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Word: antonioni (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...photographer is better than the people Antonioni chooses to show beside him, redeemed in part by his instinctive commitment, however minimal, to photography. Rejecting the current connotations of "photographer." Antonioni defines the term as one who lives (and matures) by watching. The photographer in Blow-Up can no more join the mods and lose himself in their sterile pleasures than join the Establishment and condemn them. His camera saves him by the skin of his teeth, and at the end of the film, Antonioni leaves him on an affirmative note...

Author: By Tim Hunter, | Title: Blow-Up | 2/15/1967 | See Source »

...ending is consistent with the rest of Antonioni's work. In L'Avventura, Sandro and Claudia's romance fails to solve their individual problems, yet they will remain together; in La Notte, Giovanni and Lidia decide not to separate although they know their marriage will never be successful; Red Desert ends with Giuliana's realization that she must not commit suicide even if her life is filled with neurotic unhappiness. Unlike the films of Rosselini, Hitchcock, and Renoir, which follow characters in a state of emotional or spiritual crisis through a therapeutic chain of events, Antonioni's films are rarely...

Author: By Tim Hunter, | Title: Blow-Up | 2/15/1967 | See Source »

...examining the nature of photography, Antonioni carefully injects another theme, the more basic conflict between illusion and reality. The first scene of Blow-Up introduces the photographer as he leaves a flop-house where he spent the night; we learn that he had gone to photograph the sick old men who sleep there. This personal preference for social realism over fashion proves the photographer dedicated. But in photographing the tragedy and problems of other people, the photographer in Blow-Up substitutes this for an understanding and eventual solution of his own problems. The reality of the photographs becomes the photographer...

Author: By Tim Hunter, | Title: Blow-Up | 2/15/1967 | See Source »

Like Hitchcock and Fritz Lang, Antonioni feels that violence is an integral part of contemporary society and cannot be ignored. His photographer, like Hitchcock's, is brought back to reality by means of melodrama: waiting for the owner of a junk shop he wants to buy, the photographer wanders through a nearby park. Ignoring a bizarre fat lady that 99 out of 100 photographers would have snapped without thinking twice, he photographs pigeons instead, then two lovers kissing. The girl sees him and pleads with him to give her the roll of film. Unsuccessful, she follows him to his studio...

Author: By Tim Hunter, | Title: Blow-Up | 2/15/1967 | See Source »

...Antonioni, the discovery of the murder represents the intrusion of reality on the photographer's world. The blow-ups suddenly bring him face-to-face with potential involvement in the affairs of other people. He does not, actually, become involved: his nature rules out the possibility of calling the police, he cannot locate the girl, and his interest in the affair begins to diminish when he discovers that the girl has stolen the blow-ups--the only evidence of the crime. Still, for a moment, the detached photographer realizes his involvement sufficiently to consider the alternatives: calling the police...

Author: By Tim Hunter, | Title: Blow-Up | 2/15/1967 | See Source »

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