along with being a brute, Zampanò leaves her once more along the
roadside as she sleeps, this time forever.
We later discover that Gelsomina is
found along a beach, eventually wasting away and dying. Hearing of the story
from a woman whose father has taken Gelsomina in, Zampanò gets drunk and
wanders to the nearby beach, where he breaks down in despair for having lost
the woman to whom he could never acknowledge, even to himself, he loved.
If Fellini’s work is a simple playing out of body, soul, and mind
(Zampanò, Gelsomina, and Il Motto) it is also a profound statement about the
Postwar world which the film portrays, a bleak landscape in which the souls and
minds of the body politic have been clearly ravaged by the brute force of
Italian Fascism. The tawdry circuses Fellini reveals as weak—if also sometimes
charming—imitations of more serious entertainments such as literature, cinema,
and drama, remind us of Juvenal’s satiric statement: “Two things only the
people anxiously desire—bread and circuses.”
For Fellini, it is clear, the circus of life is a merely a coarser
version of the vast mythic fantasies conjured up by the
imagination—particularly his own. The very straightforward emblematic approach
of La Strada is an early, provincial
exploration, of the grand orgiastic entertainments he will later role out
before our eyes in the Roman landscapes of La
Dolce Vita, 8 ½, and Fellini Satyricon. If I prefer the later
works over this gently personal remembrance, even if they only that they
represent elegantly deft fantasias that the characters of La Strada might never even have imagined. But then, it would be
hard for any of us to imagine the gifts Fellini left us when he became
determined to go “full throttle.” How
can a pebble, no matter how useful, match the whole of Italian society—as
Fellini portrayed it—gone berserk?
Los Angeles, January 22, 2014
Reprinted from International Cinema Review (January 2014).
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