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Michelangelo Antonionia flawed legacy
Part 2
By Richard Phillips
11 November 2004
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This is the conclusion of a two-part series on veteran Italian
director Michelangelo Antonioni. Part
1 was published on November 10.
In 1960 Antonioni wrote and directed LAvventura (The
Adventure), the first of four films that concentrate on what the
director described as the internals of character and psychology.
It is difficult to give a real sense of the film by simply recounting
its storylineAntonionis great skill lay in his ability
to create emotional depth by editing, camera movement and complex
images. Most often it is not what his characters say and do, but
their silences and lack of activity that matter most.
The film follows several days in the life of a group of rich
Italians cruising the Aeolian Islands, off the coast of Sicily.
Anna (Lea Massari), who has a troubled relationship with Sandro
(Gabriele Ferzetti), disappears after going for a walk on one
of the islands, and is never found again. Apart from Annas
friend Claudia (Monica Vitti) and Sandro, the other characters
quickly lose interest in searching for her, leave the island and
return to their rather purposeless lives.
As Sandro and Claudia continue looking in other parts of Sicily
they fall in love. But Sandro is intellectually frustrated, self-centred
and sexually promiscuous. Formerly a promising architect, he has
decided to abandon this profession for a more lucrative job as
a draftsman. His relationship with Claudia is complex and, like
the film itself, has an intangible and melancholic character.
The mystery of Annas disappearance is never solved.
When LAvventura first premiered at the Cannes
Film Festival, there were audience walkouts and booing from those
offended by its rejection of conventional cinematic techniques.
But the next day a group of leading filmmakers issued a statement
praising the movie and it was given another screening, a special
achievement prize and quickly secured an international release.
LAvventura is a complex and artful film. Antonioni
demonstrated that movies could depart from a formal narrative
structure or logical ending and that atmosphere and emotional
depth could be created with extended silences or dead time,
carefully choreographed cinematography and other visual techniques.
Explaining dead time, he said: The rhythm
of life is not made up of one steady beat; it is, instead a rhythm
that is sometimes fast, sometimes slow; it remains motionless
for a while, then at the next moment it starts spinning around.
There are times when it appears almost static, there are other
times when it moves with tremendous speed, and I believe all this
should go into the making of a film.
Most importantly, the film attempted to explore the spiritual
emptiness of its bourgeois characters and thus hint at broader
social dissatisfaction.
We live today in a period of extreme instability, as
much political, moral, and social as physical. I have made a film
on the instability of the emotions, on their mysteries,
Antonioni declared in a statement to the Cannes festival. Scientific
advances, he continued, had not produced a development in mankinds
inner spirit and sex had now become a substitute for
self-fulfilment. Although each relationship was an adventure
it provided no genuine fulfilment.
As he later explained: Sandro is a character from a film
shot in 1960 and is therefore entirely immersed in such moral
problems. He is an Italian, a Catholic, and so he is a victim
of this morality ... All the characters in my films are fighting
these problems, needing freedom, trying to find a way to cut themselves
loose, but failing to rid themselves of conscience, a sense of
sin, the whole bag of tricks.
Antonionis next three filmsLa Notte (The
Night [1961]), LEclisse (The Eclipse [1962]) and
Il Deserto Rosso (Red Desert [1964])attempt to explore
some of these issues. His recognition of the psychological and
moral concerns of middle class protagonists is sensitive and evocative,
but the underlying subtext is that there is no way out of their
dilemmas.
La Notte portrays 24 hours in the life of a writer Giovanni
(Marcello Mastroianni) and his wife Lydia (Jeanne Moreau), who
have all the accoutrements of a sophisticated existence, but whose
marriage is disintegrating. The film follows the couple as they
visit a dying friend in hospital, wander through Milan, go to
a jazz strip club and then attend an all night party held by a
wealthy industrialist, where they half-heartedly resist the temptations
of infidelity.
Like Sandro in LAvventura, Giovanni has arrived
at an artistic and personal impasse. At the party he is offered
a lucrative salary and a company directorship to write the life
story of the industrialist. As dawn breaks, Giovanni and Lydia
walk in the gardens of the industrialists mansion. Lydia
reads aloud a love letter written to her years before, but Giovanni
is so distant that he doesnt even remember that he was the
author. The film ends with the couple making love on the grassan
act of self-pity more than anything else.
LEclisse is set in Rome and is about a young woman
in the process of leaving her lover and beginning a new relationship
with a young stockbroker. The film has some thoughtful momentstelephones
ring but are not answered and characters are constantly separated
by windows, doors and various other physical barriers. Scenes
at the Rome stock exchange give a palpable sense of the ruthlessness
of the market and the psychological impact on its players. LEclisse
concludes with an extraordinary sequence at a spot where the
two lovers have agreed to meet. They fail to show up and the film
ends with an eerie seven-minute visual essay of the location.
Much of Il Deserto Rosso, Antonionis first colour
feature, occurs at an industrial plant in northern Italy. Spectacular
industrial sights and sounds dominate the film, its alienated
characters trapped in a strangely dehumanised world. The film
begins with Giuliana (Monica Vitti) wandering aimlessly with her
son Valerio outside the heavily polluting factory. She has suffered
a nervous breakdown after a car accident but her husband, Ugo
(Carlo Chionetti), is preoccupied with his job and takes little
interest in her. A visiting engineer, Corrado Zeller (Richard
Harris), who is attempting to recruit workers for a business project
in Patagonia, is attracted to Giuliana.
While Ugo is away on a business trip, Valerio apparently becomes
paralysed and then inexplicably cured. Giuliana, who is becoming
more and more distraught, is drawn towards Corrado and makes love
with him. While this brief relationship is emotionally barren,
Giuliana somehow begins to recover her psychological stability.
The film ends where it began, with Giuliana and Valerio outside
the factories. When Valerio asks what happens to the birds who
fly through the yellow smoke emitted by the complex, Giuliana
tells him that they survive by flying around the poisonous fumes.
These final comments attempt to demonstrate that Giuliana has
somehow found a way to adapt to the social environment in which
she is trapped.
Creative decline
Although the trilogy (LAvventura, La Notte, LEclisse)
and Il Deserto Roso expanded the international audience
for Italian movies, Antonionis movies increasingly tended
to luxuriate in the dilemma of their protagonists. The now celebrated
director was constantly experimenting with different forms but
he refused to probe the deeper roots of the middle class malaise
he was dramatising. And rather than examine the underlying social
reality that produced his characters disquiet, he often
mystified it.
As his introduction to Four Screenplays of Michelangelo
Antonioni in 1963 declared: We are surrounded by a reality
which is not defined or corporeal. Inside of us things appear
like dots of light on a background of fog and shadow. Our concrete
reality has a ghostly, abstract reality.
Blowupthe first of Antonionis English-language
movies and his most commercially successful workindicated
that the director was stagnating artistically. Set in London during
the mid-60s, it takes the form of a murder-mystery and follows
a few days in the life of Thomas (David Hemmings), a successful
but dissatisfied fashion photographer, searching for some inner
meaning to his life.
One day he photographs two lovers embracing in a park. The
woman, Jane (Vanessa Redgrave), demands he hand over the film,
which he refuses. At the same time Janes lover, an older
man, suddenly disappears. Thomas returns to his studio to develop
the photographs, but Jane tracks him down and tries to seduce
him in order to retrieve the negatives. He pretends to give her
the film and she leaves.
One of the photos appears to show a body on the ground and
someone in nearby bushes firing a gun. Has a murder been committed?
Enlargements of the negative only seem to add to the mystery.
He returns to the park and finds Janes lover dead on the
ground.
Thomas leaves, informs his disinterested friends and returns
to his studio only to discover that it has been ransacked and
the negatives and most of the pictures stolen. He revisits the
park the next morning but the body is gone. The film concludes
with Thomas playing an imaginary game of tennis with a mime group
in the park and, as the camera pulls back to an aerial shot, he
slowly blends in with the lawn.
Blowup has a few interesting momentsthe dark room
sequences have a certain tension, and the social atmosphere of
mid-1960s London is well captured. But its underlying and rather
obvious messagethat reality and truth are relativeis
a retreat from the more serious psychological explorations of
his early work.
Antonionis next film, Zabriskie Point (1970),
despite recent attempts to rehabilitate its reputation, is an
artistic failure. Set in late 1960s America, the movie returns
to more conventional narrative forms but is unconvincing and confused.
The films two main characters are Mark, involved in radical
student politics and accused of shooting a policeman during a
protest, and Daria, the young secretary of a Los Angeles property
developer. Mark hijacks a small plane and links up with Daria,
who is traveling to a planned real estate development in the desert.
The two travel together, smoke marijuana, and make love at Zabriskie
Point, a desert tourist attraction. As they begin making love,
the film merges into an orgy fantasy involving dozens of young
people.
Mark eventually decides to return the plane but is gunned down
by police. When Daria hears about his death she imagines a massive
explosion destroying the developers desert property. The
final scene consists of slow-motion exploding homes and consumer
items against the sound of Pink Floyds rock anthem, Careful
with that axe Eugene.
Professione: Reporter (The Passenger [1975]), staring
Jack Nicholson as world-weary journalist David Locke in North
Africa, although a slight improvement, ends with another visually
complex Antonioni endinga seven-minute single take in which
Locke is killed. Form and technique was now almost entirely dominating
the filmmakers work and had become his way of avoiding any
genuinely creative exploration of his subject matter.
This was even more apparent in Il Mistero di Oberwald
(The Oberwald Mystery [1980]), a turn-of-the-century period piece
starring Monica Vitti. Antonioni shot the movie on video and then
transferred it to film for theatrical release. During the shoot
he manipulated the video cameras to give the actors colour auras,
according to their characters moods. None of this improved
the story or increased its dramatic impact.
In 1982 Antonioni attempted to recreate some of the emotional
atmosphere of his earlier work with Identification of a Woman.
The visually lush movie, about a director searching for the perfect
actress, has little to recommend it.
Badly affected by a stroke in 1985 that left him paralysed
and unable to speak, Antonioni, with the assistance of German
director Wim Wenders, returned to similar themes in Beyond
the Clouds (1995). The rather pointless movie consists of
four separate stories about sexual encounters between strangers;
one of the characters is a film director (John Malkovich), also
preparing for his next movie. It has a short clever
segment starring Marcello Mastroianni and Jeanne Moreau as an
old couple, as if their marriage in La Notte had survived
the years.
Thousands of words have been published dissecting Antonionis
work over the yearsthe director elevated to cult-figure
status during the confused and culturally barren environment of
the 1990sbut most of the often-lengthy observations are
confused and self-serving.
British film critics Ian Cameron and Robin Wood provide one
of the better commentaries in Antonioni, a series of essays
published in 1968. The authors admire the directors artistic
skills but perceptively point to one of the underlying weaknesses
in his workAntonionis defeatist approach.
According to Wood, Antonionis concentration on style
became a means of avoiding more complex aesthetic and social questions.
Wood argues that one of the functions of art is to make its recipients
in some sense more alivenot necessarily happy
... but alert, responsive, active. The whole movement of [the
films] seems to work in the opposite direction, so that they become
a sort of depressive aesthetic drug.
The artistry in Antonionis movies, he continues, makes
them the ideal medium for the self-indulgence of disillusioned
intellectuals. Even their desolation is strangely comforting,
because it is so little disturbed by any activeness of protest,
and so beautifully expressed. There are many ways of seeking refuge
from the complexities, confusions and anxieties of a profoundly
disturbing age; Antonionis retreat into a fundamentally
complacent despair is a particularly subtle and insidious one,
because it gives the impression all the time of uncompromisingly
confronting them.
This analysis, and the recognition that powerful creative work
can only be maintained by fearlessly challenging the existing
social order, is valuable advice for any filmmaker and artist
today.
Antonionis creative skills, particularly his ability,
in his early films, to visually demonstrate the inner, emotional
complexities of modern life, and to make some sort of protest
against it, constitute a contribution to cinematic art. This vital
element, however, became increasingly faint during the late 1960s
and then appears to have died out altogether over the last two
and a half decades.
The artistic decline of an undoubtedly talented figure is a
complex process and, in Antonionis case, obviously connected
to the difficult intellectual climate in which he worked. It is
also, however, bound up with his own decision, conscious or otherwise,
to accommodate himself to the political and social status quo.
Concluded
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