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New high-definition transfer, with restored image and sound ; "Vitellonismo": An exclusive documentary featuring interviews with late actor Leopoldo Trieste, actor Franco Interlenghi, assistant director Moraldo Rossi, Fellini biographer Tullio Kezich, Fellini friend Vincenzo Mollica, and director of the Fellini Foundation, Vittorio Boarini; Collection of still photographs, posters, and memorabilia; Original theatrical trailer; New and improved English subtitle translation; Optimal image quality: RSDL dual-layer edition; Plus, a new essay by writer Tom Piazza (My Cold War: A Novel, Blues and Trouble: Twelve Stories)
Full Product DetailsSide #1 --
1. Logos/Opening Credits [1:24]
2. Beauty Pageant [6:14]
3. A Job in Milan [5:12]
4. Fausto and Sandra [3:37]
5. A Late Night [8:10]
6. A Surprise on the Beach [3:28]
7. Fausto Returns [4:15]
8. An Honest Day's Work [2:39]
9. The Movies [6:43]
10. Carnivale [9:42]
11. The Morning After [5:57]
12. Signora Michele [3:40]
13. "Have a Drink With Us" [3:36]
14. Master Salesmen [7:22]
15. Around the Dinner Table [1:25]
16. Moraldo and Sandra [1:11]
17. Little Moraldo [1:54]
18. A Great Artist [1:53]
19. "This Town Is Blind to Art" [8:26]
20. Lipstick on Your Face"|00:03:04|}
21. The Search Is On [3:29]
22. "Allow Me to Shake Your Hand" [8:01]
23. Moraldo's Story [3:38]
24. Color Bars [2:25]
Italian maestro Federico Fellini's first international success is a nakedly autobiographical film that bears many of the formal and thematic concerns that recur throughout his work. Set in the director's hometown of Rimini, I Vitelloni follows the lives of five young vitelloni, or layabouts, who while away their listless days in their small seaside village. Fausto (Franco Fabrizi), the leader of the pack, marries his sweetheart, but finds himself constantly distracted by other women. Meanwhile, would-be playwright Leopoldo (Leopoldo Trieste) continues work on his dreary plays, dreaming of staging them one day. Clownish Alberto (Alberto Sordi) still lives at home with his mother and sister, Olga (Claude Farell), while boasting of preserving the family honor by watching over her. While the movie seems to pay little attention to Riccardo (Riccardo Fellini) and Moraldo (Franco Interlenghi), the latter eventually emerges as its key character, plainly serving as Fellini's alter ego. Stuck in adolescence, the five friends stumble into various misadventures, as they seek to spice up their uneventful provincial lives. Ultimately, one of them breaks free from their self-imposed paralysis and moves on, leading to one of the most poignant farewell sequences in film history. A hit in Italy upon its release, I Vitelloni secured Fellini's reputation as an up-and-coming talent, while also introducing its title into Italian vernacular. ~ Elbert Ventura, All Movie Guide All Movie Guide