La dolce vita (
Italian for "The Sweet Life") is a 1960 film directed by
Federico Fellini. It is usually cited as the
film that signals the split between Fellini's earlier
neo-realist films and his later
art films.
Plot
Set in
Rome in the 1950s where Marcello (
Marcello Mastroianni) covers the more sensational side of the news: movie stars, religious visions, and the decadent aristocracy.
The film shows seven days and nights in the life of the reporter. Marcello is living with Emma (
Yvonne Furneaux), a woman who loves him and wants a traditional marriage, but she is possessive and shows little ability to understand his unarticulated search for value and meaning in his life. He has encounters with other women – Maddalena (
Anouk Aimée), a beautiful, wealthy, and jaded friend/lover, and
Anita Ekberg as an American movie star named Sylvia. Marcello also briefly meets an unspoiled and charming girl working at a beachside restaurant.