The Night
An excerpt essay from Realm of Unknowing
1
Summer. 1993. The worst
heat wave in living memory.
I lie awake all night, night
after night, in Windham,
Vermont, thinking about
the floodwaters of Biblical
proportions sweeping across
Kansas and Missouri – the
Mississippi swollen, bursting
the levees, the farmers
eyeing their drowned fields
from National Guard helicopters.
I go downstairs and pace
the two-hundred-year-old
rented farmhouse, stare
out the windows and wait
for the deer. Torn between
ecstasy and exhaustion in
the gray of dawn, any thoughts
I might have had about a
split between the mind and
the body are destroyed in
this insomniac state.
I had despaired of how
to begin an essay on Michelangelo
Antonioni until another
long night of sleeplessness
threw me a line.
I thought of Monica Vitti’s
rapt gaze when she looks
up as the wind strums the
stark white flagpoles against
the blackest sky, and of
the couples in the trilogy L’Avventura, La
Notte, and L’Eclisse,
and the photographer in Blow-Up who
stay up all night. It is
only in this fragile, indeterminate
state that we can begin
to see for ourselves the
presence of the world that
Antonioni’s films
relentlessly present.
The pure fact of the world.
The egalitarian nature of
the sensual world.
Why the night? Stay up
through the night and you
come to the end of something.
Something that is disappearing.
*
At that time I slept very
little; I’d adopted
the habit of going to bed
as soon as the day’s
gradual fade-in began. (“Toward
the Frontier”)
2
The work of the most demanding
artist of the stellar group
of directors to emerge in
the 1950’s seems to
be in eclipse. The Passenger was
the only film of Antonioni’s
to be shown commercially
since Zabriskie Point.
He could not get his late
films distributed or made. Identification
of a Woman never opened
in America after its screening
at the New York Film Festival. The
Crew, which intensifies
Antonioni’s focus
on the Third World, was
never shot. Neither was Technically
Sweet, his most ambitious
screenplay, though many
of its themes were absorbed
into The Passenger.
And yet the reputations
of his somewhat more literary
contemporaries, such as
Bergman and Kurosawa, have,
if anything, grown in the
past two decades.
*
On my way to the Retrospective
of his work at the Walter
Reade Theater I could not
help but note that a building
under demolition across
from the café looked
like a three-tiered jungle
ruin: the exposed floors,
the steel cables sprouting
everywhere like vines. The
air was heavy with an almost
paralyzing humidity.
And each day there was
less of the site, though
by the time I arrived, mostly
in the late afternoon, there
was no sign that the wrecking
ball had been at work. Just
dust and silence and the
hovering presence of the
ruin.
I would not mention this
building being leveled had
it not brought to mind the
most riveting scene in I
Vinti (The Defeated),
in which, to escape his
pursuers a man on the run
descends the scaffold of
a construction site, going
endlessly down and down,
as if the planks and ladders
had no bottom, and we switch
from thinking about his
escaping the other men to
his escaping this dark labyrinth.
Physics has sprouted a metaphysics.
*
There were screenings for
his early films at 10:00
A.M., and one time I went
with Rachel Hadas to see La
Signora Senza Camelie.
We arrived anxiously, as
one does at such events,
and struggled to be on time,
because even if there is
no one there, or just two
or three desultory souls
(who nevertheless take up
a lot of room) scattered
throughout the theater,
the projectionist will run
the film at the appointed
time. Still, it is a shock
to see only two or three
people in the theater (or
do “film people” have
such easy access to the
cosmic archives that they
can see what they need to
see when they want to see
it, when amateurs like myself
are forced to bend their
schedules to fit the screening
time . . . ?).
3
The process of creation
is notoriously difficult
to record on film. Writing,
music, painting: all resist
being captured by a machine
which renders only outward
appearance. As Antonioni
stated in an interview: “Film
is not image: landscape,
posture, gesture. But rather an
indissoluble whole extended
over a duration of its own that
saturates it and determines
its very essence.”
That process is most evident
in Blow-Up, in
which Antonioni uses photography,
the least metaphorical of
all the arts, to define
the human condition. He
takes his cue from ancient
sources and quotes these
remarkable lines of Lucretius: “Nothing
appears as it should in
a world where nothing is
certain. The only thing
certain is the existence
of a secret violence that
makes everything uncertain.”(my
emphasis).
From the moment Blow-Up opens
the photographer, Thomas,
seeks that which is missing,
the disappearing center.
After spending the night
taking photographs in the
flophouse for the homeless,
he is too wound up to sleep;
and after asking that his
clothes be burned – shaving,
half-dressed in his white
jeans and wide black belt,
while his gofers attend
upon his eagerness to leave — he
dons the last part of his
outfit, an emblem of his
youth and high spirits,
a midnight-blue velvet blazer,
and makes his way toward
a park where he revives,
comes alive like a young
colt. Storming the steps, “relaxed
and payin’ attention” (as
the line from the Byrds’ song
from that time has it),
he enters a garden (one
of paradise’s false
trapdoors) and proceeds
calmly, in full control,
ready to receive the image:
the mystery is ready to
offer itself to him.
Antonioni wonderfully depicts
the restless waiting, the
fever that precedes creation.
Thomas is frustrated by
the ease with which he can
control the finite realm
of his work and still feel
there is a fragile bond,
at best a truce, between
what the naked eye sees
and reality. Once at work,
he is focused, intent: fully
alive. Alone in his darkroom
he blows up a seemingly
innocent, yet suspicious,
photograph — again
and again until a gun can
be made out, and it is not
long till it’s clear
that it’s pointing
at a dead man. But as he
goes on looking (as the
camera pans back and forth
between him and the photograph
on the wall) enlarging the
image, it decomposes.
*
Disappearance is the normal
order of things for Antonioni.
“People disappear
every day,” The Girl
in The Passenger says.
“Every time they leave
the room,” Locke replies.
*
And the strange thing is
that there’s a vague
sense of guilt at the back
of my conscience, I feel
it flowering like a shadow,
a Hitchcock-like shadow
of doubt that falls on the
coherence of my life. (“Report
About Myself”)
*
Blow-Up returns
over and over to Thomas’s
photographs of the disinherited,
the homeless; they are part
of the larger puzzle he
is trying to assemble, along
with the death of love between
himself and his wife and
the escapism of the woman
in the antique shop who
wants to get out of herself
and find renewal in Nepal
(to whom Thomas replies,
wittily and wearily, “Nepal
is all antiques”).
Thomas comes to understand
in the course of the film’s
slippery dialectics of appearance
and reality, that he is
one of the disinherited — that
what separates him from
the men in his photographs
is economics. His camera
has recorded something that
his sensibility could not
register. By uncovering
the “secret violence” that
appears before him in the
darkroom, he begins to learn
how to live inside manifold
contradictions. To exist — even
as he is implicated.
4
It is in direct apposition
to dailiness that Antonioni
fastened on the night-long
vigil as a way of opening
his characters’ eyes.
Sleeplessness awakens them
to their animal nature:
it peels away the folds
of ego, pretense, identity.
What remains is a naked
eye that sees the alien
strangeness of the familiar
world.
*
The beautiful and terrible
moment before dawn when
the gray light signals the
sky’s clair-obscur resistance....
There is a shagginess to
this hour that I love.
The trees fill with wind;
expand. And the all-night
vigil prepares the way for
the eye to see. The blindness
of a sleepless night lays
down the path for sight;
insight — duration’s
timeless time.
Last night, in the long
awaited thunderstorm, it
was like driving under water
and it reminded me of two
scenes in Antonioni’s
films
that have that “terrible
beauty”: the scene
in Identification of
a Woman where the headlights
can make no further headway
in the fog, and there is
no self or other in the
wetness that encompasses
the lens, and the scene
in L’Eclisse in
which Vittoria and Piero
watch the “dire spectacle
of the wrack” of Piero’s
car, driven into an artificial
lake by a drunk, rise from
the dark water with its
headlights on, casting a
ghostly trail.
*
The night, during which
Vittoria and Piero get acquainted,
prepares the ground for
their rendezvous at the
intersection the next afternoon.
They do not appear, but
the camera does and, in
a seven minute crescendo – a
Waiting for Godot with
objects as characters – renders
the independence of the
world apart from an individual
point of view. The sequence
provides an escape, a break
from the problem of other
minds; a resolution, not
a solution.
...the director’s
problem is that of embracing
a reality that
ripens and consumes itself,
and to set forth
this movement, this reaching
a point and then advancing,
as fresh perception.
*
In the tense, night-long
lover’s quarrel which
comprises the first scene
of L’Eclisse,
Vittoria keeps going to
the window, from which she
sees the wind blowing through
the stark black trees and
the fiercely alien mushroom
shape of what I take to
be a water tower. (This
suggestion of a “mushroom
cloud” comes back
in the form of a headline
warning of nuclear threat
in the final sequence.)
Then the camera moves outside
the house for the first
time and we see Vittoria
suddenly dwarfed by the
black trees nearest the
house as they lean toward
her, embodying the full
range of the terrible and
the beautiful.
*
It is not the trees and
water towers that grow stark
and gigantic in the night
but our senses that are
awakened. Our working lives
prevent us from indulging
in the night.
I pause, having taken up
this essay when the temperature
was rising, to listen to
the wind in the trees and
see if it spells some relief....
5
The world Antonioni renders
means something very specific
to him. He deploys his art
as one way of crossing “over
the border of the purely
physical without knowing
it.”
So spoke of
the existence of things,
An unmanageable
pantheon
Absolute,
they say
Arid.
A city of
corporations
Glassed
In dreams
And images—
And the pure
joy
Of the mineral
fact
Tho it is
impenetrable
As the world,
if it is matter
Is impenetrable.
-
George Oppen
More a filmmaker of place
than of objects, Antonioni
has gone so far as to color
smoke and paint trees so
that places in his films
could be expressive of his
character’s inner
crises. He took this to
an extreme in Red Desert,
where yellow, factory-waste
smoke insults the sky and
chemicals mar the blue-green
Adriatic off the coast of
Ravenna. “There’s
something terrible about
reality,” Giuliana
tellingly remarks, “and
I don’t know what.”
*
Antonioni is an investigator,
a diagnostician of social
ills. His devotion to uncovering
the truth, peeling away
the layers of his characters’ self-protective
armor, is a laborious, tense-making
activity. His work cuts
against the grain of modern
life, which turns its back
on time and duration and
sees itself cut off from
the past.
Perhaps Antonioni had to
hit bottom and make Il
Grido, with its dour
portrait in gray — in
which the characters are
truly in the landscape and
in the grip of labor conditions
in the Po Valley in winter
ten years after the war — before
he could in good conscience
alter his focus from the
social to the existential.
I mean literally hit bottom — as
the protagonist, Aldo (played
by the sluggish American
actor Steve Cochran), hurls
himself from a tower, and
for a moment his agonized
cry scorches the air.
*
The form that “secret
violence” takes is
also — death.
In addition to the suicides
of Rosetta in Le Amiche and
Aldo in Il Grido,
there is the death of Giovanni’s
best friend in La Notte;
the death of a stockbroker
(who was given “a
minute of silence” broken
by the antiphonal ringing
of the phones) in L’Eclisse;
the murder in Blow-Up;
the question of whether
or not Mark killed a cop
in Zabriskie Point;
Robertson’s death
in The Passenger (which
enables Locke to assume
his identity). All these
are deaths about which no
one cares enough, but they
are deaths which galvanize
action – and force
the living to confront their
lives.
Learning how to live is
necessarily learning how
to mourn.
6
Antonioni’s films
became more and more rarefied
as he came to locate, to
focus on, to blow up,
to explode, the timeless
human problems as signified
by a title like Identification
of a Woman. The lives
of characters freed from “the
practical restraints which
imprison him or her” allowed
him a more intense focus
on the conflicts that lie
underneath the social matrices,
or the “cover” of
work.
Antonioni has always been
incisive where matters of
class are concerned and
nowhere more prominently
than in the early films
in the neo-realist vein.
Consider the nightclub scene
in Cronaca Di Un Amore where
Guido, tense, sweating,
as if flames were about
to shoot out from the crown
of his skull, looks on as
Paola—the ultimate
object of his desire, the
rich girl, pursuit of whom
is his raison d’etre—carries
on in a flippant fashion,
bedecked in jewels and a
ludicrous, absurd “leo-leopard” hat.
7
Profession: Reporter.
Antonioni started out as
a journalist, film critic,
and documentary filmmaker
and always approaches filmmaking
as a kind of investigation.
Part of his task is to give
an account of certain conditions.
Watching his characters
try to live their lives
against a background of
modern verticals and horizontals
that show no love for human
scale, we understand why
he envisions his work as
digging: “archaeological
research among the arid
material of our times.” His
worldliness, his awareness
of history have given him
the freedom to leave it
out and look more closely
at the human dilemma of
living after the second
world war.
*
“The sun is fierce
up in these hills,” writes
another chronicler of those
years, Cesare Pavese, (whose
novel Tra Donna Sole
[Among Women Only] Antonioni
adapted as Le Amiche
[The Girl Friends]). “I
had forgotten how its light
is flung back off the bare
patches of volcanic rock.
Here the heat doesn’t
so much come down from the
sky as rise up underfoot—from
the earth, from the trench
between the vines which
seems to have devoured each
speck of green and turned
it to stem.”
Antonioni’s films,
in addition to his adaptation
of Pavese’s novel,
reflect Pavese’s tone:
his obsession with real
time and the feeling of
being, as he phrased it
in his diary, “alone,
alone, alone.”
For Pavese, who committed
suicide shortly after receiving
the Strega Prize for Among
Women Only, only others
had life. He was undone
by the problem of other
minds. In one revealing
diary entry he wrote: “6th
January 1946. Gods, for
you, are the others,
individuals who are self-sufficient,
supreme, seen from the outside.”
Pavese makes you compliant
in his quest: he offers
an invitation to wandering,
saying, come on, let’s
go into the hills, it’s
cool, it’s clear,
and we can look back at
the town and get things
back into perspective. There’s
the long, slow ascent, the
careful deciphering of paths
from natural openings in
the brush that don’t
go far enough, the blend
of solitude and dialogue
(if accompanied by a friend),
self-abandonment, all tied
to the ascent; then the
melancholy turn homeward
and the more thoughtful,
darker descent, as the perspective
gained from the height is
lost again.
But sometimes Pavese did
not want to come down. He
did not want to sacrifice
possibility—which
seems endless when you look
down at the town from far
away—for the probability
that he would return to
the old ways when he reentered
the town walls. In town,
among others, he felt lonely.
In the hills, alone, he
felt—for a moment
at least—the joy of
solitude. A moment, a split-
second, of solidarity with
the world.
*
Antonioni takes this quest
for perspective a step further.
His characters have a lust
for altitude: they “get
high” by taking to
the air. In L’Eclisse,
Antonioni reveals Vittoria’s
capacity for elation as
she enjoys her ride as a
passenger in a small plane—a
scene that conveys what
it feels like to fly better
than any film footage I’ve
seen, as if we were experiencing
it from the point of view
of the plane itself. Daria
and Mark “communicate
best” in Zabriskie
Point while he flies
a plane over her car in
the azure air in slow, teasing,
twisting, erotic circles
against a backdrop of mountain,
mesa, and the whiteness
of the desert.
*
How do you
know but ev’ry Bird
that cuts the airy way,
Is an immense
world of delight, clos’d
by your senses five?
-
William Blake
*
Antonioni was inevitably
drawn to the character who
is the embodiment of “professional” entrapment: “Locke” in The
Passenger (originally
titled Profession: Reporter).
Not that Locke (Jack Nicholson)—in
a segment excised from the
final cut and handed out
with the director’s
approval in the retrospective “packet” under
the title of “The
Reporter You Never Saw”—isn’t
aware of how different things
could be. “Yeah, it’s
strange how you remember
some things and forget others. If
we suddenly remembered everything
we’d forgotten, and
forgot everything we usually
remember, we’d be
totally different people” (my
emphasis).
There is no escape from
the desire to escape.
Antonioni is nothing if
not restless; he loves to
let his camera pick up the
other “stories” that
appear around the edges
of the story. Or to find
oblique and eerie ways of
detailing the inner states
of his characters. Niccolo,
the blocked director in Identification
of a Woman, dreams
of escaping to the sun.
In the bravura coda, Antonioni
shoots his spaceship—made
of minerals able to withstand
millions of degrees of heat—voyaging
into the savage red.
Antonioni’s endings
break free of what precedes
them, like rockets sprung
loose from their boosters.
And his characters fight
against their animality;
but they cannot escape (not
even “to Nepal”).
In Profession: Reporter,
the uncut version of The
Passenger, when Locke
and The Girl repair to a
garden, he grows quickly
restless in paradise and
says, “Let’s
go eat. The old me is getting
hungry.”
8
It is no small task to
convey the experience of
transcendence on
film: in L’Aventurra,
Antonioni builds up to it
in the uninhabited town
under construction, the
nowhere before they reach
Noto, where Claudia and
Sandro wander between ancient
arches in the roughy whiteness — drying
out the spirit.
“It isn’t
a town, it’s a cemetery.”
“They designed
it like a stage set.”
“Once they
had centuries of life, now—twenty
years.”
The nun who leads them
up to the bell tower in
Noto has never ascended
to that physical height
before even though she lives
right below it. When Claudia
(Monica Vitti) accidentally
touches the bell rope on
the tower, it sets all the
bells in the ancient city
ringing out in response
to her love: they answer
her call.
Sandro is an architect
who has abandoned aspiration
for commercial success—and
whose life is hell on account
of it, a fact which strikes
with shocking force when,
having come down from the
tower, he knocks over a
bottle of ink “accidentally
on purpose” by letting
his keys swing to and fro
until the inevitable occurs,
and he destroys an architecture
student’s sketch.
Inevitable, too, is the
way the student, not yet
crippled by a life of waffling,
flies at his throat. It
is the energy of this student
that Antonioni will gravitate
toward in the future when
his love affair with Monica
Vitta comes to an end.
I go among
the Fields and catch a glimpse
of a Stoat or a fieldmouse
peeping out of the withered
grass—the creature
hath a purpose and his eyes
are bright with
it. I go amongst the buildings
of a city and I see a man
hurrying along — to
what? the creature hath
a purpose and his eyes are
bright with it.... May there
not be superior beings amused
with any graceful,
though instinctive attitude
my mind m[a]y fall into,
as I am intertained with
the altertness of a Stoat
or the anxiety of a Deer?
Though a quarrel in the
Streets is a thing to be
hated, the energies displayed
in it are fine; the commonest
Man shows a grace in his
quarrel—By a superior
being our reasoning[s] may
take the same tone—though
erroneous they may be fine—This
is the very thing in which
consists poetry... (John
Keats)
*
Even Locke (now Robertson)
has a moment of delirious
freedom when he simulates
flight, leaning from the
funicular out over the blue
waters of Barcelona harbor.
But ecstasy exacts its price.
In the next scene, as Locke
waits in the park in Barcelona
for his first rendezvous
with the cipher “Daisy,” he
meets a winsome yet curmudgeonly
old man who sees the children
playing as his springboard
for this pessimistic reflection: other
people look at the children
and they imagine a new world
but he just sees the same
old tragedy begin all over
again.
These sentiments recur
in Locke’s bleak parable
at the end of The Passenger:
a man who has been blind
all his life is so disturbed
by what he sees when he
gains his sight, the dust,
the ugliness, the repetition,
that he kills himself.
*
Antonioni is trying to
discover what mutations
in the character of his
characters have been brought
about by change in the world. “The
milieu...accelerates the
personality’s breakdown...[but]
it isn’t the milieu
that gives birth to the
breakdown; it only makes
it show. One may think that
outside of this milieu,
there is no breakdown. But
that’s not true.”
9
Seeing has been the central
metaphor of Western culture
ever since Oedipus plucked
out his eyes. Or ever since
Freud fashioned his “complex” out
of that singular action.
The art of film is not
only well suited, but may
have been created, in an
evolutionary sense, to get
this paradox of sight out
in the open. Sight, where
moving pictures are concerned,
requires the dimension of
time, and this is where
mainstream cinema most often
relinquishes its claim as
art. Antonioni has had the
courage to experiment with
real time in long takes,
phrased and framed within
a context in which there
is at least a trace of a
story. He has sought “a
cinema free as painting
which has reached abstraction...a
cinematic poem with rhyme.” Time
passes. Duration is timeless;
it exists out of time. “Only
through time can time be
conquered,” wrote
Antonioni’s favorite
modern poet, T.S. Eliot.
*
Antonioni devoted a sketch
to Eliot in That Bowling
Alley on the Tiber.
“Who is
the third who walks always
beside you?”
“When a line of poetry
becomes a feeling, it’s
not difficult to put it
into a film. This line of
Eliot has often tempted
me. He gives me no peace,
that third who walks always
beside you.”
*
Antonioni resisted the
bastardization of montage
into shock-effect, ”Mabusian” audience
control, knowing that the
time was propitious to go
the other way, to get back
to and rediscover the origins
of an art that had developed,
from a technical point of
view, too quickly for its
own good.
I believe I’ve
managed to strip myself
bare, to liberate myself
from the many unnecessary
formal techniques...of much useless
technical baggage, eliminating
all the logical transitions,
all those connective links
between sequences where
one sequence served as a
springboard for the one
that followed. The
reason I did this was that
I believe...that cinema
today should be tied to
the truth rather than to logic.
(my emphasis)
In place of controlling
the emotional reaction of
the viewer with a cut, Antonioni
holds his long take until
a trace of true feeling
can come through, as he
phrases it, in “a
world where those traces
have been buried to make
way for sentiments of convenience
and appearance: a world
where feelings have been ‘public-relationized.’”
10
Antonioni exhibited a series
of paintings, blown-up gouaches
really, in Rome in the early
1980s called The Enchanted
Mountain; and while
I found myself unable to
respond much to the work,
the sequence clearly alluded
to Cézanne’s
method of painting the same
mountain again and again;
which is how, in his long
takes, Antonioni lets time
fan out, expand, and flower
in a scene so that truths
imperceptible to the naked
eye can be perceived. In
film he has sought to hold
the retinal focus until
duration enters the work
of its own accord. For his
paintings he magnified the
initial “image” a
thousand times.
*
Not concentration on the “thing” but
on the scene.
(And what did Antonioni
do in the short documentary Return
to Lisca Bianca if
not, to the bewilderment
of the crew, make everyone
sweat out a hot July morning
on the island and wait until
noon for two clouds to provide
some shadow-play before
saying yes to Take One.)
The fact of a secret violence
that throws everything in
an uncertain light is what
we come to after an hour
on the treeless, rocky island
of Lisca Bianca, searching
for Anna, the disappearing
center of L’Avventura, who
has been reading Tender
is the Night. (This “dis-appearance” is
Antonioni’s concession
to plot mechanics—akin
to Hitchcock’s MacGuffins.)
The starkness of the rocks
on the island; the steady
pulse of waves broken once
by a cataract that rushes
up and scare-thrills Claudia;
the high, direct sun, forcing
everyone to squint and screen
their eyes to keep the glare
from blinding them; the
elemental otherness of this
wild outcropping of stone
in contrast to what awaits
them on land.
Is there something sinister
or menacing about the universe?
Something more—than
indifference? Or is it that
people are often flummoxed
by the curve balls, change-ups,
and sliders, that life throws
them? Life is lethal; ambiguity
the poison of choice.
*
There is a stillness that
takes place in the interstices
of volcanic activity.
The black
donkeys move single file
down the narrow lane,
hooves striking
sparks on the stones,
while magnesium
flares answer back from
obscure peaks.
- Eugenio Montale, “News
from Mount Amiata”
(my
translation)
Antonioni’s work
is perched on an active
volcano: it registers the
seismographic shock of the
scene in Rossellini’s
earlier Journey to Italy when
on a visit to Vesuvius,
Ingrid Bergman and George
Sanders come upon a man
and a woman who, while making
love, were buried in the
lava-flow that leveled Naples.
Sandro remains too mired
in melancholy to respond
to Claudia’s joy.
He embodies the dangers
of professionalism. Which
ignores the night. He’s
the “new man”—and
a new kind of character
for Antonioni to use.
In successive films Antonioni
identifies the architect,
the
stockbroker, the writer,
the photographer, the reporter.
And then a woman—who
is two women.
The architect is paradigm
of the larger human problems:
how to address life, to
stay in touch with the violence
underlying change, rather
than making something that
is merely the mirror of
the time. And postwar Italy
is a place, as Montale has
it in “News from Mount
Amiata,” of “fragile
architectures.”
Sandro’s character
is an instance of how you
do yourself no good in the
long run by scaling down
your ambition, artistic
or spiritual, to make your
life more frictionless in
passage through this world.
*
The “novelist” Giovanni
(Marcello Mastroianni) in La
Notte is similarly
trapped in his (glum) idea
of what it is to be a writer
(like a Moravia character
adrift in a novel by Pavese).
Having emerged from the
womb of his room only to
attend his own book party,
he moves looking out of
place and bewildered for
the rest of the day and
through the night.
He notices that Valentina
(Monica Vitti) happens to
be reading Hermann Broch’s
somewhat obscure modernist
classic, The Sleepwalkers.
This makes her climactic
line even more pungent: “I’m
not intelligent, just wide
awake.”
The night allows the truth
to slip in, or slip out,
as in the final scene toward
dawn when Lidia (Jeanne
Moreau) reads Giovanni a
love letter that he, ghost
of himself that he is, thinks
is beautiful beyond measure,
unaware that it was he who
had written it.
In the lyric moment that
concludes this sequence
Valentina tells the numbed
couple that they have “exhausted” her,
and then she stands, quietly
alone, silhouetted in the
doorway, right knee slightly
bent, black hair and dress
in stark contrast to the
whiteness of her skin, and
turns out the light.
*
If there is a central weakness
in Antonioni’s ouevre
it is that his male leads
are rarely adequate to the
complex parts he would have
them play. He needed characters
like the architecture student,
in whom the animal was still
alive.
After the dissolution of
his offscreen relationship
with Monica Vitti, Antonioni
moved his focus away from
women to raw youths, like
David Hemmings in Blow-Up and
the streetwise non-actor
Mark Frechette in Zabriskie
Point, who could move
like kinetic and magnetic
cursors through his meditative
films.
11
The quiet of the night
awakens our sensitivity
to sound-images that we
are normally too preoccupied
to attend.
In Antonioni’s films
you are never free from
sounds. In the first scene
in L’Eclisse the
loudness of the fan—which
encroaches on the room,
oppresses the room like
a praying mantis—is
played off against the susurration
of the wind in the bushes.
At the end of the scene
the slamming of the gate
reiterates the finality
of the man’s departure.
And at the “press
screening” of The
Passenger to open the
retrospective, which Antonioni
attends with Maria Schneider
on his arm, the propeller
fan in the first scene whirrs
like an infernal machine;
whirrs so loudly I think
there’s something
wrong with the projector.
In Blow-Up the
soundtrack replays the sound
of the wind in the trees
(which I imagine must have
some very personal root
in the etiology of Antonioni’s
imagination) that accompanied
the first stage of Thomas’s
discovery.
It is not the first time
Antonioni puts wind on the
soundtrack where there could
be no such sound in the
room.
12
The sensation I have when
I feel that it’s the shrilling
of the telephone wires in
the country that makes
the landscape impatient.
Especially in the first days
of spring, when you hear
more.
I think
of this impatience transferred
to people, peasant
families for instance. It’s
not true that peasants
are patient. And I think
of the crisscrossing of
the telegrams in those lines,
with all their stories.
And a soundtrack based on
that shrilling.... (“The
First Days of Spring”)
Antonioni looks at people—not
objectively, not independent
of any point of view, but
to investigate how they
interact with objects. And
to underscore how human
development lags pitifully
behind technology.
Technos grows. People talk
to each other face-to-face
less and less.
Mechanical objects are
monsters of repetition.
Niccolo can’t get
the burglar alarm his ex-wife
has installed to stop ringing.
Gadgets multiply, like
the child’s robot
in Red Desert which
beats its head repeatedly
against the wall.
*
During the showing at the
Walter Reade Theater of
his early documentary about
the workers on the Po river, Gente
del Po, a tear appears
in the screen. The bulb
behind it blazes like the
streetlight at the end of L’Eclisse.
And all I can do is stare
at the hole in the screen,
the rip in the fabric, the
light that cuts through
the masts of the barges
as they set off down the
Po.
13
There are no long nights
without an element of boredom.
And boredom is an essential
component of Antionioni’s
work. The problem of boredom
is inseparable from the
problem of time. Antonioni’s
use of time is the closest
analogue I can think of
to the use of time in the
works of Faulkner, Joyce,
Proust, Woolf, and Broch
(more in his sentence-long
novel Death of Virgil than
in The Sleepwalkers).
This has to do with the
ramifications of duration—moments
of perception which take
consciousness a long time
to detail; to populate.
Consciousness can never
unravel all that it perceives
happening in an instant.
Any inquisition into the
nature of time is doomed
to the use of paradoxes,
analogies, which are doomed
to imprecision. You’re
always running up against
a wall of intervening space.
That means it’s time
to buy something: it’s
easy, satisfying, and only
begins to exert an inertial
pull after it has been possessed,
like the guitar Thomas tosses
into the street after working
so hard to wrest it from
others at the Yardbirds
concert.
14
The night and time. Things
get fuzzy when you talk
about time. Science is still
in the process of discovering
the intermittences that
the body knows. “Intermittences
of the heart,” as
Proust phrased it in his
search.
*
At the end of August a
slight breeze sets off a
clicking in the dry weeds.
Driving back roads, I note
the change in the attitude
of nature when it’s
further from the highway
or well- trafficked route:
fences step out of shadows,
and the curvatures in the
hills let you see them in
more detail. This is a landscape
whose language is a fructive
dialogue between wilderness
and settlement. And yet
I sense there is something
perilous in the spaces between
the cultivated and the wild.
I walk into the woods at
nightfall, down a path I
have not taken before. I
walk a while, begin to feel
my way and notice it is
darker than when I set out.
Ten, fifteen minutes have
passed. The darker it grows
the clearer it seems that
I am walking through a tunnel,
that the trees have been
here so long their topmost
branches touch, intertwine;
and the tunnel looks like
it is narrowing, but it
is the absence of light
that makes it look like
there is less space ahead.
Only now do I note that
it is (once again) darker
than when I last registered
the change in light as light.
This is what I remember
best about the walk, and
it occupied maybe ten seconds
out of half an hour’s
meander.
This is close to where
duration is positioned in
relation to time. Duration
exists in time, yet it is
hard to imagine it separately
from space. Duration is
time as it curves into space.
The artist who lets himself
be pursued by duration risks,
in defeating time, defeating
the tension necessary to
make the work live. You
believe in moments out of
time, Eliot’s “moment
in the rose garden,” or
you do not. The latter row
is easier to hoe. The sensualist
argues against timelessness.
Duration occurs in time
but feels subjectively like
it is out of time. In time
you’re coterminous
with yourself. In duration,
you’re walking beside
yourself.
Once I look back, and the
entire path’s in shadow.
I realize I have to gauge
my progress by the sky.
Shadows put a matte finish
on the path.
What is infinite about
this silence if I am in
the act of hearing it?
15
While boredom is not necessarily
a component of music or
the visual arts, I can’t
imagine literature in some
degree without it—with
the singular exception of
lyric poetry, which destroys
as it conflates the dimension
of time. (That time is not
a factor in, say, a sonnet
is one reason why the form
is so adept at arguing that
nothing will outlast its “powerful” rhymes.)
Antonioni has staked his
claim as an artist. I remain
confounded as to why people
who admit to having no problem
with the boredom factor
in such works as the Iliad,
the confessions of St. Augustine
and Rousseau, the Prelude,
Tolstoy’s novels,
and the numerous more ambitious
works of the modernists,
object to what is a precondition
of Antonioni’s long
takes. They are the cinematic
analogue to Proust’s
way of touching on the rush
of images that flooded Marcel’s
sensorium.
Antonioni knows how to
release the tension of a
long take and release it
powerfully—as when
Lidia in La Notte,
in flight from the breezy
hospital room where Tomasso
lies dying, walks fearlessly
(scaring a man who stares
at her) through the outskirts
of Milan and comes across
the boys who shoot off rockets
in a field and talk of reaching
the moon. A phallic chant
goes up: “Terrific
thrust!” This thrusting
off into outer space is
congruent with Antonioni’s
avowed desire to be in on
the action and catch a ride
up there as soon as possible:
Kennedy, just prior to his
assassination, had granted
him permission to participate
in a space flight.
I’ll admit that the
scene at the stock market
in L’Eclisse,
a riff on gambling, is a
little too long; but how
do we know that it does
not shrewdly set the tone
for the scene that follows-Vittoria
watches an elderly man who
has just lost a fortune,
proceed, stoically and matter-of-factly,
to the pharmacy for a tranquilizer
and down it quietly at an
outdoor café, with
no visible sign of grief-to
have maximum impact.
*
It’s a risk to fashion
an art that shows people
in a shiftless, distracted,
uneasy state; between the
acts, in the mess. And yet
to show them killing time
in this state of anxious
uncertainty is to show them
at their most human—which
doesn’t mean that
members of the anxious audience
would recognize themselves
in these portraits.
Antonioni is after truth,
not proof; diagnosis of
the problem, not a cure
for symptoms.
He is the artist of the
peripheries, for whom the
only center is that which
does not exist (except to
disappear, like Anna and
the victim’s body
in Blow-Up). The
periphery is the realm of
the possible.
It’s...the sort of
film I’ve always wanted
to make and have never been
able to, a mechanism
not of facts but of moments
that recount the hidden
tensions of those facts,
as blossoms reveal the tensions
of a tree....[I]t was
one of those evenings controlled
by invisible looks. In short,
an unexpressed tragedy. The
characters in a tragedy,
the places, the air one
breathes—these are
sometimes more fascinating
than the tragedy itself,
the moments preceding tragedy
and those that follow it,
when the action is firm
and speech falls silent.
Tragic action itself makes
me uneasy. It’s abnormal,
excessive, shameless. It
ought never to be performed
in the presence of witnesses.
In both reality and fiction
it excludes me. (my emphasis)
*
Film is a hybrid, an admixture
of all the arts that preceded
it. Antonioni’s use
of these materials is ascetic—no
empty virtuosity: technique
has always been the servant
of necessity. By the time
of The Passenger in
1975 he no longer wanted
to “employ the subjective
camera, in other words the
camera that represents the
viewpoint of the character.” After
Locke’s death the
camera, as if weary of confinement,
wants to look outward again.
What does Antonioni do when
confronted with what had
hitherto been thought of
as a technical impossibility?
In the final scene of The
Passenger, which consists
of one long take, he had
his crew cut through the
window bars of the hotel
in Osuna so the camera could
see further, emerge, look
back at the scene it had
just shot.
When asked in a filmed
interview with Lino Micciche, Antonioni
as Seen by Antonioni,
shown for the first time
in America during the retrospective, “Does
the camera have a future?” Antonioni,
still spry and youthful
in his seventies, did not
hesitate to answer: “It
will.”
POSTSCRIPT:
Noto-Mandorli-Vulcano-Stromboli-Carnevale
As if to echo the ending
of an Antonioni film, I
had no sooner “completed” this
essay than a friend lent
me a documentary that Antonioni
made in 1991—a film
that deftly amalgamates
many disparate themes that
circulate throughout his
work. It is an ecstatic
(yet lucid in that ecstasy)
meditation on terror and
beauty. The benign and the
malevolent are married everywhere
in this deft ten-minute
imagist/cubist tone poem.
The film is as relentless
in its own way as D.H. Lawrence’s
contrapuntal “Bare
Almond-Trees”:
Have you a
strange electric sensitiveness
in your steel tips?
Do you feel
the air for electric influences
Like some strange
magnetic apparatus?
Do you take
in messages, in some strange
code,
From heaven’s
wolfish, wandering electricity,
that prowls constantly around
Etna?
*
Noto. Synthesizer
bells and bird songs. The
faces of gargoyles, which
range from the beatific
to the loutish. The female
gargoyles gaze upward like
aspiring angels; the males
leer from the balconies.
These gargoyles are brutish
but shrewd: not moral. They
indicate that the human
conception of what it is
to be human has not changed
so much over the years.
He reacts,
he loves, he hates, he suffers
under the sway of moral
forces and myths, which
today, when we are at the
threshold of reaching the
moon, should not be the
same as those that prevailed
at the time of Homer but
nevertheless are.
The meditation on their
expressions link up with
the carnival masks at the
end of the film. And they
bring to mind the coarse
faces in the stock market
scenes in L’Eclisse,
where it is easy to mistake
the human lust for activity
with greed.
Mandorli. There
is nothing terrible about
the blossoming almond tree
in this segment as it fills
the lens. Only the world
surrounding it is terrible.
And yet this Edenic moment,
like the grove that Locke
and The Girl enter in Profession:
Reporter, owes everything
to history, violence, and
chaos.
Vulcano-Stromboli. The
volcanoes come as an interruption
but they are in themselves
interruptions. Volcanoes
are populated. They are
not at the core; they are
the core. As children we
pretended that molten lava
flowed between the volcanoes
of our adjacent cots. We
wrestled. And the loser
would be dissolved in the
infra-red flow.
I have walked the cracked,
sulfurous lava crusts on
the island of Hawaii where
several thousand small earthquakes
occur every day; and while
they don’t shake you
up, you pick up the activity
in your nerves, and it is
not unpleasant—because
it is real—because
it is an inviolable seismographic
reminder that life is fragile,
robust, dangerous; a reminder
that just because you can’t
see something doesn’t
mean it isn’t there,
like the murder in Blow-Up which
the camera—more sentient
than the man who wields
it, yet without any moral
authority—records.
*
Antonioni is asking us
to ask: what can be done
with information? Can I
act on a received image?
I? Vittoria can transform
herself after looking at
some photographs of lions
at home in the bush in Africa,
but can lions react to photographs
of us? Can lions be deceived
by images, like Stevens’s
men eating images of themselves?
How else explain the force
of distraction in Antonioni’s
films? The volcano is a
silent witness to history,
to the explosions of news
and eros.
In most films violence
is erotic, often delicate
to the point of being balletic
in execution: that is part
of its allure. With Antonioni
sex and violence occur with
volcanic force, as when
Guido comes under the spell
of the nymphomaniac in La
Notte, or Rachel Locke’s
feral boyfriend crowds her
in The Passenger.
And there is always Mount
Aetna, brooding over Claudia’s
hesitant caress of Sandro
in the last shot of L’Aventurra.
*
Volcanoes: female when
they smoke; male when they
erupt.
*
The camera approaches the
crater slowly, circling,
trying out various approaches.
The volcano changes with
every new angle. The gorgeous
green-gray verges on the
comforting, like the park
in Blow Up that
looked so “peaceful
and still” to the
photographer even as a murder
was being committed. Murder
and death are allied within
the seething center here.
The camera does wonderful
things with the craters;
they’re ridged; entry
is blocked. Sulfurous fumes
rise continually from the
vents around the rims. A
hovering precedes descent.
Bare, barren. Curvaceous.
The lens caresses the black
igneous rock, revealing
now a whale’s hump,
now the concave look of
a sarcophagus. Everything
has a double life: the steam
around the craters’ rims
recalls the deux ex machina “fires
of hell” at the end
of Faust, and the
refining fires which the
lovers pass through in The
Magic Flute.
Gradually a center is revealed,
steaming on all sides. Closer
and closer the camera moves
toward the heat at the center.
I am violent by nature.
A doctor told me so when
I was a boy. And I must
give vent to this violence
one way or the other.
*
Carnevale. The
grotesquerie is not to be
taken lightly. The masks
are vastly less ambiguous
than the gargoyles. There
is something inexorable
about the slow, mechanical
movement of the shark’s
jaws as it bites the empty
air; and the tinsel-breathing,
lean, intent face of the
dragon grows ferocious in
its glittering. Time does
not move on the charming,
feline papier-mâché clock
faces.
These shots marry the heat
of the volcanic cones and
this reflected light that
then—in a quick cut—blazes
as a sunflower, with lights
strung along all of its
paper petals, like steam
rising from the rims of
craters. Like light on light,
reminiscent of the final
shot of L’Eclisse:
a close-up of light itself;
energy in radiant form.
And yet the center of the
sunflower is dark....
*
Night is threatened. It
is not what it used to be.
The night is what we can
see of the volcanoes: a
night that offers no repose
is terrible. It is an incendiary
night, about to burst into
flames,
Either now
or tomorrow or the day after
that.
-
Wallace Stevens
Once again, silently, definitively
here, an inquiry into perception.
—-
All quotes not otherwise
identified are taken from
interviews with Antonioni
or his prose — especially That
Bowling Alley on the Tiber:
Tales of a Director,
translated by William Arrowsmith.
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