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- Winner of Fellini’s fourth Academy Award for best foreign-language film, Amarcord remains one of the director’s best-loved creations, beautifully weaving together Giuseppe Rottuno’s colorful cinematography, Danilo Donati’s extravagant costumes and sets, and Nino Rota’s nostalgia-tinged score.
www.criterion.com/films/208-amarcord
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Jan 4, 2004 · “Amarcord” is Fellini’s final great film. The other masterpieces are “ La Strada,” “ Nights of Cabiria,” “ La Dolce Vita,” “ 8 1/2 ” and “ Juliet of the Spirits.”
Fellini's bawdy coming-of-age film is brilliant but mature. Read Common Sense Media's Amarcord review, age rating, and parents guide.
- Armondo Brancia, Magali Noel, Pupella Maggio
- Federico Fellini
- Criterion Collection
Amarcord is an episodic coming of age film from Federico Fellini. The film might have some autobiographical elements but it is a fee flowing almost anecdotal film of eccentric characters including some buxom women in the village of Borgo San Giuliano in 1930s Italy where Fascism is on the rise.
Frequently clashing with his stern father (Armando Brancia) and defended by his doting mother (Pupella Maggio), Titta witnesses the actions of a wide range of characters, from his extended family...
- (47)
- Federico Fellini
- R
- Magali Noël
Amarcord. Amarcord (Italian: [amarˈkɔrd]) is a 1973 comedy-drama film directed by Federico Fellini, a semi- autobiographical tale about Titta, an adolescent boy growing up among an eccentric cast of characters in the village of Borgo San Giuliano (situated near the ancient walls of Rimini) [2] in 1930s Fascist Italy.
Amarcord: Directed by Federico Fellini. With Pupella Maggio, Armando Brancia, Magali Noël, Ciccio Ingrassia. A series of comedic and nostalgic vignettes set in a 1930s Italian coastal town.
Winner of Fellini’s fourth Academy Award for best foreign-language film, Amarcord remains one of the director’s best-loved creations, beautifully weaving together Giuseppe Rottuno’s colorful cinematography, Danilo Donati’s extravagant costumes and sets, and Nino Rota’s nostalgia-tinged score.