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 CINEMA :Les blessures narcissiques d'une vie par procuration
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CINEMA :Les blessures narcissiques d'une vie par procuration

VIP-Blog de tellurikwaves
  • 12842 articles publiés
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  • Créé le : 10/09/2011 19:04
    Modifié : 09/08/2023 17:55

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    Origine : 75 Paris
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    © DR - BLOW UP de Michelangelo Antonioni (1967) p19

    30/12/2012 20:09

    © DR - BLOW UP de Michelangelo Antonioni (1967)  p19


    Vanessa Redgrave

     

     

     






    © DR - BLOW UP de Michelangelo Antonioni (1967) p20

    31/12/2012 06:01

    © DR - BLOW UP de Michelangelo Antonioni (1967)  p20


    Success and image; fantasy and reality

    Author: DC1977 from United Kingdom
    10 December 2003
    Antonioni's Blow-Up was the biggest hit of the Italian director's career, the superficial elements of the fashion world, Swinging London and orgies on purple paper ensuring its commercial success.

    Models such as Veruschka (who appears in the film), Twiggy and fashion photographers at the time have complained about its unrealistic depiction of the industry and claimed that its central character, Thomas (played by the late David Hemmings) was clearly based on David Bailey.

    To look at Blow-Up as an analysis of the fashion business in the Sixties is to misunderstand the film's intentions. In any case, when watching this film it may be difficult to tell what its all about if you're unfamiliar with Antonioni's films but it obviously has little to do with the fashion world which is merely the setting for the story and nothing more.Antonioni made the clearest statement of his motivation as a filmmaker at the end of Beyond the Clouds when he talked about his belief that reality is unattainable as it is submerged by layers of images which are only versions of reality.

    This is a rather pretentious way of saying that everyone perceives reality in their own way and ultimately see only what they want to see.With this philosophy in mind, Blow-Up is probably Antonioni's most personal film Thomas' hollow, self-obsessed world is shattered when he discovers that he may have photographed a murder when casually taking pictures in a park. He encounters a mysterious woman, Jane (Vanessa Redgrave) who demands he hand over the film and when he refuses she appears at his studio, although Thomas never told her his address.

    When the evidence disappears shortly afterwards, Blow-Up seems to deal in riddles that have no solution. Redgrave re-appears and then vanishes before the photographer's eyes, Thomas returns to the park without his camera and sees the bodyThe film concludes with Thomas,having discovered the body has disappeared watching a group of mimes playing tennis without a ball or rackets in the park where the murder may have taken place.

    It is only in the final scene of the film where the riddle is solved. Thomas throws the imaginary ball back into the court and watches the game resume. The look of realisation on his face is all too apparent as the game CAN BE HEARD taking place out of shot.There is a ball, there are rackets and this is a real game of tennis. What we have seen up until this point is the photographer's perception of reality:the murder,the mysterious woman in the park, the photographic evidence and the body.The following exchange between Hemmings and Redgrave is the key to the film:

    -Thomas: Don't let's spoil everything, we've only just met.

    -Jane: No, we haven't met. You've never seen me.






    © DR - BLOW UP de Michelangelo Antonioni (1967) p21

    31/12/2012 06:11

    © DR - BLOW UP de Michelangelo Antonioni (1967)  p21







    © DR - BLOW UP de Michelangelo Antonioni (1967) p22

    31/12/2012 06:18

    © DR - BLOW UP de Michelangelo Antonioni (1967)  p22


     Patience will be rewarded

    Author: riderpridethemovie from Toronto
    7 June 2005
    If you believe that the ending makes the movie, Blowup is for you. The first 30 minutes seem aimless and wandering, but they set up the main character and what is he is to discover about himself, about his occupation and about art in general. Antonioni builds tension (or frustration as you're watching it) not with plot, but with anti-plot.

    You want to scream at David Hemmings's character to: focus! screw those models! do something! But as the film unfolds you will see why Antonioni chose this actor,this profession and those girls.A wonderful manifesto about the dangers of voyeurism and what it does to a man's sexuality that is 40 years ahead of its time. The symbolism might get heavy handed at times (mimes, a broken guitar), but the sets are so full of creativity and the actors so beautiful (this will give my age away, but Vanessa Redgrave, who knew?) that you forgive Antonioni (he's Italian after all).

    Hemmings is Hugh Grant before Hugh Grant, but in this role at least, much more interesting. He's highly sexual, but unlike his painter roommate, his chosen art form represses him, all in the name of the shot. And when he finally gets the perfect shot in the perfect light, it's so perfect that someone steals it, and for good reason. Did those events actually take place or just through his camera lens? When the photos are the proof of what you see, then when that proof is taken away, did you see?

     





    © DR - BLOW UP de Michelangelo Antonioni (1967) p23

    31/12/2012 07:03

    © DR - BLOW UP de Michelangelo Antonioni (1967)  p23







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