PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
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TU PUNTUACIÓN
Casanova es un seductor libertino que no sabe si realmente está interesado en alguien, o si él mismo es interesante.Casanova es un seductor libertino que no sabe si realmente está interesado en alguien, o si él mismo es interesante.Casanova es un seductor libertino que no sabe si realmente está interesado en alguien, o si él mismo es interesante.
- Ganó 1 premio Óscar
- 7 premios y 3 nominaciones en total
Margareth Clémenti
- Sister Maddalena
- (as Margareth Clementi)
Chesty Morgan
- Barberina
- (escenas eliminadas)
- (crédito solo)
Leda Lojodice
- Rosalba the mechanical doll
- (as Adele Angela Lojodice)
Daniel Emilfork
- Marquis Du Bois
- (as Daniel Emilfork Berenstein)
Hans van de Hoek
- Prince Del Brando
- (as Hans Van Den Hoek)
Argumento
¿Sabías que...?
- CuriosidadesDonald Sutherland, who wore a prosthetic nose and chin, shaved off the front part of his hair, once telling a laughing crowd "When Fellini says get a hair cut, you get a hair cut."
- PifiasCasanova says "I went to Holland, to Belgium, to Spain. In Oslo, I became seriously ill." But Norway's capital was called Christiania at the time; it did not adopt the name "Oslo" until 1925. And Belgium did not exist until 1830; that region would have been called the "Austrian Netherlands" or by the individual provinces of Brabant, Hainaut and Flanders.
- Citas
Giacomo Casanova: A man who never speaks ill of women does not love them. For to understand them and to love them one must suffer at their hands. Then and only then can you find happiness at the lips of your beloved.
- ConexionesEdited into Zoom su Fellini: Fellini nel cestino (1984)
Reseña destacada
I totally disagree with the critical trend of discrediting Fellini's later films as symptomatic of his decline. Instead, I believe that Fellini's last films were actually his best. And Casanova, by far Fellin's worst reviewed film, is Fellin's masterpiece-- a sad, funny, wistful, grotesque, Rabelisian epic of a film.
In a way, Casanova is a foil to Fellini's earlier classic La Dolce Vita-- the main difference being that the former is more pessimistic in tone, while the latter is enfused with a youthful optimism. In a way, that's how the films of Fellini have progressed; his earlier films were filled with an almost child-like love for life (albeit with some very dark edges), while his later films became increasingly darker and more depressing. Strangely enough, Fellini's later films were also his best, both on a technical level, and in terms of thematic depth.
Casanova is not only the story of a man, it is also about a whole era-- an era of grand opulence and grand waste. Like in many of Fellini's other films, the protagonist of Casanova serves as a guide for us through a phantasmagoric carnival-like world. Casanova is depicted as a sexually-ravenuous, and deeply cynical man. He is constantly searching for some kind of image of the perfect woman-- an ideal which eventually leads to his own destruction.
Casanova is not a film for everyone-- despite having the usual Fellinisque scenes of ribaldry, Casanova is for the most part slowly paced (it reminds me of Kubrick's Barry Lyndon). Ultimately, Casanova, like Fellini's And the Ship Sails On, is about the passing of a golden age into oblivion. One leaves Casanova feeling both depressed, and yet somehow hopeful. Why?
Perhaps because like all great artists, Fellini realizes that in our darkest hours, we still can hold on to our memories of happier times.
In a way, Casanova is a foil to Fellini's earlier classic La Dolce Vita-- the main difference being that the former is more pessimistic in tone, while the latter is enfused with a youthful optimism. In a way, that's how the films of Fellini have progressed; his earlier films were filled with an almost child-like love for life (albeit with some very dark edges), while his later films became increasingly darker and more depressing. Strangely enough, Fellini's later films were also his best, both on a technical level, and in terms of thematic depth.
Casanova is not only the story of a man, it is also about a whole era-- an era of grand opulence and grand waste. Like in many of Fellini's other films, the protagonist of Casanova serves as a guide for us through a phantasmagoric carnival-like world. Casanova is depicted as a sexually-ravenuous, and deeply cynical man. He is constantly searching for some kind of image of the perfect woman-- an ideal which eventually leads to his own destruction.
Casanova is not a film for everyone-- despite having the usual Fellinisque scenes of ribaldry, Casanova is for the most part slowly paced (it reminds me of Kubrick's Barry Lyndon). Ultimately, Casanova, like Fellini's And the Ship Sails On, is about the passing of a golden age into oblivion. One leaves Casanova feeling both depressed, and yet somehow hopeful. Why?
Perhaps because like all great artists, Fellini realizes that in our darkest hours, we still can hold on to our memories of happier times.
- directjw
- 20 nov 1999
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- How long is Casanova?Con tecnología de Alexa
Detalles
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- País de origen
- Idiomas
- Títulos en diferentes países
- Fellini's Casanova
- Localizaciones del rodaje
- Empresa productora
- Ver más compañías en los créditos en IMDbPro
Taquilla
- Recaudación en todo el mundo
- 227 US$
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By what name was Casanova (1976) officially released in India in English?
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