Capital Celluloid 2019 - Day 37: Wed Feb 6

Red Desert (Antonioni, 1964): BFI Southbank, NFT1, 8.40pm



This film, part of the Michelangelo Antonioni season at BFI Southbank, is also being shown on February 9th and 23rd. Details here.

Chicago Reader review:
Michelangelo Antonioni's first color feature (1964) uses colors expressionistically, and to get the precise hues he wanted, he had entire fields painted. The film came at the end of his most fertile period, just after L'Avventura, La Notte, and Eclipse
, and it isn't as good as the first and last of these, but the ecological concerns look a lot more prescient today. Monica Vitti plays a neurotic married woman briefly attracted to industrialist Richard Harris, and Antonioni does eerie, memorable work with the industrial shapes and colors that surround her; she walks through a science fiction landscape dotted with structures that are both disorienting and full of possibilities. Like any self-respecting Antonioni heroine, she's looking for love and meaning and mainly finding sex. But the film's most spellbinding sequence depicts a pantheistic, utopian fantasy of innocence, which she recounts to her ailing son.
Jonathan Rosenbaum


Here (and above) is the trailer.

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