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Fellini - Satyricon
 
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Fellini - Satyricon (1970)

Starring: Martin Potter, Hiram Keller Director: Federico Fellini Rating: R (Restricted) Format: DVD
3.7 out of 5 stars See all reviews (71 customer reviews)

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Frequently Bought Together

Fellini - Satyricon + Fellini's Roma + 8 1/2 - Criterion Collection
Total List Price: $69.91
Price For All Three: $54.97

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  • This item: Fellini - Satyricon DVD ~ Martin Potter

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  • 8 1/2 - Criterion Collection DVD ~ Bruno Agostini

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What Do Customers Ultimately Buy After Viewing This Item?

Fellini - Satyricon
90% buy the item featured on this page:
Fellini - Satyricon 3.7 out of 5 stars (71)
$9.49
Amarcord (Criterion Collection)
3% buy
Amarcord (Criterion Collection) 4.3 out of 5 stars (65)
$35.99
Fellini's Roma
3% buy
Fellini's Roma 4.2 out of 5 stars (28)
$13.49
8 1/2 - Criterion Collection
3% buy
8 1/2 - Criterion Collection 4.5 out of 5 stars (124)
$31.99

Product Details


Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com essential video
Trippy is as trippy does, even when you're talking about a movie set in ancient Rome. This 1969 Fellini opus was among the most visually arresting entries in a year when the psychedelic experience was trying to claw its way into every movie coming down the pike. But Fellini, in telling a negligible story about two young men tasting the various pleasures of Nero's hedonistic and priapic reign, aimed for images that jarred as well as seduced. He found humor in freakishness, contrasting beauty and ugliness while effortlessly passing judgment on the emptiness of a life devoted to sensation and personal freedom. More of a fever dream than a linear story, Fellini Satyricon crystallized the director's reputation as a visionary--but may have trapped him into spending the rest of his career (with the exception of Amarcord) trying to top himself in reaching new levels of outrageousness. --Marshall Fine

Product Description
Encolpius is a Roman student who begins by arguing with his friend Ascyltus over the affections of androgynous youth Giton. Ascyltus wins, whereupon Encolpius embarks upon an odyssey, partaking in a drunken orgy and being kidnapped by a bisexual sea captain and his concubine. Encolpius eventually rejoins Ascyltus to visit a suicidal Roman couple, join in a plot to kidnap a "sacred" hermaphrodite, and much more. Loosely based on the book "Satyricon" by Gaius Petronius, the "Arbiter of Elegance" in the court of Nero, Federico Fellini wrote and directed this tongue-in-cheek hymn to the "glories" of pagan times via a bizarre journey through the decadence and debauchery of Nero's Rome.

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Customer Reviews

71 Reviews
5 star:
 (37)
4 star:
 (9)
3 star:
 (9)
2 star:
 (2)
1 star:
 (14)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
3.7 out of 5 stars (71 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

 
28 of 30 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Reason Movies Exist, April 30, 2001
By Stephen McLeod (New York, NY USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
*Fellini-Satyricon* was the Maestro's first movie in which his name appears as part of the title. It is also his first color masterpiece, and one of the most fascinating and origninal films of the 20th century. Every Fellini movie is unique. He had no peers. *Fellini-Satyricon*, however, is a cardinal enry in Fellini canon (not to mention the canon of Italian cinema) because it is the perfection of the new style announced in *8 1/2* and the innauguration of a new visual extravagance that would inform all of Fellini's subsequent films.

The subject, 1st century Rome in all its florid, tumescent decadence, is lovingly transformed through Fellini's comic vision. The self-contained sequences, vignettes really, are not only fair translations into cinema of what is probably the first "novel" in Western literature, they also serve to reflect the fragmentary nature of the surviving evidence of antiquity. Scenes are fitted together like pieces in a puzzle where some of the picture is ultimately lost. This is emphasized by the visual references to broken frescoes, from which the characters seem to emerge and revert back into.

The DVD provides a sparkling, lush, diamond-sharp transfer with a choice of English or Italian soundtracks and English, French, Spanish subtitles.

A word about the dubbing: The English version is much better than the Italian version, for a number of reasons. 1) Fellini dubbed all his actors anyway because he used international casts. There is no such thing as a Fellini movie where the actors are actually speaking their lines in real time. For the most part, different actors were used for the dubbing. 2) The Italian actors used in the Italian dub are horribly miscast. There is just no way that those voices could come out of those people. Physically. The English actors are better. (If you watch their lips, you'll notice that Hiram Keller and Martin Potter are both speaking their parts in English). 3) You'll want to watch, not read, this film. 4) A good amount of the sound that comes out of the characters' mouths is either Latin, gibberish, or some admixture thereof, and, for the most part, what the characters are actually saying isn't all that important.

There are sadly, no extra features on this DVD. A commentary by surviving cast members would have been so great. Nevertheless, this is a DVD that anyone who loves movies should want to own. Highest recommendation!!!

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36 of 43 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Visually Stunning But Disjointed and Sterile, August 10, 2003
If one rates a film on visuals alone, Fellini's SATYRICON would surely be completely off the scale: a phantasmagorical mixture of sensual beauty and the distasteful but evocative grotesque set in an ancient Rome that never was, never could have been, and yet which plays up to every extreme concept we secretly harbor about Roman decadence. The leading men are incredibly beautiful; the women are generally seductively depraved; and the broad vision that Fellini offers is easily one of the visually stunning creations ever put to film.

And yet, oddly, the film is sterile. The story is impossible to describe, a series of largely unrelated events in the lives of two impossibly handsome youths (Martin Potter and Hiram Keller) who begin the film by battling over the sexual favors of a slave boy (Max Born) who alternately unites and divides them until all three find themselves sold into slavery and flung from adventure to adventure, most often with sexual (and frequently homosexual) connotations. Clearly, Fellini is making a statement about the triviality and emptiness of a life lived for physical pleasures alone. But the film is jumpy, disjointed, disconnected; the sequences do not always arise from each other in any consistent way, leaving viewers with a sort of "what the ..." reaction when the film unexpectedly shifts without explanation. In consequence, SATYRICON is ultimately less about any philosophical statement Fellini may have had in mind than it is about sheer pictorial splendor and deliberate weirdness.

Whatever its failings, it is an astonishing film, and one that would have tremendous influence on a host of directors who followed in Fellini's wake--although all to often without his style and vision. Clearly Pasolini, director of such works as SALO, ARABIAN NIGHTS, and CANTERBURY TALES spent the better part of his largely unlamented life trying to out-Fellini Fellini; likewise, it is impossible to imagine how Tinto Brass and Bob Guccione arrived at the notorious CALIGULA without reference to Fellini's SATYRICON. Such efforts to expand on SATYRICON were merely more explicit and less interesting than the original, and I do not really recommend them--nor do I really recommend SATYRICON for any one other than Fellini fans, for with its oddly disjointed feel it is unlikely to please those raised on mainstream. Still, it is a powerful, remarkably beautiful, and completely unexpected film that must be seen at least once by any one with a serious interest in world cinema, and to those I recommend it without hesitation.

--GFT (Amazon.com Reviewer)--

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14 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A film that transcends the limitations of storytelling, July 30, 2004
By John Gallone (Seattle, Washington USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
Satyricon, by Le Maestro, Federico Fellini, is simply one of the most enthralling films ever produced. From the phantasmagorial depiction of Roman life, to our two hapless protagonists, Fellini spins a tale of deceit, duplicitous alliances and fascinating intrigues. The visual imagines are dazzling and the stunning plot arcs from bungled kidnapping and incredible travels to retribution and redemption.
If you just don't 'get' this wonderful allegorical journey, do yourself a favor and watch it continually until you do.
Satyricon is a perfect example of the powerful potential of film to transcend the limitations of story telling along with an incredible display of Fellini's marvelous and seemingly limitless imagination.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews

1.0 out of 5 stars Hogwash
Fellini Satyricon is self-indulgent, and made as though everyone on the crew were wasted.

The film can't seem to decide whether it wanted to be filmed in English or... Read more
Published 2 months ago by Herr Tarquin Biskuitfaß

5.0 out of 5 stars Dude, it's Fellini
Creepy.
Disturbing.
Weird.
Fellini takes us to ancient Rome in Satyricon; a world of greed, lust, and gluttony. Read more
Published 2 months ago by Robert Lachman

4.0 out of 5 stars stunning visual poem on Nero's Rome
This is a powerful evocation of pagan Rome under an emperor of questionable sanity. We are witnesses of gutter characters, poets, and nouveau rich as Nero is deposed. Read more
Published 4 months ago by Robert J. Crawford

1.0 out of 5 stars 1 star out of 4
The Bottom Line:

An almost unwatchable film with no plot, structure, or continuity of any kind, Fellini-Satyricon is a perfect example of why you shouldn't literally... Read more
Published 5 months ago by One-Line Film Reviews

3.0 out of 5 stars This is probably Fellini's most visually engaging film, and is without a doubt one of the masterpieces of film art...
Fellini engages us through a tapestry of decadence during the Roman Empire with such stunning juxtapositions of exceptional images from a collapsing society that one cannot help... Read more
Published 5 months ago by Roberto Frangie

3.0 out of 5 stars Good
The best way to understand director Federico Fellini's audacious 1968 film Satyricon (also known as Fellini Satyricon, because 1967 saw the release of Satyricon by fellow Italian... Read more
Published 9 months ago by Cosmoetica

5.0 out of 5 stars Oh so good!
It's amazing to think that the original story behind this movie was created at about the same time as the beginnings of Christianity. Read more
Published 18 months ago by God's Will Know-it-all

5.0 out of 5 stars Humanity & Fantasy
SATYRICON may well be the crown jewel of the late 1950-1960's European/Asian Art Film genre--by one of the master directors of the time. Read more
Published 19 months ago by Jeff Farrow

5.0 out of 5 stars Exploring reality through drug-induced fantasy
As much as I enjoy Roman epics like Kubrick's Spartacus - Criterion Collection, it is undeniable that these tend to either whitewash the more bizarre aspects of Roman life or turn... Read more
Published 20 months ago by Martin Doege

3.0 out of 5 stars Empty, loud, and shallow illustration to an ancient book

"Satyricon" studies ancient Rome of the first century, and is virtually plot less; images drive the movie, not the story and characters, and the movie is essentially a... Read more
Published on April 26, 2007 by Galina

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