Orchestra Rehearsal

1978 "The Decline of the West in C# Major"
7.1| 1h10m| NA| en| More Info
Released: 01 October 1978 Released
Producted By: RAI
Country:
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
Official Website:
Info

An orchestra assembles for a rehearsal in an ancient chapel under the inquisitive eyes of a TV documentary crew, but an uprising breaks out.

Genre

Drama, Comedy, Music

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Director

Federico Fellini

Production Companies

RAI

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Orchestra Rehearsal Audience Reviews

Lovesusti The Worst Film Ever
Evengyny Thanks for the memories!
Sameer Callahan It really made me laugh, but for some moments I was tearing up because I could relate so much.
Mathilde the Guild Although I seem to have had higher expectations than I thought, the movie is super entertaining.
Aboudonya While the musicians are faced by the decaying society...decaying world we live in....they wanted to scream....they should scream....or better to produce a lovely symphony...that even if no one hears....no one knows about...They are proud of playing! The film is so subtle in acting...the love of musicians to their instruments is inspiring and truly helps us Audience to understand how it means to them to play...and to fight to gain this right.. The Location of the rehearsal...and what it stands for as an ancient church in a wolrd of atheists....to be blown away for no apparent reason...while the place can be used....to rehearse Orchestra....like the musicians were trying to capture the last seconds of the place of the old....before it collapses....like them...their love...their dreams!
Jules et Jim A rare jewel in Fellini's filmography.While the unchained genius who broke off with Neorealism to build up his own personal brand of art reaches such absolute heights of delirium as in "Satyricon", "Casanova" or "E la nave va", here he is grave, pondered, sober, using a very fine irony to cast on his message about human society.One can relate this movie rather to "I Clowns", "Roma" and "Amarcord". Splendid in everything, and deeply permeated by the Great Federico's bright mind. Some people go even to declare it the best Fellini ever - and it wouldn't be too easy to contradict them!
MisterWhiplash In most of Federico Fellini's best films, he made big statements about the way we live and socialize with each other and deal with ourselves as much as the past, all within exciting, tragic-comic film-making style. Orchestra Rehearsal does the same, though in a shorter amount of time. We are given a (union) orchestra in Italy, who's members vary from young adults to the old timers, women, introverts, trouble makers, and so forth, who each have their own music of choice (or sometimes of necessity). The conductor is frustrated- he can barely get the orchestra to concentrate much less really practice, and the union problems get things caught in the way as they rip through the ironically happy and (typically) carnival-like pieces. There's a break taken, which is when everything starts to slowly, but surely, wind down and breakdown among the musicians. In the meantime a television crew stands by taking 'interviews' of the musicians, their opinions, their little 'off' moments, signaling the anarchy that will soon ensue.The interviews themselves are some of the strongest, funniest parts of the film- the interviewers get (sometimes begrudgingly) words on their instruments, why they play, how they play, and what role their music has in the world. These interviews can also be hit-or-miss sometimes, and because of the constant dialog (there's sometimes barely a breath to be had, as is the beautiful claustrophobic style in Fellini's characters), there's almost too much information going on. There's also the tendency for the character(s), whom are mostly portrayed by un-professionals (to acting, not to music of course), to not be very convincing, or even a little boring (the conductor's monologue in his room, for example, is one of the weaker parts of the film for me). But then it does start to pick up in insane, trademark Fellini fashion as the musicians rebel, and an unexpected surprise comes heading their way.It's likely that Orchestra Rehearsal isn't one of Fellini's very best films, but it is one that captivates as it bemuses, brings laughs as it does thought, and it isn't necessarily a wasteful experience (some may not like it much at all, at least in comparison to his masterpieces). Not to forget the incalculable, lasting power of Nina Rota's music, which drives the film's bombastic, heart-racing rehearsing scenes (there is also humor underneath much of the music, like when the musicians have their own little solos as jokes). There's something always satisfying when a composer is on the same page as the director he's writing for, and few were ever so in tune as Fellini and Rota. And even during some parts that don't add up, their combination helps out a lot. As mentioned before, one could even think deeper into the ideas and thoughts and characters in the film as almost a microcosm of society itself, its easy-going people, its hard-nosed people, its incendiaries, its nostalgics, and its normals and eccentrics. Or, one can just take the Fellini ride, so to speak, and enjoy some 70 minutes with Fellini & company.
xenophil This miniature movie's tempo builds, stops and starts in that comical, jerky way characteristic of Fellini. It's one of the things I like.The interviews are a riot!It appears to be a parable of the last few hundred years of European history.