In Search of Fellini

2017

Action / Adventure / Biography / Drama / Fantasy / Romance

5
Rotten Tomatoes Critics - Certified Fresh89%
Rotten Tomatoes Audience - Upright72%
IMDb Rating6.2102755

Plot summary


Uploaded by: FREEMAN

Director

Top cast

Maria Bello Photo
Maria Bello as Claire
Ksenia Solo Photo
Ksenia Solo as Lucy
Beth Riesgraf Photo
Beth Riesgraf as Sylvia
720p.WEB 1080p.WEB
951.44 MB
1280*714
English 2.0
R
24 fps
1 hr 43 min
P/S 0 / 1
1.91 GB
1920*1072
English 5.1
R
24 fps
1 hr 43 min
P/S ...

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by SnoopyStyle7 / 10

the trip

It's 1993. Lucy Cunningham (Ksenia Solo) is a naive 20 year old living in small town Ohio with her dreamer mother Claire (Maria Bello). Claire is so protective that anything or anyone dying would require her to write a postcard to Lucy pretending to be the loved one or pet still alive and simply on a joyful trip. After reading a newspaper ad, Lucy decides to apply for a film job in the big city of Cleveland. She promptly loses her Vespa and the job turns out to be porn. She is drawn to a Fellini film festival which leads her to a life-changing journey to Italy while her mother hides her terminal illness.

This is a nice coming-of-age story. Quite frankly, I like this more than all those other finding-yourself-in-Italy movies. The three ladies create a great family connection. I find the surrealism in Cleveland very endearing. It could use more surrealism in Italy. It's definitely trying to recreate Fellini with many of the old film clips. It's very Fellini but it needs to be more. One way to create more surrealism is Lucy's drawings. It would be interesting to see her artwork come alive. While I like Ksenia Solo, she is in her late 20's but the character is only 20. At times, she can't quite reach the wide-eyed innocent that the role requires. The character is already more childlike than her twenty years. It's asking a lot from an actress in her late 20s. Overall, it's a wonderful trip with an appealing character.

Reviewed by ferguson-67 / 10

welcome to the universe

USA Film Festival 2017 Greetings again from the darkness. Even In this age of "helicopter parenting" it's disconcerting to see such flagrant over-protectiveness as that perpetuated by Maria Bello's character on her daughter Lucy. For film lovers, it's even more disheartening to see how the mother uses "happy ending" movies such as It's a Wonderful Life to create the social bubble that results in 20 year old Lucy having never been kissed, and having no concept of reality (outside of what she has seen in movies).

Contrary to what that set-up would have us believe, director Taron Lexton's film is actually less Coming-of-Age and more 'Welcome to the Universe', and Lucy's journey of self-discovery is quite enjoyable to behold. Co-written by Nancy Cartwright and Peter Kjenaas, it's the 'based on a true story' of Ms. Cartwright's own personal journey prior to her nearly 30 year run as the voice of Bart Simpson.

Lucy (Ksenia Solo, Black Swan) is off on an interview-gone-wrong when she stumbles into a Fellini film festival. She is immediately entranced by the obscure imagery and often less-than-happy endings. In fact, she connects with the films in such a manner that she is inspired to travel to Italy and meet with the Maestro himself. Ms. Cartwright's real life motivation stemmed from watching Fellini's La Strada (1954),and she instantly saw herself in Gelsomina (played by the spirited Giuletta Masina).

Her travels through Italy are filled with ups and downs, and Lucy crosses paths with good people and bad. It's her first true life experience and we are along for the ride. The structure of the story is such that as Lucy is discovering life, her mother (Bello) is back home in Ohio slowly losing her battle with cancer while being nursed by her straight-talking sister (Mary Lynn Rajskub, Chloe from "24"). Such contrasting elements would fit right in to a Fellini film.

At some point, most movie lovers experience the awakening that occurs when graduating from pleasant, feel good family movies to more esoteric and philosophical cinema. Fortunately, this awakening typically occurs before age 20 and does not require an international trip or dying mother to allow us to grow as a person. Ms. Cartwright's willingness to share her story makes for interesting filmmaking and one of the more unusual coming-of-age (or Welcome to the Universe) twists that we've seen on screen.

Reviewed by tabuno7 / 10

Slowly transforms into a darker, sometimes surrealistic adventure that borders on horror

This coming of age drama develops along two eventually divergent stories consisting of a naïve, innocent daughter and her mother who doted and protected and isolated her from the world. From the beginning light and entertaining, the film slowly transforms into a darker, sometimes surrealistic adventure that borders on horror. There are lighter tonalities from Alice in Wonderland (1951) the animation classic, Pieces of April (2003) about a clueless young woman who invites her dysfunctional family to dinner and her horrible efforts to make dinner and Amelie (2001) about a shy young woman who comes of age through her spreading joy to others instead of an inner journey in the outside world as in Fellini. Yet, this movie starkly diverges in mood and feeling with its darker nature that has elements from Eyes Wide Shut (1999) Stanley Kubrick's classy look into the phantasmagorical world of the elite dark orgy of fetishes. Closer still, but less ambitious, is Fellini's suggestive flourishes with a movie such as Steppenwolf (1974) based on Hermann Hesse's magical, surrealistic mind-blowing novel about an strange, introverted aging man who discovers his duel inner nature. The clash of affect or emotional resonance between the mother's evolving story and her daughter's adventure seems to create an uncomfortable and seemingly tear at the fabric of the movie itself. Perhaps a more pleasant individual journey on film might be Under the Tuscan Sun (2003) with Diane Lane who plays a middle age American woman who comes of age in a foreign country.

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