
All of this makes the
reception to his final swan song The
Voice of the Moon all the more baffling for how swiftly critics, audiences
and distributors turned on the maestro.
Based upon Ermanno Cavazzoni’s novel The
Lunatics’ Poem and starring Life is
Beautiful actor/comedian Roberto Benigni, the film is something of a smorgasbord
of recurring obsessions and themes to be found throughout all of Fellini’s
films. Concerning an off the wall poet
recently released from a mental institution, the film is a fleeting and
Saroyanesque serenade through the wonderment and whimsies of the Emilia-Romagna
countryside of the director’s upbringing.
Much like Akira Kurosawa’s Madadayo,
The Voice of the Moon plays less like
a conventional narrative than an open farewell to a life sitting in the
director’s chair.

After screening the film at
the Cannes Film Festival, The Voice of
the Moon was both critically panned and tragically left without a
distribution deal in the US and UK for many years until the good folks at Arrow
Video proceeded to serve up a digitally remastered blu-ray edition. Now that it’s available, I’m glad to have
seen it but tend to agree with critics his final effort is far more
self-indulgent and personal than his previous works. Where his earlier works did overload the viewer with sensual delights and increasingly hallucinatory magical imagery, there was somehow something holding them together whereas The Voice of the Moon plays a bit like a series of disconnected vignettes which never coalesce.
Personally my favorite
Fellini where he gets everything right remains The Temptation of Dr. Antonio from the anthological film Boccaccio ’70 which united the director
with Mario Monicelli, Luchnino Visconti and Vittorio De Sica. Though only a short segment the narrative
hook synchronized beautifully with Fellini’s interests, passion for life and
bawdy penchant for women with curves. Here, The Voice of the Moon finds
the director in familiar territory but lacking the drive that made Dr. Antonio so wildly entertaining. In summation, this is strictly for Fellini
die-hards only, offering up a wealth of whimsy and fantastical imagery but
ultimately paling in comparison to what the man did before.
Score:
- Andrew Kotwicki