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L’Eclisse
is the third movie in a series by Michelangelo Antonioni that started with L’Avventura
and La Notte. It is not immediately apparent that this is a trilogy, there is
no continuing story or overlap in characters, but thematically they are quite
similar. They all deal with emotional emptiness.
When you
read a synopsis describing a movie as inaccessible and without a logical plot
it is usually time to get worried and I was, going into this one. This is not
what I normally look for in a movie. Fortunately I had already watched the
other two movies so I was acclimatized to Antonioni’s particular style and with
that synopsis I feared the worst and that is actually a good place to be. It
can only get better than expected.
I actually
found it more coherent than the previous two movies. It did not feel as if the
movie was searching, but missing, a storyline, because it did not pretend to
have much. Instead it was full of impressions, pictures expressing that
particular emotion the movie seeks to convey. That is much less stressful for
me as I do not have to try to make sense of what I am watching.
Monica
Vitti is back as a woman, Vittoria, who is breaking up with her boyfriend, Riccardo
(Francisco Rabal). We have no idea why, but apparently they have been talking
or arguing all night. Vittoria is determined to end this, but Riccardo is more
reluctant. Leaving Riccardo, Vittoria is entering a vacuum. Her apartment is empty.
Her modern neighborhood is cold and sterile. For a while she fills up the space
with two friends, dreaming they are in Africa, but it is just that, an escape.
Vittoria’s
mother is playing with money on Rome’s stock exchange and as Vittoria go there to
seek out her mother (Lilla Brignone) we are introduced to that crazy place.
This is a hectic and surreal place where money is made or lost in minutes and
everybody are leaning on a heart attack. It is here Vittoria meets Piero (Alain
Delon) and somehow they start hanging out together.
Piero
completely embraces consumerism. He lives in the present, concerned with work,
buying things and doing what he wants, when he wants it. Not an unpleasant guy
at all, but very different from the hesitant and thoughtful Vittoria who has no
idea what she wants and who seems to second guess herself in anything she does.
It feels like archetypical man and woman profiles and that may be intended. She
soon gets frustrated with him because he seems shallow and he gets frustrated with
her because he cannot figure out what she wants. It is a wonder they are still
together at the end of the movie.
Speaking of
which, the movie is famous for an ending entirely without the two protagonists.
That was not as special as the hype made it, but did serve effectively to
underline the empty waiting that Vittoria experiences.
I think limbo
or emotional vacuum is the overriding theme of the movie, even more than in the
previous movies. You can fill up your life with money, work or consumption, but
is that enough? Can you love someone, or force yourself to love someone and
have that fill your life? All these people are clearly lacking something.
Maybe it is
just me who is a bit naïve, but looking at these three movies there is
something missing in all of them: children. To name procreation as the meaning
of life is a little too biological even for me, but from personal experience I
can definitely say that getting children of your own gives plenty of purpose,
one way or the other. That may be what these very modern Italians are missing.
L’Eclisse
is a beautifully made movie with every picture thought out and full of details.
Technically the stock exchange scenes are brilliant and they capture the primal
energy perfectly. As does the soundtrack that must have inspired countless
later movies. A detail I liked very much was the juxtaposition of very new and
very old, but then again, that is Rome.
This is not
a movie I would recommend to everybody, but if you know what you are going into,
you will not be let down by this one.
I'd love to pretend in my head that you planned this whole thing out and carefully arranged for this review to show up just days before a highly publicized solar eclipse.
ReplyDeleteThat would have been awesome had it been true. Alas, the two events are entirely unrelated.
DeleteHere is another one I haven't seen in years. I remember zero about the plot just Monica Vitti and some African masks! I'm looking forward to the rewatch.
ReplyDeleteI do not think the plot it what you would remember. It is the images and feeling it invokes. I think you will like it.
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