La Strada

  • Italie La Strada (plus)
Bande-annonce

Résumés(1)

Gelsomina, une jeune femme naïve et généreuse, a été vendue par sa mère à un bateleur de foire brutal et obtus, Zampano, qui présente un numéro de briseur de chaînes sur les places publiques. À bord d’un étrange équipage – une moto à trois roues aménagée en roulotte – le couple sillonne les routes d’Italie, menant la rude vie des forains. Surgit Il Matto (le fou), violoniste et poète, qui seul sait parler à Gelsomina. (Les Acacias)

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Critiques (2)

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lamps 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais The centre of the narrative is not Fellini's pictorial symbolism, but Giulietta Masina, an actress whose shy look full of moral innocence is worth a thousand words, and Anthony Quinn, a charismatic thunderbolt whose eccentric performance brings the viewer exactly to the emotions the situation demands. They make such an unforgettable couple, and their mutual differences become such a strong and narratively unifying bond, that master Fellini could just dryly react behind the camera this time and the tragic ending would still hit us in the back of the head with an unprecedented emotional load. The story this time is very basic and some of the philosophical motifs just stretch it unnecessarily, but in Fellini's rich filmography, full of challenging works of thought, The Road certainly doesn't get lost even after all these years, quite the opposite... 80% ()

kaylin 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais There's probably not much doubt that it's a good film, just as there are excellent performances by the actors. However, I can't help feeling that it's not something that would completely blow me away to the point of being floored. It's an excellent example of how Fellini knew how to tell stories and also how he could look at people in a way that most of us wouldn’t like. ()