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  1. Federico Fellini Cavaliere di Gran Croce OMRI (Italian: [fedeˈriːko felˈliːni]; 20 January 1920 – 31 October 1993) was an Italian film director and screenwriter. He is known for his distinctive style, which blends fantasy and baroque images with earthiness.

  2. Federico Fellini. Writer: Nights of Cabiria. The women who both attracted and frightened him and an Italy dominated in his youth by Mussolini and Pope Pius XII - inspired the dreams that Fellini started recording in notebooks in the 1960s. Life and dreams were raw material for his films.

  3. Jun 18, 2024 · Federico Fellini, Italian film director who was one of the most celebrated and singular filmmakers of the period after World War II. His distinctive methods superimposed dreamlike or hallucinatory imagery upon ordinary situations in such movies as La strada, La dolce vita, and Juliet of the Spirits.

  4. It shows all of Fellini's unrivaled virtues -- his lyrical sense of place, his abiding affection for even the most hapless of his characters, his effortless knack for limpid, bustling composition -- and very few of his putative vices. 4. The Road.

  5. Jun 20, 2024 · Fellini, best known for La Dolce Vita, defined the new role of the film director on Italy’s postwar cultural scene.

  6. Nov 12, 2018 · By the time of his death in 1993, Federico Fellini had won four best foreign language film Oscars, tying him with his countryman Vittorio De Sica for the most wins by any director.

  7. One hundred years after his birth, Federico Fellini still stands apart as a giant of the cinema. The Italian maestro is defined by his dualities: the sacred and the profane, the masculine and the feminine, the provincial and the urbane.