Friday, 23 February 2018

Red Desert, Part 1

Monica Vitti in 'Red Desert'

This time, I would like to talk about Michelangelo Antonioni’s ‘Red Desert’. Though it was a film more than 50 years ago, it is still a recommendable film for today’s audience. While I first became fascinated in Antonioni’s work after working ‘Blow Up’ many years ago, it has turned out that ‘Red Desert’ would become my favorite Antonioni film of all. I am impressed by the thoughtfulness and philosophical outlook of the film, and I think the central theme of the film is relevant for people from any era – what sort of attitude and action should one take in an ever-changing world? Just merely try to fit in and get every gadgets that are just on the web 5 seconds ago? Or to retreat and celebrate the good old times and a simpler life? As we will see, Antonioni recommended a more positive plan of action for the audience.     


The visual style of ‘Red Desert’ has influenced many subsequent films. Alfred Hitchcock, who admired Antonioni, has been impressed by the color use in ‘Red Desert’ and ‘Blow Up’. He tried to adapt a similar visual style in his unrealized film ‘Kaleidoscope’, and what a shame this film could never be made. On the other hand, John Boorman has also cited his influence from Antonioni and other European filmmakers when he made the Lee Marvin classic ‘Point Blank’ in 1967, which was also about the question of subjectivity and alienation. 


The story concerned the experience of Giuliana, the mother of a single child, in a modernizing and industrial town. She struggled to come to terms in the technological progress around her, and a subtle suggestion stated that she might be suffering from some form of neurosis – and certainly existential crisis. Through her interaction with the people, and also landscape and environment around, would she be able to find her own place, and also have the wisdom to figure out a meaning of her life? 


Once in an interview, Antonioni has expressed a lot about his view on ‘Red Desert’. He noted that this film represented a shift of focus for his filmography, because for his 3 films before that – the trilogy that started with ‘L’ – they were more concerned with relationships between people. In ‘Red Desert’, a more cosmological and outward perspective was taken – he wanted to explore more about how individuals interacted with their surroundings – the ‘human in universe’ theme, which I have mentioned quite a lot before in other films. While this approach would likely require an impartial perspective, Antonioni’s style turned out to be far more imaginative than that.  


The style could be considered artificial or even abstract at points, very much like a high-end modernist artwork. While color may at the surface seem to enhance the realism of the scenes – human beings see in color, right? – Antonioni’s evocative use of color seemed to lead to the very opposite paradoxically. His use of color led to a ‘formalist abstraction’, which served his anti-realist motivation. Thus, the color was seen as very ‘heightened’ for the audience, and to be honest, it has a weird sort of pleasure when one looks at it. Antonioni has also explained that the artificiality of his color would enhance the expressivity of his images, I guess much like the edginess seen in German Expressionism. It is notable that Antonioni used a telephoto lens when he shot ‘Red Desert’, because in order to achieve an anti-realist effect, he was committed to reduce the depth of field often evident in Bazinian Realism, and his use of the lens led to a flattening effect of his images, where the distance between foreground and background was reduced. 


As noted by many critics, the motif of landscape is very important for Antonioni's films. Antonioni has succinctly stated that all his works were born of a landscape, and his desire to explore the landscape. Thus, one can start by saying that Antonioni has provided an impersonal view of humanity, as there is a delicate balance between the emphasis of humans and environment.  


Antonioni employed some nice editing strategies to illustrate an abrupt shift of focus and to illustrate to the audience how his characters were trapped by their surroundings. He deliberately did sudden cut from a conversation between 2 characters to a background shot, to state that the characters were locked in a larger surrounding they might or might not be appreciating. Interestingly, this strategy has been used by a lot of great directors, where they attempted to show an alienation and entrapment of the characters. Stanley Kubrick’s ‘Barry Lyndon’, Joseph L. Mankiewicz’s ‘Sleuth’, Martin Scorsese’s ‘Taxi Driver’ contained nice examples of this great approach. The placement of the characters were also quite unusual in many cases, as if Antonioni was attempted to undermine them, suggesting a loss of agency of these characters towards their environment or the context they found themselves in. 


The poiesis from Antonioni meant that he was not only determined to confront his audience visually, but also aurally. He portrayed the irony that, in some senses, the industrial noises were even louder than the character’s dialogue – which would NOT be the case for the traditional approach of Western cinema – symbolizing that these characters were entrapped and alienated, and could not deliver clearly their thoughts and feelings to each other.

(1/2)

by Ed Law
24/2/2018

Film Analysis





Friday, 2 February 2018

La Notte


1. In January and February this year, a number of films by the Italian filmmaker Michelangelo Antonioni are re-released in Hong Kong. This time, I am going to talk about ‘La Notte’, which is part of a trilogy with ‘L’Avventura’ and ‘L’Eclisse’.  I will present my viewpoints in an episodic manner, as if they are some random thoughts from my mind.

2. ‘La Notte’ is fascinating in the sense that it can be qualified for the guideline for classical unities in Aristotle's ‘Poetics’ - the unity of time. In terms of theme, ‘La Notte’ shares similarity with another film of the same era, John Cassevetes’s ‘Faces’, though the approaches to the issue were quite different between the 2 filmmakers. It has also been compared to Stanley Kubrick's 'Eyes Wide Shut'.

3. The story concerned Giovanni and Lidia, a couple from Milan, and how the experience in an evening would push them to examine their relationship.  While the activities might sound a bit random and episodic, Antonioni’s intention was probably deliberate and these activities will lead to meanings if one is willing to look beyond the banality of the surface.

4. The relationship between the couple was detached, and soon Lidia felt that she needed some solitude and thus wandered into the evening lights. When she strolled through the place she once lived, some solutions seemed to offer to her in the form of her perceptions – aggression (a fight) or running away (the setting off of some homemade rockets). As one would see also in the later Antonioni’s films, these are often not the best way to deal with one’s existential terror, though they might have provided some form of short-term solace.

5. Memories have been confronting the characters, especially our 2 protagonists. Antonioni the filmmaker seemed to provide his characters a lot of things to think back on, say, where they lived in the past, and the love poem Giovanni has written a long time ago. Giovanni went as far to claim that all he was left with were recollections of the past, though, ironically, Lidia caught him off by noting that he even forgot his own poem, where he has written for Lidia to show his love.

6. It is also worthwhile to see that the mise-en-scene has also emphasized the detached relationships for the characters. Antonioni deliberately installed barriers like gates and doors to symbolize the distance between characters, and the limits that impeded them to get closer to each other in an emotional way. One of the scenes involved a floor which resembled a chessboard, as if the characters were players in a game, always keeping safe distance from what others could offer.

7. Giovanni succinctly stated to Lidia regarding his existential angst, "I no longer have inspirations, only recollections". Inspirations are what we need to move on with our lives, to find out our own meanings throughout the journey of our existence. Giovanni pinpointed the stalemate in his own life, and probably his relationship with Lidia. All Lidia could recommend, which was understandable at first glance, was that "One must do something", and they just dropped in to a lavish party, to explore any new opportunities for gratifications.

8. The party by the millionaire was fascinating, because although the activities might appear banal, Giovanni and Lidia were forced to confront a number of issues – fidelity (in the form of Monica Vitti and her invented game), fame and wealth, mortality and nature (the sudden shower). What I have often wondered is to what extent Kubrick has been influenced by this double-flirting sequence and put it into ‘Eyes Wide Shut’ (he did mention ‘La Notte’ was one of his favorite films). The force of nature also exposed the carnality of some of these ‘civilized’ guests – they literally jumped into the pool like kids when rain started to pour.

9. The millionaire, Gherardini, was portrayed rather neutrally in the film, given the belief Antonioni would likely have regarding this sort of people. Gherardini indeed gave a few insightful observations about modern life. Not only he saw through the decadence and wealth-oriented nature of the modern ago, he also felt that the meaning of life has to be figured out by the individual himself. Gherardini cared less about his position on the billionaire list, yet he wanted to create something ‘solid’ – which was a legacy of himself to be remembered. He also pointed out a nice point regarding writer and or form of artist – one should create an art work because of necessity, because the artist had a will to do it – they just wanna do it, period. It could not just be reward or recognition that one wanted to involve in art work. Gherardini’s vision also coincided with some key ideas of existentialism, for example his affirmative insistence that ‘Life is what we make of it through our own efforts.’, and his concentration on the present rather than the inaccessible future. 

10. After all that happened throughout the evening, they reflected one last time on their relationship. Lidia was sad because she felt that she no longer loved Giovanni, and she felt like dying because there was clearly a relationship she has cherished all the time, and she saw it as an intense loss. Giovanni could appreciate the seriousness of the issue and he kept on reassuring her that he definitely loved her.

11. It should be fair to state that both of them were experiencing some form of crisis, so we cannot say who should be more responsible for the marriage failure. Lidia, by noting that Giovanni has forgotten his own love letter, allowed him to confront his own memories, his vision of the affair. In a sense, Giovanni would be able to discover new meanings in these lost memories, and see how they might be inspiring him to regard his relationship with Lidia, just like he has once written for Lidia, "Beyond your face I saw a pure, beautiful vision showing us in the perspective of my whole life...all the year to come, even all the years past.".

12. Antonioni concluded La Notte with an open ending, by not giving the answer of whether Giovanni and Lidia reconciled at the end. I would be optimistic and speculate that they would have a greater chance to be back with each other. Because throughout the night, they had so many chances to rediscover themselves and realize where the problems were. Both of them still treasured the relationship they have sustained, and would feel depressed if that ended with a nasty note. When Giovanni was forcing himself on Lidia (sort of), it was almost the dawn, suggesting the beginning of a new day, and a new chapter of their relationship. That is the idea of ‘lost and found’ – through the recognition of the the value of what that has been lost, it will then orient for a new start. After all, that is what I think Antonioni has always wanted us to be able to do.

by Ed Law
3/2/2018

Film Analysis