📼 Tune in Tuesday: Fellini the Clowns — Eureka Blu-Ray 📼




Put on the greasepaint, dim the lights, let the carousel spin. Fellini’s The Clowns isn’t a movie, it’s a séance for rubber noses and tumbling ghosts. Half documentary, half fever dream, all Fellini—where pratfalls blur into prophecy and circus music feels like it’s leaking from some busted TV in the afterlife.

Eureka’s Blu-ray pops like a midway at midnight. The reds bleed rich, the tents glow like dying suns, the clowns’ eyes glimmer with that familiar Fellini ache. Grain stays intact—it’s not digital plastic, it’s celluloid carnival dust, caught in your throat.

Nino Rota’s score staggers out of the speakers like a drunk calliope searching for the big top. Extras stack the deck: context, essays, sideshow lore. A whole apparatus to remind you this wasn’t just a one-off TV special, but a manifesto for Fellini’s lifelong circus worship.

This disc? It’s a cracked mirror in a funhouse corridor. Watch it and you’ll see clowns as Fellini saw them: sad prophets, cosmic fools, death’s warm-up act.

Buzz says: Cop it, spin it, let the greasepaint static into your bloodstream. This is Fellini’s VHS-age mixtape for the eternal carnival. 🎪📼



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