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8 1/2

1963 - Not Rated
Release Date: 12/04/2001
Features: DVD Features: Region 1 Keep Case Two-Disc Set Single Side - Dual Layer Disc One: Full Frame - 1.33 Audio: Mono - Italian Introduction - 1. Terry Gilliam-Filmmaker Booklet Audio Commentary - 1. Gideon Bachmann-Friend of Director 2. Antonio Monda-NYU Professor of Film Trailer - 1. Original Theatrical Trailer Disc Two: Additional Release Materials: Bonus Features - 1. FELLINI: A DIRECTOR'S NOTEBOOK 2. NINO ROTA: BETWEEN CINEMA AND CONCERT Interviews - 1. Sandra Milo-Actor 2. Lina Wertmuller-Assistant Director 3. Vittorio Storaro-Cinematographer (Discussing work of cinematographer Gianni di Venanzo) Text/Photo Gallery: Production Stills
Original Language:  Italian 
Time:  138  mins.
J&R Item # 1000142_8
UPC # 037429135624
Label: Criterion Collection
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1963 - Not Rated
Release Date: 10/08/2002
Features: DVD Features: Region 1 Keep case Aspect Ratio - 1.78 Audio: Dolby Digital Mono - Italian
Original Language:  Italian 
Time:  138  mins.
J&R Item # 1000142_9
UPC # 014381098723
Label: Image Entertainment, Inc.
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Plot Credits Awards Reviews Related Shipping
Federico Fellini's Oscar-nominated 8 1/2 is a masterpiece of storytelling and cinema. The most autobiographical of Fellini's films, the plot of which concerns a 43-year-old film director who is having a midlife crisis, it is a career benchmark for this magnificent Italian New Wave director. Beautifully choreographed with flashbacks, dream sequences, exaggerated fantasy scenes, and magical surrealist episodes, 8 1/2 is one of the richest, most exuberant movies ever made, in the mode of Fellini's artfully abstract LA DOLCE VITA and AMARCORD. Guido Anselmi (Marcello Mastroianni) is at a crisis point in his life and his work; in the opening sequence, Guido, suffocating, is caught in traffic with the windows of his car locked shut. He climbs out of the sunroof and literally rises up over the highway into the clouds, seemingly free, when he realizes there's a rope tied around his ankle that is violently pulling him back to earth. Cutting from this dream to the health spa where Guido is trying to recapture his creativity and write the screenplay for his next film, his vices become clear: Guido is self-absorbed, and he's distracted by the fabulous cast of actresses, intellectuals, and eccentrics who have joined him at the spa. Additionally he struggles with Freudian complexes about his wife (Anouk Aim�e), his lover (Sandro Milo), his ideal woman (Claudia Cardinale), and his dead parents; and his repressive Catholic guilt follows him everywhere like a haunting mist.

Year - Presenter Award Category Result Name
1963 - Academy Awards Best Foreign Language Film Winner Not Applicable
"...8 1/2 is the best film ever made about filmmaking....The film weaves in and out of reality and fantasy....It is a film filled to bursting with inspiration..." -- Roger Ebert , (Chicago Sun-Times)

"...The most famous screen treatise ever about the illogical undertaking of making a movie..." -- Mike Clark , (USA Today)

"...The greatest mind-game movie ever..." -- Entertainment Weekly Staff , (Entertainment Weekly)

"...[T]he ideas and texture of 8 1/2 have never ceased to be an inspiration to artists everywhere..." -- Premiere Staff , (Premiere)

"[T]he film teems with Jungian imagery, while grappling with the alienating effects of modernity and, overall, the exasperating quest for contentment in an arbitrary and uncertain world." -- Simon Braund , (Empire)

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PID # 3776979


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