Two people dance energetically in an open courtyard, one in a dress and heels, the other in a suit. A third person sits at a table under a canopy, watching the scene unfold.

Marcello Mastroianni plays Guido Anselmi, a director whose new project is collapsing around him, along with his life. One of the greatest films about film ever made, Federico Fellini’s  (Otto e mezzo) turns one man’s artistic crisis into a grand epic of the cinema. An early working title for  was The Beautiful Confusion, and Fellini’s masterpiece is exactly that: a shimmering dream, a circus, and a magic act.


Produced by Peter Goldfarb, this “imagined documentary” of Fellini on Fellini is a kaleidoscope of unfinished projects, all of which provide a fascinating and candid window into the director’s unique creative process.


The film screens in a new 35mm print that was struck from the original camera negative at L'Immagine Ritrovato in Bologna, Italy, and subtitled at TITRAFILM in Paris, one of the world’s few surviving 35mm subtitling facilities. The print was created entirely photochemically, with no intermediary digital source or restoration. Lasers were used to etch the subtitles directly into the film emulsion, the only subtitling method possible for photochemically-created prints.


Part of our "Restorations & Rediscoveries" series. In Italian, French, English, and German with English subtitles. Courtesy of Janus Films.

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