the great escape
by Douglas Messerli
Federico
Fellini and Ennio Flaiano (screenplay), Federico Fellini (director) I
Vitelloni / 1953
After Federico Fellini’s early film Variety
Lights, which had weak ratings at the box-office, and his next The White
Sheik bombed, producers and distributors were understandably hesitant about
taking on his new project, I Vitelloni, in which he had cast no major
actors except perhaps for Alberto Sordi, who’d had a long career, but after his
performance in Fellini’s Sheik was considered to be a wash-up.
Moreover, Fellini’s and his writing partner Ennio Flaiano’s script was
less a unified narrative than it was a series of related and just as often
unconnected episodes featuring the five “vitelloni” (best translated into
English as “the loafers” or “the
idlers”) who, sponging off of their parents well past the years by which they
should have established their own lives, spend their days mostly in cafés,
movie houses, and walks along the Adriatic beach when they aren’t, like the
local lothario of their group, Fausto Moretti (Franco Fabrizi), entertaining
women, all previous to their nightly dance off hand-in-hand down the streets of
the small town in which they live, dropping each other off at the respective houses.
In short, they are a bit like the Pasolini “scroungers’ in his film of 8 years
later, Accatone.
Unlike the bright sunshine in which Pasolini’s characters bathe before
one of them daringly drops into the river to swim across to the other shore,
Fellini’s film begins in a later-afternoon celebration, the annual crowning of
one of the town’s female beauties as “Miss Mermaid.” The winner, Sandra Rubini
(Leonora Ruffo), is the sister of the youngest of these idlers, Moraldo (Franco
Interlenghi).
Sandra has evidently been one of Fausto’s objects of desire, who when
she wins the contest is overwhelmed by the sudden appearance of torrential
rains, her appreciative crowds, and the fact, we soon perceive, that she is
pregnant.
Guessing the truth, Fausto makes a fast retreat from these festivities
in order to pack up and leave town—which is, after all, the desire and endless
subject of many of the “vitelloni’s” conversations. But caught in the act by
Moraldo and, more importantly, by Fausto’s own father (a lovingly gruff Jean
Brochard), along with a threatened belting, Fausto is quickly dissuaded from
flight and forced into a kind of “shot-gun” wedding, a rather desultory affair,
which ends, at least, in a pleasant few weeks in Rome (nicknamed by the town’s
residents “the Big Smoke”) before the couple return to their backwater home
with the new-born in arms.
In
the meantime, we get to meet some of the others of these “loafers,” all
seemingly bored without the daring Fausto at their side. Alberto (Sordi) is a
mama’s boy (a momoni) tries to keep his mother free from the
downpour of tears she daily threatens, both of whom live off the wages brings
in from his sister’s nightly work as an at-home typist. The odd-looking
Leopoldo Vannucci (Leopoldo Trieste) is the group “intellect” who writes poems
and plays which, we later discover are pretty awful.
Moraldo, who has already been introduced, is the group’s dreamer who can
hardly sleep as he paces through the empty night streets imagining a new life
anywhere but where he now is seemingly trapped.
Fausto returns, appearing as the happy father, but almost immediately
picks up again with his womanizing, first attempting to gain the affections of
a good-looking woman at the movie theater while he is seated between the
stranger and his wife. He even dares to leave the theater in order to track his
desired conquest back to her apartment, but is—at least temporarily—rejected,
while with the movie over, Sandra impatiently waits, astoundingly believing his
report that he was attempting to meet someone for a job.
Alberto attends that same carnival party dressed totally in drag, slowly
getting drunk, and ending the evening in one of the most memorable scenes of
the movie as he tangos several times across the room and later, with wig
removed, attempts to drag a large carnival mask home with him, while one of his
friends promises to accompany him on his nearly impossible-to-accomplish trek.
Utterly depressed, he observes his sister running away with a man from another
village awaiting her in his car, having brought the promised torrent of tears
to his mother’s eyes.
If
the actor no longer shows much talent, to Leopoldo he represents the
possibility of finally seeing one of his efforts brought to stage. Oddly, the
elderly actor seems impervious to the embarrassingly bad play of several acts
that Leopoldo insists upon reading him.
His friends gradually drift away in search of women, but Leopoldo and
the thespian remain intricately involved in the endless reading, in part
because the playwright has paid for the actor’s equally grandiose dinner.
Even
after enduring the unbearable torture that Leopoldo forces him to undergo, he
insists upon hearing summaries of later scenes, luring the posturing intellect
out-of-doors and down the narrow streets of the town, before finally suggesting
they visit the beach.
At
least, Fausto seems now temporarily cured of his loutish behavior. And, in a
kind of miracle, Moraldo finally determines to catch the daily train out of
town forever, meeting at the station the young railroad boy, Riccardo (Riccardo
Fellini) who he has earlier in the film befriended. Obviously, the kid, whom
Moraldo nightly meets on the boy’s way to work, symbolizes his own childish and
yet wondrous views of the world, not unlike those of il babbo Fellini at
the same age.
Fellini’s long camera shot of the young boy, balancing along the rail of
the track for a quite long time, says everything. This youth already has a job
and will find a new balance in the world, whether he stays or goes, that most
of “the loafers” can never experience.
Add to this lovely series of tales Nino Rota’s entrancing score and the
startlingly crisp black-and-white images of Carlo Carlini’s, Otello Martelli’s,
and Luciano Trasatti’s cinematography and you have a film that predicts the
director’s future cinematic wonders.
Los Angeles, August 16, 2020
Reprinted from World Cinema Review (August
2020).
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