Nine

21 Jan 2010-21 Feb 2010 ,

3
Nine
Improved image coming soon!
First published on . Updated on 15 Apr 2011.

Best wipe 8 1/2 from your mind, or at least delay seeing Fellini's loopy masterpiece, if you're going to enjoy this angsty romp through the director's 1963 film about a fictional Italian filmmaker, Guido Contini (Daniel Day-Lewis), who loses his mojo and might be about to lose his marbles and his marriage.

Surprisingly, though, there's lots in this musical version, itself an adaptation of a 1980s Broadway show, that relates to the sombre heart of Fellini's original. We still get Guido's formative childhood memory of watching a prostitute perform on the beach (although this time it is Fergie from the Black Eyed Peas brilliantly belting out the film's foot-tapping anthem Be Italian). We also get the lingering ghost of his mother (Sophia Loren!), the pain of his adultery and the madness of his creative impasse. Also, Fellini's meshing of dream and reality is oddly suited to the unreal tendencies of a musical, although it's anybody's guess what the director would have made of Penélope Cruz throwing herself around in stockings and suspenders and upping the sex factor beyond anything Claudia Cardinale offered in the original.

The biggest difference, though, is that almost 50 years later, director Rob Marshall (Chicago) is able to play the story of 8 1/2 as a nostalgia piece. He fetishises the look and feel of 1960s Italy and especially Rome so that the film's mood of artistic melancholia is expressed on a canvas that comes dangerously close to looking like an ad for Italian coffee. Marshall and his writers, including the late Anthony Minghella, also stress the humour of Guido's philandering, often preferring that his inner turmoil goes no further than chain-smoking. To give Day-Lewis his due, the actor grounds the film's sillier tendencies in a charming performance of mercurial despair. He's well supported by Marion Cotillard, who conveys the sadness of being Guido's wife, although both Nicole Kidman as his leading lady and Kate Hudson as an admiring journalist are little more than window-dressing.

More films, film reviews, film festivals and special screenings in Sydney? Sign up for our weekly newsletter

Words by Dave Calhoun

Nine details

Length: 100 minutes

Country of origin: USA/Italy

Year of production: 2009

Classification: Not Available

Date 21 Jan 2010-21 Feb 2010

Opens

Director: Rob Marshall

Cast: Daniel Day-Lewis, Marion Cotillard and Penélope Cruz,

Readers' comments

Community guidelines

blog comments powered by Disqus
 


© 2007 - 2012 Time Out Group Ltd. All rights reserved. All material on this site is © Time Out.