La Dolce Vita

La Dolce Vita

21 quotes

Biography

La Dolce Vita is a 1960 satirical comedy-drama film directed by Federico Fellini and written by Fellini, Ennio Flaiano, Tullio Pinelli, and Brunello Rondi. The film stars Marcello Mastroianni as Marcello Rubini, a tabloid journalist who, over seven days and nights, journeys through the "sweet life" of Rome in a fruitless search for love and happiness.

"[to Sylvia] You are everything... everything! You are the first woman on the first day of creation. You are mother, sister, lover, friend, angel, devil, earth, home."

La Dolce Vita

"[to Emma] A man who agrees to live like this is a finished man, he's nothing but a worm! I don't believe in your aggressive, sticky, maternal love! I don't want it, I have no use for it! This isn't love, it's brutalization!"

La Dolce Vita

"I'm wasting time. I won't manage anything anymore. Once I had ambitions, but maybe I'm losing everything. I forgot everything."

La Dolce Vita

"Don't be like me. Salvation doesn't lie within four walls. I'm too serious to be an amateur, but not enough to be a professional. Even the most miserable life is better than a sheltered existence in an organized society where everything is calculated and perfected."

La Dolce Vita

"We must get beyond passions, like a great work of art. In such miraculous harmony. We should love each other outside of time... detached."

La Dolce Vita

"[to Emma] The day you understand that you love Marcello more than he does, you'll be happy."

La Dolce Vita

"[to Paparazzo] How can you be this way? It's not possible to be like you! Hyenas! You're worse than hyenas! You don't respect anyone! You make me sick! Cowards!"

La Dolce Vita

"Come home, I'll make Ravioli! I want to make love!"

La Dolce Vita

"[to Marcello] Stay free, available, like me. Never get married. Never choose. Even in love, it's better to be chosen."

La Dolce Vita

"Le tre grandi evasioni -- fume, bere, letto. [The three great escapes—smoking, drinking, bed.]"

La Dolce Vita

"The great thing is to burn, and not to freeze."

La Dolce Vita

"We must all think about tomorrow, but without forgetting to live today."

La Dolce Vita

"Transvestite: By 1965 there'll be total depravity. How squalid everything will be."

La Dolce Vita

"I'll ask myself: What is my favorite film? Or I'll skew the question slightly: What film would I most like to see again right now? The answer would not be "Kane." … Right now, this moment, the answer that would spring most quickly to mind is Fellini's "La Dolce Vita" (1960). I've seen it, oh, at least 25 times, maybe more. It doesn't get old for me. Age has not withered, not custom staled, its infinite variety. I've grown so worked up just writing this paragraph that I want to slide in the DVD and start watching immediately. … I might add that it is one of the most visually fluid movies ever made, a movie that approaches music in its rushing passion, not simply because Nino Rota's score is one of the best ever recorded, but because the characters seem to move with music within them (joyful, lustful, exciting, doubtful, sad)."

La Dolce Vita

"The film that shocked the critics...uncut, uncensored for all to see!"

La Dolce Vita

"The world's most talked about movie today!"

La Dolce Vita

"The Roman Scandals - Bound to shock with its truth!"

La Dolce Vita

"Audrey McDonald - Jane"

La Dolce Vita

"Harriet White Medin - Edna"

La Dolce Vita

"w:John Francis Lane - John"

La Dolce Vita

"Desmond O'Grady - Himself"

La Dolce Vita