Italy film school
1960
bw 143 min.
Director: Michelangelo Antonioni
CAV: out-of-print collectible
           3 discs, catalog # CC1162L
CLV: $69.95 - available
           2 discs, catalog # CC1380L
VHS: available from Home Vision Cinema
Many films are called "classic," but few qualify as turning points in
the evolution of cinematic language, films that opened the way to a
more mature art form. Michelangelo Antonioni's L'Avventura (The
Adventure) is such a work. It divided film history into that which
came before and that which was possible after its epochal
appearance. It expanded our knowledge of what a film could be and
do. It is more than a classic, it's an historical milestone.
Antonioni was little known in Europe, and none of his films had
been seen in the United States, when L'Avventura, his sixth
feature, was released in 1960. Almost overnight it catapulted the
Italian director to the front ranks of world cinema and made an
international celebrity of its star, Monica Vitti, a stage actress
appearing in her first film role. A few years later, in a Sight and
Sound poll of 100 critics around the world, it was judged to be
one of the ten best films of all time.
A wealthy young woman (Lea Massari) disappears from an island off
Sicily during a pleasure cruise. While searching for her, her fiance
(Gabriele Ferzetti) and her best friend (Monica Vitti) become
lovers. But their affair is troubled, and the film ends with their
future and the fate of the missing woman unresolved. Around this
minimal and enigmatic set of events, Antonioni constructed a
revolutionary masterpiece of great beauty, economy, and deep moral
seriousness, one of the few films that stands comparison with our
century's most important works of art.
L'Avventura was the first in a trilogy of films (La
Notte, 1961, and The Eclipse, 1962, are the others)
concerned with the familiar postwar existential themes of alienation,
non-communication, and the failure to find meaning in a world of
obsolete values. But it is not so much about "meaninglessness" as
about the characters' response to it -- namely, a retreat into
sexuality as a superficial substitute for meaningful work.
In L'Avventura, everyone except Claudia -- especially her
lover Sandro -- seeks solace in erotic liaisons to cover the emptiness
they feel, having unconsciously refused to make their lives
meaningful. They represent what Antonioni has called "the malady of
the emotional life," summed up in his famous remark, "Eros is sick."
But L'Avventura is as life-affirming as it is
pessimistic. On one level, the film's title refers to Claudia's
spiritual journey toward self-knowledge. She alone seems open,
searching, questioning, seeking. What matters is not the result of
her journey -- signified at the end by a single tentative gesture --
but the journey itself, the search, and the way she lives it out. The
sense of an uncertain spiritual quest gives this austere,
unsentimental movie its profound emotional depth.
Antonioni's great achievement was to put the burden of narration
almost entirely on the image itself, that is, on the characters'
actions and on the visual surface of their environment. He uses
natural or manmade settings to evoke his characters' state of mind,
their emotions, their life circumstances. We learn more about them by
watching what they do than by hearing what they say. We follow the
story more by reading images than we do by listening to dialogue. The
settings are not symbolic or metaphoric -- they are extensions,
manifestations, of the characters' psyches. Physical landscape and
mental landscape become one.
This is as "pure" as narrative cinema gets. And it is why
L'Avventura is so perfectly suited to the laserdisc medium. If
ever a film demanded the still frame, variable speed, and random
access capabilities of the CAV laserdisc format, it is
L'Avventura. Every frame requires the same contemplation and
reflection that we give to the work of our greatest still
photographers or painters -- and each frame can be studied in its
original wide-screen format. A great medium suits a great master's
greatest work.
-- GENE YOUNGBLOOD
Credits
Director: Michelangelo Antonioni
Producer: Amato Pennasilico
Screenplay: Michelangelo Antonioni, Elio Bartolini, Tonino Guerra
Director of Photography: Aldo Scavarda
Scene Design: Piero Poletto, C.S.C.
Music: Giovanni Fusco
Editor: Eraldo da Roma
Assistant Director: Jack O'Connell
Costumes: Adriana Berselli, C.S.C.
Sound Technician: Claudio Maielli
Production Coordinator: Angelo Corso
Transfer
This edition of L'Avventura was transferred from a 35mm master
print in the correct widescreen aspect ratio.