Discover Rimini paying homage to the great dirtector Federico Fellini starting from his famous films, in particular from his most autobiographical work "AMARCORD"
The cinema with its stories and its authors can reveal a territory and its treasures in a unique way. The first cine-tourism itinerary dedicated to Federico Fellini is born. It will lead travelers to evocative places or movie sets that have been important for the life and creative universe of the master, proposing the experiences lived through his eyes. The itinerary that is dedicated to the director of 8½ and his city, Rimini, branches into three directions: the 'City of Memories', the 'City of Dreams' and the 'City of Cinema'. Each itinerary represents a part of Fellini's life.
The City of Memories
Fellini was born in Rimini in 1920 and stayed there until 1939 when he moved to Rome. It was during this period that he began to create the ‘mythology of childhood’ which can be found throughout his works. THE HOUSES Fellini was born in via Dardanelli (A1). The family then moved just down the road to Palazzo Ripa, in Corso d’Augusto 6, now 115 (A2), and then in 1926 to Palazzo Ceschina in via Gambalunga 48, now 91 (A3). He finally moved to via Dante 9, now 23, in 1931. (A4). His grandparent’s house on his father’s side can be found just outside Rimini in Gambettola, (A5), this is the countryside farmstead in a famous sequence from the film 8 ½. SCHOOLS Fellini went to primary school in via Brighenti 38, and the gym in via Tempio Malatestiano, now 24 (A6). These are the years of Omero and the “pugna” evoked in Amarcord. ROADS AND SQUARES The cars from the Mille Miglia race would run over the Tiber bridge (A7) just as was portrayed in Amarcord, towards Corso d’Augusto. Piazza Cavour (A8), Piazza Tre Martiri (A9) and Piazza Ferrari (A10) served as a backdrop for famous sequences from Amarcord: the scene with the peacock on the Pigna fountain, the “moustache” on the bicycle, and the scene with the Partisan Monument from the First World War. The circus from The Clowns used to be set up in Piazza Malatesta (A11).
The City of Dreams
Throughout his films, Fellini made Rimini into a place where the soul reigns supreme, a mythical dimension, a place you always want to come back to. Around this city and it’s magical places, Fellini created a universal idea of beauty. THE PALATA (B1) The Rimini pier in winter is the emblem of the Vitellonis. In Amarcord, the motorcyclists’ theatre in Scurèza in Corpolò is the place where the boats leave to meet the Rex. THE GRAND HOTEL (B2) Federico Fellini Park. Inaugurated in 1908, it is the symbol of the Belle Époque, and for a young Fellini, forbidden desires: “The Grand Hotel represented wealth, luxury and lavish westerners.” The director stayed here every time he came back to Rimini, in room 316. THE FULGOR (B3) Corso d'Augusto, 162. The cinema where Fellini saw, as depicted in Rome, his first film - Maciste in Hell, and he discovered the magic of the cinema. It is here that Titta, the protagonist of Amarcord tries and fails to seduce Gradisca. Reopened in 2018 with the scenery and props of the three time Oscar winner Dante Ferretti, the Fulgor evokes everything that cinema represents: dreams, fantasy and wonder. Today the Fulgor Cinema is one of the axes of theFELLINI MUSEUM, inaugurated in 2021. Included by Mibac among the great national projects of cultural heritage, it is a magical place of artistic synthesis that develops between Castel Sismondo, the fifteenth-century fortress to whose project Filippo Brunelleschi contributed; Palazzo Valloni, an eighteenth-century building, where the Fulgor cinema is located on the ground floor; and a large urban area, a real Piazza dei Sogni with green portions, arenas for shows and artistic installations, which form a real cultural center and which embraces, in a ring that is not only symbolic, the Fellini Museum, the theater Galli and the Part - Palaces of art. A space that creates emotions and entertainment in which innovation, research and experimentation come to terms with the classicism of art. A museum that does not intend to interpret Fellini's cinema as a finished work in itself, as a shrine or homage to memory, but as the key to «everything is imagined».
The City of Cinema
Everything in Fellini’s cinema is an ode to Rimini and everything in the city of Rimini is an ode to Fellini. THE SAN GIULIANO QUARTER (C1) Recalled in The Clowns it is a concentration of squares, alleyways and houses covered in murals that depict characters and scenes from Fellini’s most famous films. THE BOOK OF DREAMS (C2) On these pages, Fellini wrote down and illustrated his dreams for over 30 years, his inspiration for his films. It is currently being shown in the City Museum in via Luigi Tonini, 1. THE RING (C3) This work by Mauro Staccioli in piazzetta Zavagli evokes a scene from Amarcord that never made the final cut, when Count Zavagli’s daughter’s ring was found in a black well. Today THE FEDERICO FELLINI STUDY CENTRE (C4), where there are original documents, archived materials, photographs, drawings, scripts and articles, is incorporated into the new Fellini Museum. THE BIG BOW (C5) Arnaldo Pomodoro’s monument to remember Fellini, his wife Giulietta Masina and his son Pier Federico. In Petrella Guidi there is a Name Field, a sanctuary of peace (C6), that the poets and scriptwriter Tonino Guerra wanted to dedicated to his director friend and his wife.
Download the Cine-itinerary map
Follow the route, from the beach area to the city centre:
1.Piazzale Fellini: the Grand Hotel, symbol of the forbidden desires;
2. Piazzale Boscovich: the pier, the socalled "palata", Winter destination of the loafers in the film "Vitelloni" and favourite place of Scureza, the motorcyclist in "Amarcord";
3. Piazzale C.Battisti: the railway station, the train, metaphore of departure, often used by the Master;
4. Via Clementini n. 9: Palazzo Dolci, the house of his youth and of his first love;
5. Via Oberdan: his sister's house and the old seat of the Fellini Foundation;
6. Piazza Ferrari: war memorial, the naked statues;
7. Via Gambalunga: Palazzo Gambalunga, the old gymnasium, theatre of many students' jokes;
8. Piazza Cavour: the Pigna fountain recalls the snow balls to Gradisca, Scureza's raids, the enchantment of the peacock; 9. Piazza Cavour: the stairs to the Arengo Palace and the tower of the Commune recall the fascist celebration and the lonely protest with the grammophone in "Amarcord";
10. Corso d'Augusto: the cinema Fulgor, part of the new Fellini Museum, the largest extended museum devoted to this genius screenwriter ever named after a film director, which includes the magnificent jewel of the Renaissance, Castel Sismondo, and Piazza Malatesta now named Piazza dei Sogni (square of dreams);
11. Ponte di Tiberio: the thousend miles in "Amarcord";
12. Borgo San Giuliano: the murals, painted by artists from Rimini and representing the films and the life of the Maestro;
13. Civic Cemetry: "La Grande Prua" , the monument in honour of Federico Fellini and his wife Giulietta Masina, work of the famous artist Arnaldo Pomodoro. It represents the bow of a boat pointing towards heaven recalling the legendary Rex in "Amarcord".