“Blowup” [also known as Blow-Up] was a turning point in the great Michelangelo Antonioni’s career. After a string of critically acclaimed Italian classics, he was offered the opportunity to work with MGM on three English language films – “Blowup” being the first and the most successful, unfortunately for the wrong reasons, more of which in a moment. What marks this a turning point however is that after his return to Italian cinema after these, he will never be as prolific as he used to be before worldwide acclaim. His projects grew few and far between, even whilst his genius remained radiant as ever.
Adapted from a short story by Julio Cortázar, Antonioni developed the screenplay further to experiment with an array of philosophical themes. Prominent among which is the perception of reality. What is real, and when does it become ‘accepted’ as real. Is seeing believing, or isn’t that enough, even with photographic evidence. Does everyone have to create their own reality. Another concept is his trying to define ‘value’ – the fact that things taken out of context loose their value and purpose (a bit like the compilations in my posts – oops, sorry couldn’t resist that ) is demonstrated time and again. There’s also his pet themes like urban alienation explored through a different angle using characters that conform mechanically to fit in an environment.
All these themes are woven into events during a day in the life of Thomas, a mod and fashion photographer in London during the swinging sixties. We don’t know much about Thomas, he isn’t particularly likeable even, but he grows on us as we get to see things from his point of view. We can see Antonioni is critiquing his protagonist but at the same time is fascinated by him, along with the glitz and glamour of his world. His world is one of attractive women throwing themselves at his feet, of drugs, parties, and rock and roll, which we get to sample intermittently through the film. And it is the documentation of these facets of Thomas’ world that was the cause of much controversy – scenes like these, though tame by today’s standards were not shown in film until then.
The very thought of this film being produced by MGM is incredible to say the least – they don’t usually make this kind of stuff. And mainstream film or not, Antonioni nevertheless dishes out bitter-pill ideas, cunningly sugar-coating it with glamour and sex. The audience bought it too, and it apparently did well in both the US and UK. The film itself is exquisitely done. Antonioni narrates this like a stylish thriller, and gives his protagonist a purpose by allowing him to believe that he was an inadvertent witness to a murder. But the protagonist is merely part of the backdrop to what Antonioni tries to tell. It is a treat for any film-lover to watch, as there are some glorious Antonioni moments thrown in – you know you’re in one when there’s barely any sound let alone music, perhaps just the rustling of leaves in the breeze, or the occasional footsteps, with characters performing tasks that would normally seem too mundane to notice even – but absolutely riveting stuff in the hands of the master. And the well-rounded technical team involved in cinematography, set design, music, and editing, and the superb well-known cast aid Antonioni create this gem of a film by capturing a moment from the sixties like few others. Needless to say, this memorable film classic is Highly Recommended Viewing..!
I couldn’t help but share a famous moment from the film – the final scene that encapsulates what the film is all about. But spoiler it ain’t – you need to watch the rest of the film to make sense of it. The camera certainly is another spectator in this game.
Compilation:Veruschka von Lehndorff, Vanessa Redgrave,
Jane Birkin, Gillian Hills, and Sarah Miles
Not all scenes contain nudity, but by and large blog-related, they’re barely clothed anyway.
A bevy of famous starlets including Veruschka von Lehndorff, Vanessa Redgrave, Jane Birkin, Gillian Hills, and Sarah Miles grace Michelangelo Antonioni's swinging sixties classic, "Blow-Up".
Scene Guide:
Thomas going through the motions taking pictures of these stylish yet grotesque models – we will also learn he’s not a particularly charming man. The first shoot is of supermodel Veruschka von Lehndorff, and we can see how Antonioni likens it to a sex session.
“Can I have the film please…” pleads a vulnerable looking Jane – she is willing to do whatever it takes to get it back from Thomas – the film roll containing pictures of her with a lover in a park. Vanessa Redgrave looks gorgeous as the distressed Jane.
Some respite from a hard day comes in the form of a brunette and a blonde, eager to get their pictures taken by the famous Thomas. And we will see the ‘birds’ are game for anything. The blonde is played by an up-and-coming Jane Birkin complete with her London accent, and the brunette by Gillian Hills.
No nudity but inserted it purely for the lovely Sarah Miles who plays Patricia – she gestures Thomas to stay and watch her making love to her boyfriend – his best friend.
Giuseppe Tornatore made his directorial debut with the crime drama “Il Camorrista” [Eng. Title: The Professor]. This would be our first glimpse of Tornatore’s prodigious talent, which will blossom gloriously in his next project two years later – a film that I still consider possibly the greatest ever made. In case you’re wondering, that is “Nuovo Cinema Paradiso” – if you love cinema and enjoy a hearty laugh and a cry in front of a screen, you must watch it. While I sometimes wish Tornatore had made a few more films, a part of me is glad to see him build his creative appetite by taking big time-off between projects – the result – every film of his is worthy of mention in the cinematic hall of fame. On another matter, if I ever venture south of Rome, it’ll be thanks largely to watching his films.
Back to the debut, Tornatore scripted the screenplay loosely based on a biopic of a real-life Camorra leader – Camorra being the Neapolitan equivalent of the Sicilian Mafia. It charts the rise and fall of ‘Il Professore’, from a childhood of extreme poverty to the leader of the ‘Reformed’ Camorra, and moving among the rich and powerful including the American Cosa Nostra, even while a wanted fugitive. It is a gritty, very well-made crime drama that portrays life and politics as it was when these syndicates cast their long shadow over the lives of every southern Italian against a hopelessly inert State apparatus. Shot in the style of a docu-drama, Tornatore adds an air of urgency to happenings with tactical use of rough edits, giving a journalistic feel to it, and the film is ably aided by the soundtrack – elements that I think were necessary considering the fact that the voice of Ben Gazarra (who plays ‘Il professore’) was dubbed, and he certainly ain’t no Al Pacino. It is nevertheless a fine film, and definitely Recommended Viewing.
Compilation:Gilla Novak and others
The film’s brief scenes of nudity occurs courtesy of ‘Pelle-di-pesca’ (Peachy skin), an aide to the Cosa Nostra representative in Milan. She befriends and seduces Ciro, a close associate of ‘Il Professore’, who will be betrayed. As retribution, both Ciro and Pelle-di-pesca will meet a terrible end in the hands of Il professore’s sister Rosaria, played by the fine Spanish actress Laura del Sol. ‘Pelle-di-pesca’ however, is played by a bold-as-ever Gilla Novak.
It required the likes of Gilla Novak to accommodate the brief but rather bold scenes of public nudity in Giuseppe Tornatore's crime drama, "Il Camorrista".
“Al Acheco del Leopardo” [Eng. title: The Stalking of the Leopard] is writer Enrique Renteria’s first foray into directing feature-length films, and I’m sure it must have been a learning curve of sorts for him. Having said that, it isn’t a bad effort, notwithstanding the odd continuity errors and a slightly underwhelming climax. But it is after all a typical Mexican mainstream thriller, and I’ve seen worse even from seasoned directors. The cinematography is actually pleasing to the eye, and of course, the customary inclusion of unbelievably beautiful people makes this film more than tolerable.
Spoiler-free Storyline: Roman is on a camping expedition with two attractive young tourist friends, the Spanish Lorena and Brazilian Patricia, when he witnesses and even records the massacre of some Mexican Indian peasants by a man in a leopard-skin hat. Roman is spotted and instantly killed, and so is Patricia. Lorena escapes in the ensuing commotion, and is rescued by a travelling group of midget bullfighters. They offer to take her to safety in Mexico city where Eduardo, Roman’s brother lives. But the assassin is determined to catch up with Lorena in order to leave no trace of what happened – he is after all doing the bidding for a very powerful man – the local governor. His relentless pursuit and Lorena’s frantic efforts to escape unscathed is what the thriller is all about.
Compilation:Diana Bernedo, Andreia Martins, and Talía Marcela
Newcomers Diana Bernedo and Andreia Martins offer some visually pleasing delights early in the film as they frolic nymph-like in this tropical thriller from Mexico, "Al Acecho del Leopardo".
Scene Guide:
It’s always a pleasure to see blog-related highlights appearing early on in film. Here we have Lorena and Patricia teasing Roman as they go skinny-dipping in the stream, unaware of a massacre about to happen in their vicinity. Lorena is played by a pretty Diana Bernedo, and Patricia by Brazilian model Andreia Martins. Nice..!
Good things don’t last forever and soon poor Patricia meets a terrible end while an understandably petrified Lorena scrambles to safety.
Exhausted, bruised, and still naked, Lorena is picked up by some travelling bullfighters who call themselves Bullfighters of Lilliput.
Eduardo tries to inform Maura, Roman’s estranged and totally stoned wife about his brother’s death, but her lover just wouldn’t let him disturb her. A scuffle ensues. Maura is played by Talía Marcela.
During the time when Nouvelle Vague was in full flow, there was a French director who wasn’t formally part of it, and yet explored cinema in his own unique way. Louis Malle started in film as a cameraman, and his evolution didn’t stop with becoming a director – even as a successful director, he was always experimenting with new ways of telling stories just as he was exploring human nature through cinema. His can reasonably be considered one of the most varied body of work in film. While I have yet to discover many of his earlier classics, from what I’ve seen, his filmography is replete with controversial subject matter, sometimes also p*ssing off various governments for one reason or another. But they’re all (the films, I mean) beautiful works – melancholic, filled with an air of foreboding, and deeply personal. While Malle also made films in the US, I hope to mainly focus on his European works in this blog.
“Black Moon” was one of his later films that his conventional fans might even consider an anomaly. Here we see Malle exploring the fairytale-fantasy genre and mixing it with modern-day politics and nightmares. Not only that – a life-long Indophile, he recreates imagery inspired from Indian folklore and rural life, and fuses it with Nordic/Gaelic symbolism to take us on a trippy journey – this is Alice in Wonderland after waking up from a night of rave, all in Malle’s subdued style of course..!
Human supremacy over the world is supposedly coming to an end as there’s a war of all wars going on – between men and women. We see the world literally returned back to nature as husband executes wife, and sister slashes brother. Pubescent Lily, poorly disguised as a man, is ducking and weaving through gunfire to reach safety. Her less-frequented path leads to a dead-end. And a portly little unicorn! And some naked little urchins chasing a big fat pig, and soon a villa (Loius Malle’s own home) inhabited by a bedridden old lady listening to her wireless set and talking to her rat called Humphrey. She seems to be looked after by a brother-sister duo – Lily, and Lily (no its not typo). This is just the first fifteen minutes of the film, and a lot more’s coming your way..!
The film is visually stunning, thanks to the chilled out direction, Bergman-regular Sven Nykvist’s magnificent cinematography, and the exquisite lighting where some of the compositions are like classical paintings. Music is used sparingly, and to telling effect. There’s plenty of humour too, as young Lily tries to make sense of what’s going on around her. Some feel it is a surreal coming-of-age film, some think it is political statement, some think this is just plain lunacy. But whatever you think, this film is one fascinating experience that you’ll never forget easily. Even after several years. Needless to say, Highly Recommended Viewing..!
I couldn’t help showing a funny scene from the film, which I think captures a lot of the film’s essence. Whether you look at these characters symbolically or literally, it engages you all the same.
You need to install or upgrade Flash Player to view this content, install or upgrade by clicking here.
Amazon DVD Box-set Link Superb value for money – the box-set from which this compilation was made also includes some of his other late classics, and my favourite, “Au revoir les enfants”.
Compilation:Alexandra Stewart and Cathryn Harrison
Made from several blog-related scenes, it features a striking Alexandra Stewart (she also bore a child through Louis Malle) who plays Lily, the sister, and a charming fifteen year old Catherine Harrison (granddaughter of Rex Harrison) who plays young Lily the refugee. The rest of the cast includes veteran German stage actress Therese Giehse who plays the old lady – her last work and to whom the film’s also dedicated to, and Warhol-regular Joe Dallesandro. The dialogues are in English which require no further explanation.
Some scenes of the striking Alexandra Stewart and charming Cathryn Harrison from Louis Malle's surreal little gem, "Black Moon".
It’s a rare occasion to introduce someone who’s predominantly an actress as a director, even more so if that actress has an impressive nude portfolio of her own – German actress Maria Schrader is a legend in that aspect which of course will be discussed here in the near future. But the chosen subject for her screenplay and directorial debut in “Liebesleben” [Eng. Title: Love Life] is certainly fascinating and intriguing, to say the least.
Ms. Schrader provokes us with the very choice of her title – especially when we see more of obsession rather than love actually depicted through the film. But love there is, from unexpected quarters. Set in modern day Jerusalem, we follow the sudden upheaval in Ya’ara’s hitherto ‘planned’ existence – a young married woman working on her masters degree, with a promising career and blissful life ahead of her. It was her introduction to Arie, a friend of her father that kindles a passion in Ya’ara hitherto unknown, even risking her marriage, family, and dignity in its pursuit. A family in denial’s dirty linen is forcibly exhibited much to Ya’ara’s dismay, through her own impulsive behaviour. Some of the situations Ya’ara gets into are quite hilarious, which makes me wonder if this could have worked better as a comedy taking a wry look at people’s idiosyncrasies in their quest to fulfil hidden desires, rather than a drama that at times seems forced and needlessly drawn out. But since you all know I hate to be critical of anyone making their directorial debut, I’d say the debut has been a qualified success.
It certainly has several things going for it – the characterisation from a woman’s perspective which is refreshingly frank, the clean cinematography aided by the stunning locations, and the sound engineering. While we may have to deal with the accented English (charming in some ways), it is a simple film that doesn’t try to say too much, but also throws a rare non-cliché’d glimpse into middle-class Jewish life. Recommended Viewing.
Many of the nude scenes of Neta Graty are a result of awkward situations laid bare in Maria Schrader's film "Liebesleben".
Scene Guide:
No nudity but sexy. Ya’ara impulsively tries on Arie’s trousers at a boutique changing room, only to be caught with the wrong red-handed. Ya’ara is played by young Israeli actress Neta Graty (credited as Netta Garti).
No nudity – Ya’ara invites herself into Arie’s house and he has fleeting pointless sex with her to get her out of the way.
On her way home, Ya’ara imagines herself as Arie’s trophy paraded in public.
Ya’ara hands over her panties in the car (as self-respecting married women do to strangers, I guess), and soon finds herself making love to Arie while his Turkish friend watches, before joining in..!
An embarrassed Ya’ara tries to escape the groping middle-aged men, only to find herself naked among some workers restoring the building.
As if that wasn’t humiliation enough, it turns out Arie’s Turkish friend is also a friend of her family..!
Ya’ara, during one of her ‘impulsive’ vists to Arie’s – she’d changed her mind about accompanying her hubby to Istanbul – finds herself naked (again) in the bathroom that her father, Arie’s guest is wanting to use. She hides herself in the bath, but nevertheless ends up drawing his attention. Could this get any worse for the poor sod – catching his daughter naked at a friend’s house, who’d also had an affair with his wife years ago..?!