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Orchestra Rehearsal AKA Prova d'orchestra (Blu-ray)
[Blu-ray]
Blu-ray B - United Kingdom - Arrow Films Review written by and copyright: Paul Lewis (7th March 2018). |
The Film
![]() ![]() In an ancient church oratory, an orchestra gathers for a rehearsal. The rehearsal is filmed by a television documentary crew. The copyist, musicians and conductor are interviewed about their work. Each section of the orchestra emphasises its importance over the others. Some members of the orchestra are unhappy about being filmed; the rehearsal is presided over by the muscians’ union representative, who intervenes in order to remind the musicians of their negotiated rights. Tension is evident between the musicians and the conductor, who has high expectations and criticises the musicians incessantly. Some musicians believe that the conductor is little more than a glorified metronome, and they assert that the orchestra would function just as well – perhaps even better – with a mechanical device at its helm. After a union-stipulated 20 minute break, the musicians return to the auditorium and refuse to rehearse for the conductor. Fights break out; slogans are chanted and written in graffiti on the walls of the ancient church. Artwork and tombs are vandalised. The protest threatens to erupt into a riot, but is halted when a wrecking ball smashes through one of the church’s walls. The conductor manages to wrest control and the orchestra resumes its rehearsal. The music is beautiful, but the conductor is still not satisfied, and he angrily berates the musicians, eventually segueing into German. As the screen fades to black, the angry, impassioned voice of the conductor can be heard; it seems near-identical to the voice of Hitler. ![]() Unusually for a Fellini picture, Orchestra Rehearsal is openly political, satirical and symbolic. The church, built in the thirteenth century, represents the past: it contains the tombs of three popes and seven bishops, the copyist tells us; ‘This place is full of dead people’. The different sections of the orchestra, each convinced of their own worth and importance, represent different strata within society; the conductor is the political class, managing to unite the musicians against a mutual threat only to turn into a fascistic dictator. The film, reputedly inspired by the abduction and murder of Prime Minister Aldo Moro by Brigate Rosso members in 1978, is heavily critical of the impact of the trade unions: some of the musicians are so concerned with their negotiated rights that this prevents the rehearsal from being completed. One of the violinists refuses to play the same piece of music more than twice, as this is the number of times stipulated by his union rep. ‘If I were you, I’d think less about your union and more about the music’, the conductor tells the musicians in response to this assertion. When music/art becomes ‘polluted’ by capital and issues of labour (and labour management), Fellini seems to be saying, the production of art becomes impossible: it loses its spontaneity, freedom and inherent creativity. (‘This is like a factory’, the conductor says in reference to the rehearsal, or at least it should be where we try to make something’.) These disputes become divisive; when an orchestra is divided, it cannot achieve harmony. The instruments should complement one another, but each section in the orchestra becomes obsessed with ‘proving’ its value over the other sections. The natural outcome of all of this, the film argues, is violence, and in the aftermath of this violence a dictator emerges. It’s a bleak and, for all its outward humour, quite angrily political film; it is certainly a very unconventional Fellini picture. ![]() The sense of division within the ranks is represented through the film’s use of language, the different sections of the orchestra being associated with various regional dialects of Italian. This is something which doesn’t ‘carry’ well in the English subtitled version on this release, or in the dubbed versions that have circulated previously.
Video
The film takes up 16.7Gb of space on the Bu-ray disc and runs for 72:14 mins. Presented in the 1.78:1 screen ratio, the 1080p presentation uses the AVC codec. The aspect ratio seems natural; compositions seem to work well in this ratio. It’s a very pleasing presentation of the film, shot on 35mm colour stock. The source contains no heavy damage other than some fluctuations in the density of the emulsions, and an excellent level of fine detail is present throughout. Contrast levels are pleasing throughout, with midtones being characterised by a strong sense of definition, blacks being satisfyingly deep and highlights being even and balanced. No evidence of harmful digital tinkering is present, and a solid encode to disc ensures the presentation retains the structure of 35mm film. ![]() ![]() ![]()
Audio
The film is presented in Italian, via a LPCM 2.0 track which is accompanied by optional English subtitles. The track is clear and problem-free and demonstrates good range, the music being carried cleanly and clearly; though as noted above, some of the nuances (in terms of having the actors in each section speak with different regional accents) are most likely lost on viewers who don’t speak Italian.
Extras
![]() - ‘Richard Dyer on Nino Rota and Orchestra Rehearsal’ (20:43). In a new interview, Dyer talks about Rota’s working relationship with Fellini, which began with The White Sheik and ended with Orchestra Rehearsal. Orchestra Rehearsal was a rare exception in Rota’s career, as it was one of the few films (perhaps the only) on which Rota wrote the score before the film went into production and during which Rota was on set. (For most films scored by Rota, Rota was drafted in after production to write the music.) - ‘Orchestrating Discord’ (23:10). Fellini biographer John Baxter narrates a new video essay looking at Orchestra Rehearsal. Baxter discusses Fellini’s approach, ‘danc[ing] into the act of creation’. Baxter situates the film within Fellini’s career, reflecting on its relationship with Casanova, the earlier film being plagued by strikes and the infamous manner in which that film’s negative was ‘abducted’ and held ransom in a robbery of the Technicolor labs of Tiburtino. Fellini had a strong dislike of television but agreed to make Orchestra Rehearsal when RAI offered him carte blanche to make the picture ‘as controversial as he liked’. - ‘Felliniana Collection’ (30 images). This feature contains rare printed materials relating to the film – posters, lobby cards and pressbooks, etc, sourced from Texan collector’s Don Young’s huge collection of Fellini-related materials.
Overall
![]() It’s certainly an unconventional Fellini picture, the antithesis of much of Fellini’s other work and standing in stark relief against Fellini’s previous picture, Casanova. Fellini fans might find this picture slightly alienating, but it’s an interesting film – especially when one considers its relationship with its social context. Arrow’s Blu-ray presentation of Orchestra Rehearsal is solid and satisfyingly film-like, and is supported by some good contextual material. Click to enlarge: ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]()
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