[''L'Avventura'' is truly one of the greats -- to borrow Churchill's line about Russia, "a riddle, wrapped in a mystery, inside an enigma." From Antonioni's NY Times obit:]
... Perhaps the defining moment in Mr. Antonionis career came on the night LAvventura was screened at the 1960 Cannes Film Festival. Many in the audience walked out and there were numerous boos, catcalls and whistles. The director and Monica Vitti thought their careers were over.
But later that night, Roberto Rossellini and a group of other influential filmmakers and critics drafted a statement which they released the following morning. Aware of the exceptional importance of Michelangelo Antonionis film, LAvventura, and appalled by the displays of hostility it has aroused, the undersigned critics and members of the profession are anxious to express their admiration for the maker of this film, they wrote.
One of the great legends of iconoclastic filmmaking how being booed at Cannes could become a badge of honor was born.
LAvventura went on to win the festivals Special Jury Prize and become an international box-office hit, spurring furious debate. Some found the film pointless; others read reams of meaning into its languid predicaments. Mr. Antonionis international reputation was made.
The next year, Sight and Sound, the influential British film magazine, polled 70 leading critics from around the world and they not only endorsed LAvventura, but they also chose it as the second-greatest film ever made, just behind Citizen Kane.
... LAvventura almost died before it was born. Chronically short of money, his producer eventually pulled out of the project just as Mr. Antonioni and the actors were working on a craggy island near Sicily.
It had gotten to the point where there was no food, Mr. Antonioni remembered. One crew deserted us. We got hold of another crew and they, too, left. I had 20,000 meters of film and the actors stayed, so I carried the camera on my back and continued shooting. Eventually, a new producer appeared.
LAvventura proved to be the turning point in his career and is widely regarded as Mr. Antonionis masterpiece.
As with most of Mr. Antonionis films, it focuses on the comfortable, ennervated lives of well-to-do Italians, in this case a group of friends on a yachting trip. Without warning, during a visit to a wave-thrashed atoll, one of them, an emotionally distraught woman named Anna, simply vanishes. Had she drowned herself because her lover, Sandro (Gabriele Ferzetti), seemed in no hurry to marry her? Had she hurled herself off a cliff in a fit of ennui? Had she been swallowed by the shark she claimed to have seen? Or had she fled on another boat?
The small island is searched. It rains. Police arrive. Then, gradually, Sandro develops an attraction to Annas best friend, Claudia (Ms. Vitti). She resists, then warms to him. Eventually, they stop mentioning Anna at all. The search is forgotten. Sandro betrays Claudia, for no apparent reason. We never discover what happened to Anna. ...
<http://www.nytimes.com/2007/07/31/movies/31cnd-antonio.html?_r=1&hp&oref=slogin>
Carl
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