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Sunday, Dec 14, 1997
I Vitelloni
I Vittelloni is one of Fellini's best films, sufficiently rooted in neorealism to convey an authentic sense of environment, yet touched with the ether of memory in its evocation of youthful boredom and rootlessness in the provincial town where Fellini grew up. The vittelloni are the not-so-young sons of the middle class, perpetually unemployed mother's pets whittling their lives away in childish pursuits. ("They shine during the holiday season and waiting for this takes up the rest of the year," Fellini said.) They include Fausto (Franco Fabrizi), the flirt headed for the dull pleasures of family life; Alberto (Sordi), the sentimental buffoon; the writer Leopoldo (Trieste), who seeks fame but settles for an affair with a chambermaid; and the rebel Moraldo (Franco Interlenghi), Fellini's autobiographical hero who takes off for La Dolce Vita. In dressing as a woman for the masked ball, and dancing with a man, Sordi's Alberto embodied Fellini's gentle satire of forced machismo, and the anticlimax and nostalgia already built into these young lives.
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