Italian resort Rimini on Monday marked 100 years since the birth of director Federico Fellini, whose visual dreamscapes revolutionized cinema in a career spanning almost half a century.
Dozens of events are being held around the world and in Italy this year to remember Fellini, considered one of the most influential filmmakers of all time.
The winner of a record four best foreign language film Oscars, he is famed for films set in Rome such as La Dolce Vita (1960), and most of his films were shot in Cinecitta’s Studio 5 outside the capital.
But he set his 1973 masterpiece Amarcord, a semi-autobiographical comedy about an adolescent boy growing up in 1930s fascist Italy, in the Adriatic resort of Rimini where he was born on January 20, 1920.
The city is marking the centenary with a special exhibition and is due to open a museum dedicated to Fellini, who died in 1993, by the end of the year.
On Monday the city will cut a giant cake in his honor on the main piazza.
“Rimini is everywhere in Fellini’s cinema, the countryside in his films is Rimini’s countryside, the sea in all Fellini’s films is Rimini’s sea,” said Marco Leonetti of the Rimini Cinematheque which helped put on the exhibition.
The show includes some of the more spectacular costumes from his films, as well as frequently erotic extracts from the sketchbooks of his dreams he created for his psychotherapist over a 30-year period.
‘Magical and lyrical’
Originally an artist and caricaturist, Fellini paid to watch films as a child at Rimini’s Fulgor cinema by drawing caricatures, and his films remain caricatures of society.
“If you take Fellini’s films, like Amarcord, La Dolce Vita, I Vitelloni, when you watch them all, it’s as if you’re flicking through a history book, you travel through the history of our country, the history of Italy, from the 1930s to the 1980s,” Leonetti told AFP.
Fellini was initially appreciated more abroad than in Italy, where he frequently scandalized the conservative society of the 1950s.
His films embodied a sense of irony, the ability to invent, and a sense of beauty, said Leonetti.
“These are the three qualities of his art, qualities which also created ‘made in Italy,’ and that’s why Fellini, besides having told the story of our country the best, is also the person who best represents it,” Leonetti explained.
Fellini has inspired generations of directors since, including Britain’s Peter Greenaway and Spain’s Pedro Almodovar.
US director David Lynch, who shares the same birthday as Fellini, in 1997 declared his love for the “maestro from Rimini.”
“There’s something about his films… They’re so magical and lyrical and surprising and inventive. The guy was unique. If you took his films away, there would be a giant chunk of cinema missing,” Lynch told filmmaker Chris Rodley.
Fellini played “a shameless game of reflections and autobiographical projections” with his actors, the exhibition said.
The exhibition Fellini 100. Immortal genius ends in March but will then travel to Rome and on to cities including Los Angeles, Moscow and Berlin.
Master pastry chef Roberto Rinaldini (left) shows off a two-meter-high cake to celebrate the 100th birthday of late Italian filmmaker Federico Fellini on Monday in Rimini, Italy. Photo: AFP