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Reviews
Michelangelo Antonionia flawed legacy
Part 1
By Richard Phillips
10 November 2004
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This is the first in a two-part series on veteran Italian
filmmaker Michelangelo Antonioni.
Films are born as poems are born in the heart of a poet.
Words, images, concepts present themselves to the mind, they are
all mixed together, and the result is the poem. I believe it is
the same for films. Michelangelo Antonioni
This year the Sydney Film Festival provided a valuable opportunity
to watch a comprehensive presentation of movies by Italian director
Michelangelo Antonioni. The retrospective, which was first assembled
by the Venice Film Festival in 2002 to celebrate the directors
90th birthday, included 14 features, 13 short non-fiction films
(made from 1943-1950 and 1983-1997) and several documentaries
about the filmmaker.
Many critics and academics consider Antonioni one of the most
significant Italian directors of the post-WWII period. Writer
Alberto Moravia once praised him for recreating the nameless,
formless anguish of contemporary life and compared his work
to that of French existentialist writers and surrealist painter
and sculptor Alberto Giacometti. Numerous contemporary filmmakers,
such as Wim Wenders, Hou Hsiao-hsien, Tsai Ming-liang and Wong
Kar-wai, cite him as a major influence.
Antonionis better movies, particularly those made during
the 1960s, are skilful and established new conventions for dramatic
cinema. While they can be visually striking and often emotionally
engaging, they are also infused with a deep sense of pessimism.
Like much of his work, Antonioni is an elusive and especially
contradictory figure. In a 1962 interview he declared that it
was the duty of filmmakers to reflect the times in which
they lived ... to capture their effect upon us, and to be sincere
and conscientious. But this thoughtful definition of artistic
responsibility, he always insisted, could only be achieved by
entirely intuitive methods.
An idea comes to me through an image, which I transfer
to the screen, he once said. [But] very often these
images have no explanation, no raison dêtre
beyond themselves. It could be argued, however, that such
a thoroughgoing reliance on the non-rational ultimately helped
lead him to a creative dead-end.
Early films
Born 1912 to a middle class family in Ferrara, northern Italy,
Antonioni studied economics at the University of Bologna in the
early 1930s. On graduating he worked in a bank and in 1939 relocated
to Rome where he wrote some reviews for Cinema, the official
film journal of the ruling fascist party, before falling out with
the organisation. He briefly attended Centro Sperimentale di Cinematografia,
a leading film school, and in 1942 began working, first as a screenwriter
on Roberto Rossellinis Un Pilota Ritorna, and then
as a writer and assistant director on Enrico Fulchignonis
I Due Foscari. Later that year he was employed as an assistant
on Marcel Carnés Les Visiteurs du Soir, a
joint Italian-French production.
Antonioni started his first filmthe Gente del Poa
documentary about Po River fishermen in 1943 but it was disrupted
by the war and not finally edited and screened until 1947. During
this time he directed several other black and white non-fiction
films; among them Nettezza Urbana, about Romes street
cleaners, LAmorosa Menzogna, a behind-the-scenes
look at the lives of fumetti (Italian photographic comic
book stars) and Superstizione, about bizarre superstitions
in Italian villages.
These short but fascinating films were made when neorealism
dominated Italian filmmakinga genre characterised by its
humanitarian outlook, the use of mainly non-professional actors,
on-location shooting, and its dramatisation of the everyday lives
and problems of ordinary people.
Prior to neo-realism, Italian movies were strictly controlled
by Mussolinis regime with directors obliged to produce either
white telephone glamour stories or empty tales about
a healthy country and its happy citizens.
But with the collapse of the fascist government in 1943, Luchino
Visconti, Rossellini and other directors began to portray life
as it really was in the war-ravaged country. In fact, Rossellinis
Roma, città aperta (Rome, Open City) was filmed
even as German troops occupied the Italian capital in 1944.
But the neo-realist movement, which produced over 20 features,
including two or three masterpieces from 1943 to 1952, was not
without its problems. Its almost exclusive concentration on workers
and the poor, in some cases portrayed as a politically passive
class, and its refusal to explore other aspects of class society,
were limiting factors.
Moreover, the emergence of Italian neo-realism did not occur
in a political or ideological vacuum. Despite its undoubted artistic
achievements, the trend always represented something of an adaptation
to Stalinist (or national-populist) conceptions. Definite limits
were placed on which social layers and problems could be examined,
and what could be said and the artistic forms employed. In the
long run, serious artists were bound to chafe against these conditions.
The background to all this, of course, was the historical betrayal
of the Italian Communist Party (PCI), directed by the Stalinist
bureaucracy in the USSR, which oversaw the handing back of power
to the Italian bourgeoisie following the collapse of the hated
Mussolini regime.
To oppose neo-realism, in other words, was by no means inevitably
a right-wing or retrograde act. The question was:
from which direction was it to be opposed? With Antonioni, the
answer is perhaps a little murky.
Although an early adherent of the movement, Antonioni soon
began challenging its aesthetic boundaries. He became increasingly
preoccupied with aspects of middle class life in post-war Italy.
Suicide was a regular occurring theme.
His first feature, Cronaca di un Amore (Story of a Love
Affair [1950]), for example, explores the class tensions within
the marriage of a successful but suspicious factory owner and
Paola, his working class and younger wife. When the husband hires
a private detective to investigate Paolas early love life
he inadvertently brings her into contact with Guido, a former
lover, and the resumption of an affair that had long since ended.
Paola and Guido eventually decide to plot the factory owners
death.
Antonioni followed this relatively successful movie with I
Vinti (1952), three stories about youth in post-war Paris,
London and Rome; and La Signora Senza Camelie (The Lady
without Camelias [1953]), which attempts to explore the relationship
between cinema, money and stardom.
His next film, Le Amiche (The Girlfriends [1955]), tells
the story of four young girls from an Italian fashion house and
their disappointing relationships with various men. Behind the
glamour world they inhabit is a gnawing inner emptiness and spiritual
poverty, themes to which Antonioni would return again and again.
In this movie he began to depart from a linear plot structure
substituting in its place a series of events and incidents.
Although not all these early films were entirely convincing,
they had some merit because they aspired to a more complex view
of social life, an approach at odds with that espoused by the
neo-realists.
As Antonioni explained in a 1958 interview: The neo-realism
of the postwar period, when reality itself was so searing and
immediate ... created an appropriate cinema. Now, however, when,
for better or worse, reality has been normalised once again, it
seems to me more interesting to examine what remains in the characters
from their past experiences.
But was the directors highly developed artistic intuition
but generally ahistoric approach to these complex issues capable
of transcending the limitations of neo-realist filmmaking?
According to a recent film writer, neo-realism was a great
but tragic episode in cinema history. Its intellectual
decline occurred when directors realised that the
real cause of the poverty and social dislocation they were attempting
to dramatise was in the unchangeable form of human nature.
While this echoes the justifications advanced during the Cold
War by sections of the intelligentsia, as they repudiated earlier
associations with the working class and the socialist movement,
the limits neo-realism placed upon itself rendered it unable to
combat these reactionary assertions. Restricting artists to merely
pointing out the injustices inflicted on the poor was, and is,
an insufficiently large arena, and can become a means of evading
other issues.
It is not clear whether Antonioni consciously embraced the
various false claims about human nature, but Il
Grido (The Cry [1957]), about the psychological breakdown
and suicide of a Po Valley sugar refinery worker, is a bleak work.
In fact, the last of his early black and white films coincided
with a mood sweeping sections of the Italian left
and liberal intelligentsia, who were accommodating themselves
to the post-war stabilisation and boom. Falsely equating Stalinist
betrayal with socialism, these layers claimed that human
nature made progressive social change all but impossible.
Antonioni lived through some of the most tumultuous upheavals
in Italian lifetwo decades of fascist rule, WWII and the
overthrow of Mussolini, the PCIs betrayal of the revolutionary
upsurge of the working class, and the rise and decline of post-war
Italian cinema. He seems, however, to have never subjected any
of these strategic experiences to serious analysis and eschewed
all public comment on political issues.
To be continued
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