32 out of 34 people found the following comment useful :- A Haunting and Enigmatic Journey, 18 April 2000
Author:
mackjay from Out there in the dark
In many ways, "L'Eclisse" is the quintessential film from Antonioni's
vintage period. Less beautiful than "L'Avventura", it compromises
nothing in its exploration of human disaffection. The director himself
has stated the humans are out of joint with their world, because of a
kind of over-civilization, mainly through technology. And sexuality
remains a final realm of mystery and contact with natural human
physicality. For this reason, many characters in his films move from
one sexual liaison to another, with no sense of any deep involvement:
the attempt to connect in this way is futile. A real connection to the
natural world has been lost. Humans have constructed a cold, efficient
surface for the world which is difficult or impossible to penetrate. In
an unconscious attempt to penetrate, to understand, characters seem
continuously to grope and search.
"L'Eclisse" is especially memorable for its strange juxtaposition of
the imagery of modern city life (in particular the Stock Exchange
scenes; the car running into the river) with that of natural, or more
primitive states (Monica Vitti's African dance; the fossilized plant).
And the final sequence is almost overwhelming in its
science-fiction-like presentation of a silent eclipsing of mankind in
his own environment.
Vitti is the perfect Antonioni actor. She displays just enough emotion
to realize the character, but is malleable enough for the director to
illustrate his theme through her. Alain Delon never looked more
handsome. He conveys the spiritually empty stock broker quite
effectively.
Unfortunately, prints of this film are not in the best condition. It is
time to restore it, along with "La Notte" to the technical standards
they deserve.
30 out of 35 people found the following comment useful :- Like a personal blend of quasi-bourgeois drama filmed in a meticulous, documentary-implied style, 31 May 2004
Author:
Filmjack3 from United States
While The Eclipse is one of the most superbly directed films I may have
ever seen, on a first impression it was (obviously) a lot to take in
all at once. As with his other films, L'Eclisse isn't for everyone. But
Antonioni distinguishes himself here as a great artist of the medium by
not only creating the kinds of compositions (lensed by Gianni De
Venanzo, who worked with Antonioni on Il Grido and La Notte as well as
the WW2 documentary Days of Glory and Fellini's 8 1/2) no one could
ever justifiably imitate correctly, but creating a depth to the
substance. On one hand one aspect of L'Eclisse that's appealing is how
it balances out the style and substance (though the style is arguably
the more distinguishable and greater than the two). On the other
another aspect is that it could put off viewers not terribly familiar
with Antonioni's psychology (which, like Scorsese for example, is at
least consistent and engaging with the rest of the director's catalog
of work). How intently he gets inside Vittoria's head, and at the same
time maintains a detachment despite the varying emotional contexts, is
extraordinary, if highly personal.
Like Vittoria, Antonioni does something that's fascinating throughout
the film - though one doesn't know what it is exactly that holds
Vittoria, and for that matter Piero, in their respective attitudes, one
doesn't feel quite left out of anything heart-stopping for the
story/character's sake. The film lets us in just enough as to no keep
us curious, and it also doesn't keep itself in a depressive tone, as it
is realistic to how the people in this city exist. In fact, there's
another facet to L'Eclisse which especially worked for me - the poetry
that slips itself in small doses amid the visual sweep. Whether it be
one of the long takes, an elongated view on a building or street-light,
or on Vitty as Vittoria, it's in the observation that subtext forms.
This is the kind of motion picture that a shot-by-shot analysis would
serve like would a Picasso or Chagal.
And as a plus to the film's success are the actors turns - Monica Vitti
is the only actress from that period and country I can think of who
could've pulled off what Antonioni wanted in Vittoria. Her face, after
being in front of us minute after minute, becomes familiar despite her
inner-angst. She knows what Vittoria's fears and loss of vitality means
for the story. She's not a person without a laugh or smile ever, yet
those emotions arrive only after the known mood is peeled away like a
layer of skin. "To love I think one shouldn't know the other," she
says, almost arbitrarily. "But then, maybe one shouldn't love at all."
Is this Antonioni hitting the hammer on the head, or is it just one of
those kinds of comments a woman like her would make? As in L'Avventura,
there is the mystery around the female lead. Is love beyond her reach
we might wonder, or has the idea of it vanished under false pretense?
Alain Deleon also deserves credit for his Piero, as he counters her
quiet, more fogged demeanor as a stockbroker in Rome. That under
current to the story - the major bustle and noise of the gamblers in
the stockbroker's hall - is also part of the contrast, to the stretches
with minimal dialog and sound.
The last act, which regards Vittoria's relationship to Piero (a time
after he empty break-up with her past lover Rodrigo) culminates in an
astonishing feat of storytelling and film-art. As it becomes all the
more evident neither one will arrive at a certain (usually) desolate
cross-road corner to meet up, the idea of an eclipse over these people
and places is hypnotic, unique. For its time it must've been quite a
stroke by a director, and forty or so years later the whole sequence
leaves its effect in due. Haunting formations beneath and surrounded by
the sky and clouds, and it's a bit intellectually loaded. There can be
any interpretation for this climax (or as one could claim an
anti-climax) that isn't manipulated by Antonioni. The sequence, as with
the rest of the film, asks only to see the world based on how one would
think it can, or will, be seen. And it fits memorably, like bedroom
slippers, into the prime of Antonioni's career as an auteur.
Among the three films in Antonioni's films from this period of his
career (1960-1962), this is the one I'd recommend the highest. The
Eclipse is also the kind that's nearly mandatory to see more than once
if sincerely interested in checking out at all (in other words, don't
watch it with pre-conceived notions of this being a dramatic love story
with solid conventions to it).
11 out of 11 people found the following comment useful :- The capital,the eroticism, 5 December 2006
Author:
Cristi_Ciopron from CGSM,Soseaua Nationala 49
The Eclipse denotes Michelangelo Antonioni 's flawless taste,and his
powerful,virile instinct for strong compositions;this elegant and suave
movie is one of the cinema's best pieces of poetry (I must also confess
that I prefer this early,younger,"black and white" and peninsular
Michelangelo Antonioni;he was 50 years when he made L'ECLISSE).Before
he approached the '60s counterculture,Antonioni made a few strong
movies not only for the intellectuals but also about intellectuals.
This one is an incredibly rich movie,a movie about many things:about
solitude,financial pawns,a woman's indefinite aspirations,the vibrating
city beauty,and the heart's resilience,the woman soul's density,the
urban aesthetic;and also about:greed,people that search gropingly
.Little wheels in the gearing of the stock exchange;the stock
exchange's crushing machine.Antonioni is caustic and sober.His
theme,the human monad,is inexhaustible.The naturalness,the charm,the
intensity,the integrity,the width of this film must be
mentioned.Antonioni proved that,for his cinema,experiments are always
ways and means,while the most intense poetry is the aim.(Each great
director is an experimenter;all great directors are experimenters,only
to be better poets.)
Antonioni is one of the three directors who,according to Averty,never
made a bad movie (and Antonioni's creation was,for almost two decades,
quite abundant;it is only after Blowup (1966) that he went slow,making
some seven movies in so many decades).His movies don't have a
"sockdolager",that's part of what makes them so good and
endearing.Experimenting in countless ways,Antonioni never forgot to be
a poet,and never failed.His aesthetic aim has a side of ingenuity and
directness that enchants in an unfailing way.
And what is Antonioni's poetry?It is this compact texture,this density
of the people and of the life,the striking immediacy.It is amazing also
how Antonioni put all of himself in this beautiful movie,The Eclipse.
Like a few others,The Eclipse is one of the movies that give us the
taste of what cinema can be.
12 out of 13 people found the following comment useful :- More than decent conclusion of a great trilogy, 1 March 2006
Author:
Alexandar (acanovakovic@gmail.com) from Nis, Serbia
L'Eclisse (1962)***1/2
Third film in Antonioni's trilogy of alienation following L'Avventura
(1960) and La Notte (1961) about a young woman (Monica Vitti) and her
brief affair with handsome Alain Delon.
Like in his other movies, Antonioni uses specific techniques not to
tell the story but rather to express the lack of communication among
the characters, their alienation and incapableness to make a strong and
meaningful relation. May this be because of their shallow characters or
as a result of living in a modern society marked with the superficial
values like prestigious and run-for-the-money it's up to the viewer
to decide. Anyway, long cadres, real time events, visual metaphors and
visual contrasts between the characters on the one side and landscapes
and/or modern day creations like buildings, streets (usually empty) on
the other is what makes this rather experience than a plot-movie
(intentionally) but nevertheless effective in their purpose (which is
to express and transmit this same feelings of alienation to the
viewer). So, if you're looking for an entertainment, you better skip
this one. Final scene is great in concluding the movie. A bit weaker of
great L'Avventura.
8 out of 9 people found the following comment useful :- Superbly crafted modern masterpiece, 8 January 2007
Author:
overseer-3 from Florida
L'Eclisse (1962) is a profoundly artistic, wonderfully crafted modern
Italian film, in which the audience is permitted to draw their own
conclusions about what they are seeing on the screen.
Unlike most directors, who construct their films in very specific,
traditional ways to tell stories they wish to convey, in L'Eclisse the
director Michelangelo Antonioni paints pictures which mean different
things to different people. It's an open-ended story and the audience
is allowed and actually encouraged to come up with their own theories
about the main plot and sub-plots, the overall themes, and the
characters' motivations and personalities. None of them are carved in
stone. You yourself can travel to a very special, unique place by
watching L'Eclisse, and it can be a very different journey than someone
else's.
What do the white lines mean to you? They show up several times in
compositional frames in the film: on the street, on the runway when the
plane lands, outside a church, and in more abstract ways in signposts,
in clothing, in architecture. Is an actual eclipse taking place when
darkness descends and the street light suddenly goes on? or has
nighttime simply fallen and we're left with a sense of desolation and
obliteration of the modern city? has the city been hit by a nuclear
bomb? The mushroom water tower: does it just signify the nuclear age,
or is it a real omen for the future of mankind? Is it not also a
phallic symbol, showcasing the director's idea that the stockbroker
character is primarily interested in towering conquests, and that
sexuality is an underlying motivation of the main female character's
psyche, even though she also seems afraid of intimacy and commitment?
The man riding the horse and buggy and the nursemaid pushing the baby
buggy: do these things just mark the passage of time? or do they have a
deeper meaning that represents the old world, a world that is quickly
disappearing from the modern landscape? Is the final scene between the
couple the end of their relationship, or are they about to become more
serious? Questions like these can be answered in different ways,
depending on your own perspective.
This was a novel approach to film-making in 1962, and actually it's
also still novel today too! How many films dare to resemble L'Eclisse
in the 21st century? Today films are too formulaic and rarely is the
same creativity expressed that Michelangelo Antonioni achieved so
sublimely in his film. If I was a filmmaker this would be the kind of
film I would love to make, full of symbolism and repressed emotions.
The cinematography is exquisite in this film. The new Criterion double
disc set did a fantastic job with the print and the extras. My
suggestion would be to watch the film without commentary and then
immediately afterward watch it again with the commentary on. As he
talks you will find yourself noticing things you missed the first time
around, and that the commentator is missing too! For instance, notice
how in the scene when the ladies are chasing the dogs who have escaped
the apartment, that Vittoria approaches two dogs, a white and a black
one, and it's the black dog who gets up and dances and charms her, an
analogy to the previous scene, in which Vittoria had put on black-face
and did an African dance in her racist friend's apartment. The white
dog blithely walks away, representing the stifling racist views of her
friend Marta, and the black dog shows joy of movement and a fun nature,
like Vittoria. The commentator completely misses this message.
Acting is superb by all three leads, Monica Vitti, with her finely
chiseled face and wild blonde hair, Alain Delon, who conveys emotions
easily with just the flick of an eyebrow, and Francisco Rabal,
classically handsome and intense. Also of note is the actress who plays
Vittoria's mother, Lila Brignone, who does a good job depicting the
emotional distance the character feels from the estranged daughter,
which in turn conveys to the audience one of the primary reasons
Vittoria is afraid of intimacy: she never had a demonstrative
relationship with her mother.
If you're a fan of Italian cinema, don't miss L'Eclisse. It's a special
film which will stay with you long after you've seen it.
10 out of 10.
9 out of 11 people found the following comment useful :- Antonioni's Memorable Journey, A Truly Exceptional Film, 31 July 2005
Author:
Hal-900 from WA, USA
Director Antonioni concludes his 1960s trilogy with a bang. I liked
"L'Avventura", the first movie in this interesting trilogy, but I
thought that movie was not a complete success. "La Notte" (second in
the trilogy) was an improvement over the first movie; here Antonioni
explores similar themes in a much more engaging manner. It seems that
Antonioni wanted to take the formula to an all-time high, and the third
film wraps things up in a fascinating and totally captivating manner.
The film has no real beginning (the first scenes show a couple at the
end of an all-night argument), and the story ends inconclusively. It is
a bold approach that adds resonance to the movie as whole. "L'Eclisse"
is the film that truly made me appreciate what Antonioni was getting at
throughout the course of two productions. "L'Avventura" had struck me
as a little too cynical, but now I see how each film is filled with its
own dash of humanity. Once again, Monica Vetti is a treasure to behold
and I don't think the movie would have worked with a different actress.
Francisco Rabal ("Nazarin") and dashing Alain Delon do a good job of
not interfering with Vetti's magic act. It is a hauntingly beautiful
movie that I have not been able to get out of my head. Highly
recommended!
7 out of 8 people found the following comment useful :- SciFi for the Emotional Life, 29 March 2007
Author:
Kara Dahl Russell from United States
Smart and moody, this film is not only about emotional Eclipse, it is
about the eclipse of the old society as it changes, and also about how
architectural changes eclipse older style, and more importantly,
nature. There are really smart and insightful comments here on changing
racial attitudes, and the disparities between rich, poor, and the
people who don't mind cannibalizing the disenfranchised. All this
commentary done with the subtlety of the slowing growing suburbs that
our leading lady lives in.
Monica Vitti plays our "everywoman" who is our window into the
Director's mind, but also herself a mere dot on the landscape. Early
on, we see her throw away exactly what she seems to be looking for,
only to pursue it in exactly the wrong place/person.
The film has a look of a sci-fi horror movie, but the horror here is
emotional desolation, the destruction of nature/natural-ness, and the
looming threat of nuclear war. This film, so cleanly represents the era
when "duck and cover" was not only a physical act, it was an emotional
state.
If you don't like film as art, you will be completely lost by the
architectural city-scape ending montage, and the lack of traditional
film closure. This is not a light evening of movie entertainment, but
it is film making at it's non-verbal, eloquent best. Captivating,
thought provoking, and meaty.
10 out of 14 people found the following comment useful :- The best Monica Vitti movie, 8 January 2003
Author:
vyto34 from United States
Many people feel that Vitti was the most gloriously radiant, magnetically
attractive film actress of the 1960s and 70s. This is her best film. It is
also one of the two best Antonioni films (along with Blowup), and it is a
stunningly inventive film. The last scene alone is totally unparalled in
film history. The "African" scene also ranks as one of cinema's most
striking moments. Alain Delon is a good pairing for Vitti and he perfectly
captures the intended too-self-absorbed, pretty-boy role.
7 out of 9 people found the following comment useful :- Black and white is full of color, 8 December 2006
Author:
kopche (kopche@yahoo.com) from Varna, Bulgaria
L'ECLISSE is not everybody's cup of tea. It is so slow that to continue
watching it may sometimes require a conscious strain of will. But it is
a rewarding experience: L'ECLISSE is probably the best of all unhurried
movies. It is so desperately tender; Alain Delon and Monica Vitti are
so young and beautiful, and at the same time - so precise in their
naiveté; the camera shots are so long and ambiguous, so empty of words.
If there ever was a movie that truthfully represents the playful and
sad uncertainty of being in love, then this must be it.
L'ECLISSE is sure to break your heart... or mend it.
The ending is as mysterious as God's ways and if it wasn't for the
music to bring me down to earth I may have thought that I had died.
5 out of 6 people found the following comment useful :- Lack of Communication, Emptiness and Loneliness in the Big City, 1 May 2007
Author:
Claudio Carvalho from Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
In the suburb of Rome, the translator Vittoria (Monica Vitti) breaks
her engagement with her boyfriend, the writer Ricardo (Francisco
Rabal), after a troubled night. Vittoria goes to downtown to meet her
mother (Lilla Brignone), who is addicted in Stock Market, and she meets
the broker Piero (Alain Delon) in a day of crash in the Stock Market.
The materialist Piero and the absent Vittoria begins a monosyllabic
relationship.
"L'Eclisse" is a love story in the world of Michelangelo Antoniani,
where the lack of communication, emptiness and loneliness in the big
city prevails over the human feelings. The first ten or fifteen minutes
with Vittoria and Riccardo alone in his apartment, practically without
any words (actually very few words are spoken), is amazing, showing a
couple whose love and relationship is completely exhausted. The scenes
in the Stock Market of Rome are also very impressive. Monica Vitti, the
favorite actress of Antonioni, shows a stunning beauty and her
alienation of feelings is expressed by her face and few words along the
story. My vote is seven.
Quicklinks
Top Links
trailers and videosfull cast and crewtriviaofficial sitesmemorable quotesOverview
main detailscombined detailsfull cast and crewcompany creditstv scheduleAwards & Reviews
user commentsexternal reviewsnewsgroup reviewsawardsuser ratingsparents guiderecommendationsmessage boardPlot & Quotes
plot summaryplot synopsisplot keywordsAmazon.com summarymemorable quotesFun Stuff
triviagoofssoundtrack listingcrazy creditsalternate versionsmovie connectionsFAQOther Info
merchandising linksbox office/businessrelease datesfilming locationstechnical specslaserdisc detailsDVD detailsliterature listingsnews articlesPromotional
taglinestrailers and videospostersphoto galleryExternal Links
showtimesofficial sitesmiscellaneousphotographssound clipsvideo clipsIMDb user comments for
Eclisse, L' (1962)
32 out of 34 people found the following comment useful :-

A Haunting and Enigmatic Journey, 18 April 2000
Author: mackjay from Out there in the dark
In many ways, "L'Eclisse" is the quintessential film from Antonioni's vintage period. Less beautiful than "L'Avventura", it compromises nothing in its exploration of human disaffection. The director himself has stated the humans are out of joint with their world, because of a kind of over-civilization, mainly through technology. And sexuality remains a final realm of mystery and contact with natural human physicality. For this reason, many characters in his films move from one sexual liaison to another, with no sense of any deep involvement: the attempt to connect in this way is futile. A real connection to the natural world has been lost. Humans have constructed a cold, efficient surface for the world which is difficult or impossible to penetrate. In an unconscious attempt to penetrate, to understand, characters seem continuously to grope and search.
"L'Eclisse" is especially memorable for its strange juxtaposition of the imagery of modern city life (in particular the Stock Exchange scenes; the car running into the river) with that of natural, or more primitive states (Monica Vitti's African dance; the fossilized plant). And the final sequence is almost overwhelming in its science-fiction-like presentation of a silent eclipsing of mankind in his own environment.
Vitti is the perfect Antonioni actor. She displays just enough emotion to realize the character, but is malleable enough for the director to illustrate his theme through her. Alain Delon never looked more handsome. He conveys the spiritually empty stock broker quite effectively.
Unfortunately, prints of this film are not in the best condition. It is time to restore it, along with "La Notte" to the technical standards they deserve.
30 out of 35 people found the following comment useful :-

Like a personal blend of quasi-bourgeois drama filmed in a meticulous, documentary-implied style, 31 May 2004
Author: Filmjack3 from United States
While The Eclipse is one of the most superbly directed films I may have ever seen, on a first impression it was (obviously) a lot to take in all at once. As with his other films, L'Eclisse isn't for everyone. But Antonioni distinguishes himself here as a great artist of the medium by not only creating the kinds of compositions (lensed by Gianni De Venanzo, who worked with Antonioni on Il Grido and La Notte as well as the WW2 documentary Days of Glory and Fellini's 8 1/2) no one could ever justifiably imitate correctly, but creating a depth to the substance. On one hand one aspect of L'Eclisse that's appealing is how it balances out the style and substance (though the style is arguably the more distinguishable and greater than the two). On the other another aspect is that it could put off viewers not terribly familiar with Antonioni's psychology (which, like Scorsese for example, is at least consistent and engaging with the rest of the director's catalog of work). How intently he gets inside Vittoria's head, and at the same time maintains a detachment despite the varying emotional contexts, is extraordinary, if highly personal.
Like Vittoria, Antonioni does something that's fascinating throughout the film - though one doesn't know what it is exactly that holds Vittoria, and for that matter Piero, in their respective attitudes, one doesn't feel quite left out of anything heart-stopping for the story/character's sake. The film lets us in just enough as to no keep us curious, and it also doesn't keep itself in a depressive tone, as it is realistic to how the people in this city exist. In fact, there's another facet to L'Eclisse which especially worked for me - the poetry that slips itself in small doses amid the visual sweep. Whether it be one of the long takes, an elongated view on a building or street-light, or on Vitty as Vittoria, it's in the observation that subtext forms. This is the kind of motion picture that a shot-by-shot analysis would serve like would a Picasso or Chagal.
And as a plus to the film's success are the actors turns - Monica Vitti is the only actress from that period and country I can think of who could've pulled off what Antonioni wanted in Vittoria. Her face, after being in front of us minute after minute, becomes familiar despite her inner-angst. She knows what Vittoria's fears and loss of vitality means for the story. She's not a person without a laugh or smile ever, yet those emotions arrive only after the known mood is peeled away like a layer of skin. "To love I think one shouldn't know the other," she says, almost arbitrarily. "But then, maybe one shouldn't love at all." Is this Antonioni hitting the hammer on the head, or is it just one of those kinds of comments a woman like her would make? As in L'Avventura, there is the mystery around the female lead. Is love beyond her reach we might wonder, or has the idea of it vanished under false pretense? Alain Deleon also deserves credit for his Piero, as he counters her quiet, more fogged demeanor as a stockbroker in Rome. That under current to the story - the major bustle and noise of the gamblers in the stockbroker's hall - is also part of the contrast, to the stretches with minimal dialog and sound.
The last act, which regards Vittoria's relationship to Piero (a time after he empty break-up with her past lover Rodrigo) culminates in an astonishing feat of storytelling and film-art. As it becomes all the more evident neither one will arrive at a certain (usually) desolate cross-road corner to meet up, the idea of an eclipse over these people and places is hypnotic, unique. For its time it must've been quite a stroke by a director, and forty or so years later the whole sequence leaves its effect in due. Haunting formations beneath and surrounded by the sky and clouds, and it's a bit intellectually loaded. There can be any interpretation for this climax (or as one could claim an anti-climax) that isn't manipulated by Antonioni. The sequence, as with the rest of the film, asks only to see the world based on how one would think it can, or will, be seen. And it fits memorably, like bedroom slippers, into the prime of Antonioni's career as an auteur.
Among the three films in Antonioni's films from this period of his career (1960-1962), this is the one I'd recommend the highest. The Eclipse is also the kind that's nearly mandatory to see more than once if sincerely interested in checking out at all (in other words, don't watch it with pre-conceived notions of this being a dramatic love story with solid conventions to it).
11 out of 11 people found the following comment useful :-
The capital,the eroticism, 5 December 2006
Author: Cristi_Ciopron from CGSM,Soseaua Nationala 49
The Eclipse denotes Michelangelo Antonioni 's flawless taste,and his powerful,virile instinct for strong compositions;this elegant and suave movie is one of the cinema's best pieces of poetry (I must also confess that I prefer this early,younger,"black and white" and peninsular Michelangelo Antonioni;he was 50 years when he made L'ECLISSE).Before he approached the '60s counterculture,Antonioni made a few strong movies not only for the intellectuals but also about intellectuals.
This one is an incredibly rich movie,a movie about many things:about solitude,financial pawns,a woman's indefinite aspirations,the vibrating city beauty,and the heart's resilience,the woman soul's density,the urban aesthetic;and also about:greed,people that search gropingly .Little wheels in the gearing of the stock exchange;the stock exchange's crushing machine.Antonioni is caustic and sober.His theme,the human monad,is inexhaustible.The naturalness,the charm,the intensity,the integrity,the width of this film must be mentioned.Antonioni proved that,for his cinema,experiments are always ways and means,while the most intense poetry is the aim.(Each great director is an experimenter;all great directors are experimenters,only to be better poets.)
Antonioni is one of the three directors who,according to Averty,never made a bad movie (and Antonioni's creation was,for almost two decades, quite abundant;it is only after Blowup (1966) that he went slow,making some seven movies in so many decades).His movies don't have a "sockdolager",that's part of what makes them so good and endearing.Experimenting in countless ways,Antonioni never forgot to be a poet,and never failed.His aesthetic aim has a side of ingenuity and directness that enchants in an unfailing way.
And what is Antonioni's poetry?It is this compact texture,this density of the people and of the life,the striking immediacy.It is amazing also how Antonioni put all of himself in this beautiful movie,The Eclipse.
Like a few others,The Eclipse is one of the movies that give us the taste of what cinema can be.
12 out of 13 people found the following comment useful :-

More than decent conclusion of a great trilogy, 1 March 2006
Author: Alexandar (acanovakovic@gmail.com) from Nis, Serbia
L'Eclisse (1962)***1/2
Third film in Antonioni's trilogy of alienation following L'Avventura (1960) and La Notte (1961) about a young woman (Monica Vitti) and her brief affair with handsome Alain Delon.
Like in his other movies, Antonioni uses specific techniques not to tell the story but rather to express the lack of communication among the characters, their alienation and incapableness to make a strong and meaningful relation. May this be because of their shallow characters or as a result of living in a modern society marked with the superficial values like prestigious and run-for-the-money it's up to the viewer to decide. Anyway, long cadres, real time events, visual metaphors and visual contrasts between the characters on the one side and landscapes and/or modern day creations like buildings, streets (usually empty) on the other is what makes this rather experience than a plot-movie (intentionally) but nevertheless effective in their purpose (which is to express and transmit this same feelings of alienation to the viewer). So, if you're looking for an entertainment, you better skip this one. Final scene is great in concluding the movie. A bit weaker of great L'Avventura.
8 out of 9 people found the following comment useful :-

Superbly crafted modern masterpiece, 8 January 2007
Author: overseer-3 from Florida
L'Eclisse (1962) is a profoundly artistic, wonderfully crafted modern Italian film, in which the audience is permitted to draw their own conclusions about what they are seeing on the screen.
Unlike most directors, who construct their films in very specific, traditional ways to tell stories they wish to convey, in L'Eclisse the director Michelangelo Antonioni paints pictures which mean different things to different people. It's an open-ended story and the audience is allowed and actually encouraged to come up with their own theories about the main plot and sub-plots, the overall themes, and the characters' motivations and personalities. None of them are carved in stone. You yourself can travel to a very special, unique place by watching L'Eclisse, and it can be a very different journey than someone else's.
What do the white lines mean to you? They show up several times in compositional frames in the film: on the street, on the runway when the plane lands, outside a church, and in more abstract ways in signposts, in clothing, in architecture. Is an actual eclipse taking place when darkness descends and the street light suddenly goes on? or has nighttime simply fallen and we're left with a sense of desolation and obliteration of the modern city? has the city been hit by a nuclear bomb? The mushroom water tower: does it just signify the nuclear age, or is it a real omen for the future of mankind? Is it not also a phallic symbol, showcasing the director's idea that the stockbroker character is primarily interested in towering conquests, and that sexuality is an underlying motivation of the main female character's psyche, even though she also seems afraid of intimacy and commitment? The man riding the horse and buggy and the nursemaid pushing the baby buggy: do these things just mark the passage of time? or do they have a deeper meaning that represents the old world, a world that is quickly disappearing from the modern landscape? Is the final scene between the couple the end of their relationship, or are they about to become more serious? Questions like these can be answered in different ways, depending on your own perspective.
This was a novel approach to film-making in 1962, and actually it's also still novel today too! How many films dare to resemble L'Eclisse in the 21st century? Today films are too formulaic and rarely is the same creativity expressed that Michelangelo Antonioni achieved so sublimely in his film. If I was a filmmaker this would be the kind of film I would love to make, full of symbolism and repressed emotions.
The cinematography is exquisite in this film. The new Criterion double disc set did a fantastic job with the print and the extras. My suggestion would be to watch the film without commentary and then immediately afterward watch it again with the commentary on. As he talks you will find yourself noticing things you missed the first time around, and that the commentator is missing too! For instance, notice how in the scene when the ladies are chasing the dogs who have escaped the apartment, that Vittoria approaches two dogs, a white and a black one, and it's the black dog who gets up and dances and charms her, an analogy to the previous scene, in which Vittoria had put on black-face and did an African dance in her racist friend's apartment. The white dog blithely walks away, representing the stifling racist views of her friend Marta, and the black dog shows joy of movement and a fun nature, like Vittoria. The commentator completely misses this message.
Acting is superb by all three leads, Monica Vitti, with her finely chiseled face and wild blonde hair, Alain Delon, who conveys emotions easily with just the flick of an eyebrow, and Francisco Rabal, classically handsome and intense. Also of note is the actress who plays Vittoria's mother, Lila Brignone, who does a good job depicting the emotional distance the character feels from the estranged daughter, which in turn conveys to the audience one of the primary reasons Vittoria is afraid of intimacy: she never had a demonstrative relationship with her mother.
If you're a fan of Italian cinema, don't miss L'Eclisse. It's a special film which will stay with you long after you've seen it.
10 out of 10.
9 out of 11 people found the following comment useful :-

Antonioni's Memorable Journey, A Truly Exceptional Film, 31 July 2005
Author: Hal-900 from WA, USA
Director Antonioni concludes his 1960s trilogy with a bang. I liked "L'Avventura", the first movie in this interesting trilogy, but I thought that movie was not a complete success. "La Notte" (second in the trilogy) was an improvement over the first movie; here Antonioni explores similar themes in a much more engaging manner. It seems that Antonioni wanted to take the formula to an all-time high, and the third film wraps things up in a fascinating and totally captivating manner. The film has no real beginning (the first scenes show a couple at the end of an all-night argument), and the story ends inconclusively. It is a bold approach that adds resonance to the movie as whole. "L'Eclisse" is the film that truly made me appreciate what Antonioni was getting at throughout the course of two productions. "L'Avventura" had struck me as a little too cynical, but now I see how each film is filled with its own dash of humanity. Once again, Monica Vetti is a treasure to behold and I don't think the movie would have worked with a different actress. Francisco Rabal ("Nazarin") and dashing Alain Delon do a good job of not interfering with Vetti's magic act. It is a hauntingly beautiful movie that I have not been able to get out of my head. Highly recommended!
7 out of 8 people found the following comment useful :-

SciFi for the Emotional Life, 29 March 2007
Author: Kara Dahl Russell from United States
Smart and moody, this film is not only about emotional Eclipse, it is about the eclipse of the old society as it changes, and also about how architectural changes eclipse older style, and more importantly, nature. There are really smart and insightful comments here on changing racial attitudes, and the disparities between rich, poor, and the people who don't mind cannibalizing the disenfranchised. All this commentary done with the subtlety of the slowing growing suburbs that our leading lady lives in.
Monica Vitti plays our "everywoman" who is our window into the Director's mind, but also herself a mere dot on the landscape. Early on, we see her throw away exactly what she seems to be looking for, only to pursue it in exactly the wrong place/person.
The film has a look of a sci-fi horror movie, but the horror here is emotional desolation, the destruction of nature/natural-ness, and the looming threat of nuclear war. This film, so cleanly represents the era when "duck and cover" was not only a physical act, it was an emotional state.
If you don't like film as art, you will be completely lost by the architectural city-scape ending montage, and the lack of traditional film closure. This is not a light evening of movie entertainment, but it is film making at it's non-verbal, eloquent best. Captivating, thought provoking, and meaty.
10 out of 14 people found the following comment useful :-

The best Monica Vitti movie, 8 January 2003
Author: vyto34 from United States
Many people feel that Vitti was the most gloriously radiant, magnetically attractive film actress of the 1960s and 70s. This is her best film. It is also one of the two best Antonioni films (along with Blowup), and it is a stunningly inventive film. The last scene alone is totally unparalled in film history. The "African" scene also ranks as one of cinema's most striking moments. Alain Delon is a good pairing for Vitti and he perfectly captures the intended too-self-absorbed, pretty-boy role.
7 out of 9 people found the following comment useful :-

Black and white is full of color, 8 December 2006
Author: kopche (kopche@yahoo.com) from Varna, Bulgaria
L'ECLISSE is not everybody's cup of tea. It is so slow that to continue watching it may sometimes require a conscious strain of will. But it is a rewarding experience: L'ECLISSE is probably the best of all unhurried movies. It is so desperately tender; Alain Delon and Monica Vitti are so young and beautiful, and at the same time - so precise in their naiveté; the camera shots are so long and ambiguous, so empty of words. If there ever was a movie that truthfully represents the playful and sad uncertainty of being in love, then this must be it.
L'ECLISSE is sure to break your heart... or mend it.
The ending is as mysterious as God's ways and if it wasn't for the music to bring me down to earth I may have thought that I had died.
5 out of 6 people found the following comment useful :-

Lack of Communication, Emptiness and Loneliness in the Big City, 1 May 2007
Author: Claudio Carvalho from Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
In the suburb of Rome, the translator Vittoria (Monica Vitti) breaks her engagement with her boyfriend, the writer Ricardo (Francisco Rabal), after a troubled night. Vittoria goes to downtown to meet her mother (Lilla Brignone), who is addicted in Stock Market, and she meets the broker Piero (Alain Delon) in a day of crash in the Stock Market. The materialist Piero and the absent Vittoria begins a monosyllabic relationship.
"L'Eclisse" is a love story in the world of Michelangelo Antoniani, where the lack of communication, emptiness and loneliness in the big city prevails over the human feelings. The first ten or fifteen minutes with Vittoria and Riccardo alone in his apartment, practically without any words (actually very few words are spoken), is amazing, showing a couple whose love and relationship is completely exhausted. The scenes in the Stock Market of Rome are also very impressive. Monica Vitti, the favorite actress of Antonioni, shows a stunning beauty and her alienation of feelings is expressed by her face and few words along the story. My vote is seven.
Title (Brazil): "O Eclipse" ("The Eclipse")
Add another comment
Related Links