| Blowup | |
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| Directed by | Michelangelo Antonioni |
| Produced by | Carlo Ponti Pierre Rouve |
| Written by | Michelangelo Antonioni Tonino Guerra Edward Bond Julio Cortázar (short story) |
| Starring | David Hemmings Vanessa Redgrave Sarah Miles |
| Music by | Herbie Hancock and the Yardbirds |
| Cinematography | Carlo Di Palma |
| Editing by | Frank Clarke |
| Distributed by | MGM (UK) Premier Pictures (USA) |
| Release date(s) | December 18, 1966 (US) January 1967 (UK) |
| Running time | 110 minutes |
| Country | United Kingdom / Italy / United States |
| Language | English |
| Budget | US$ 1.8 million |
| Gross revenue | US$ 20 million |
Blowup is a 1966 British-Italian film directed by Michelangelo Antonioni, his first English-language film. It tells of a photographer's accidental involvement with a murder, inspired by the 1959 short story, "Las babas del diablo", ("The devil's drool/drivel") by Julio Cortázar,[1] and by Swinging London photographer David Bailey. The film was scored by jazz pianist Herbie Hancock, although the music is source music, as Hancock noted: "It's only there when someone turns on the radio or puts on a record."[2] Nominated for several awards at the Cannes Film Festival, Blowup won the Grand Prix.
Blowup stars David Hemmings, Vanessa Redgrave, Sarah Miles, John Castle, Jane Birkin, Tsai Chin and Gillian Hills. The 1960s model Veruschka has a scene considered by Premiere Magazine as "the sexiest cinematic moment in history". The screenplay was written by Antonioni and Tonino Guerra, with English dialogue by British playwright Edward Bond. The film was produced by Carlo Ponti, who had contracted Antonioni to make three English-language films for MGM. (The others were Zabriskie Point and The Passenger.)
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The plot is a day in the life of Thomas (Hemmings), a fashion photographer. It begins after spending the night at a doss house where he has taken pictures for a book of art photos. He is late for a photo shoot with Veruschka at his studio, which in turn makes him late for a shoot with other models later in the morning. He grows bored and walks off, leaving the models and production staff in the lurch. As he leaves the studio, two teenage girls, aspiring models (Jane Birkin and Gillian Hills), ask to speak with him, but Thomas drives off to look at an antiques shop. Wandering into Maryon Park, he takes photos of two lovers. The woman (Redgrave) is nettled at being photographed, and Thomas is startled when she stalks him back to his studio, asking for the film. This makes him want the film even more, so he hands her another roll instead. His many blowups (enlargements) of the black and white film have rough film grain but seem to show a body in the grass and a killer lurking in the trees with a gun. Thomas is frightened by a knock on the door, but it is the two girls again, with whom he has a romp in his studio and falls asleep. Awakening, he finds they hope he will photograph them but he tells the girls to leave, saying, "Tomorrow! Come back tomorrow!"
As evening falls, Thomas goes back to the park and finds a body, but he has not brought his camera and is scared off by a twig breaking, as if being stepped on. Thomas returns to his studio to find that all the negatives and prints are gone except for one very grainy blowup showing the body. At a drug-drenched party in a house on the Thames near central London, he finds both Veruschka (who tells him she is in Paris) and his agent (Peter Bowles), whom he wants to bring to the park as a witness. However, Thomas cannot put across rds what he has photographed. Waking up in the house at sunrise, he goes back to the park alone, but the body is gone.
Befuddled, he watches a mimed tennis match, is drawn into it, picks up the imaginary ball and throws it back to the two players. While he watches the mime, the sound of the ball being played is heard. As the photographer watches this alone on the lawn he walks into the distance, leaving only the grass as the film ends.
Sundry people known in 1966 are in the film; others became famous later. The most widely noted cameo was by the The Yardbirds, who perform "Stroll On" in the last third. Antonioni first asked Eric Burdon to play that scene but he turned it down. As Keith Relf sings, Jimmy Page and Jeff Beck play to either side, along with Chris Dreja. After his guitar amplifier fails, Beck bashes his guitar to bits, as The Who did at the time. Antonioni had wanted the Who in Blowup as he was fascinated by Pete Townshend's guitar-smashing routine.[3] Steve Howe of the The In Crowd recalled, "We went on the set and started preparing for that guitar-smashing scene in the club. They even went as far as making up a bunch of Gibson 175 replicas ... and then we got dropped for the Yardbirds, who were a bigger name. That's why you see Jeff Beck smashing my guitar rather than his!"[4] Antonioni also considered using The Velvet Underground in the nightclub scene, but according to guitarist Sterling Morrison, "the expense of bringing the whole entourage to England proved too much for him."[5]
Michael Palin of Monty Python can be seen briefly in the sullen nightclub crowd[6] and Janet Street-Porter dances in stripy Carnaby Street trousers.
A poster on the club's door bears a drawing of a tombstone with the epitaph, Here lies Bob Dylan Passed Away Royal Albert Hall 27 May 1966 R.I.P., harking to Dylan's switch to electric instruments at this time. Beside the Dylan are posters bearing a caricature of Prime Minister Harold Wilson.
The opening mimes were filmed on the Plaza of The Economist Building in Piccadilly, London[7], a project by 'New Brutalists' Alison and Peter Smithson constructed between 1959–64. The scene in which men leave The Spike was shot on Consort Road, Peckham.[8] The park scenes were at Maryon Park, Charlton, south-east London, and the park is little changed since the film.[9] The street with maroon shopfronts is Stockwell Road[10] and the shops belonged to motorcycle dealer Pride & Clark. The scene in which Thomas sees the mysterious woman from his car and follows her was in Regent Street, London. He stops at Heddon Street[11] where the album cover of David Bowie's Ziggy Stardust was later photographed.[12] Outside shots of Thomas's studio were at 77 Pottery Lane, W11, and 49 Princes Place, W11, while inside filming of the studio was mostly at in Notting Hill, west London.[13]
Distributed in North America by Premier Pictures, Blowup grossed "$20 million (about $120 million today) on a $1.8 million budget and helped liberate Hollywood from its puritanical prurience".[14]
Andrew Sarris said the movie was "a mod masterpiece". In Playboy Magazine, Arthur Knight wrote that Blowup would be "as important and germinal a film as Citizen Kane, Open City and Hiroshima, Mon Amour – perhaps even more so".[6]
Time magazine called the film a "far-out, uptight and vibrantly exciting picture" that represented a "screeching change of creative direction" for Antonioni; the magazine predicted it would "undoubtedly be by far the most popular movie Antonioni has ever made".[15]
Bosley Crowther of The New York Times called it a "fascinating picture, which has something real to say about the matter of personal involvement and emotional commitment in a jazzed-up, media-hooked-in world so cluttered with synthetic stimulations that natural feelings are overwhelmed".[16] Crowther had reservations, describing the "usual Antonioni passages of seemingly endless wanderings" as "redundant and long"; nevertheless, he called Blow-Up a "stunning picture— beautifully built up with glowing images and color compositions that get us into the feelings of our man and into the characteristics of the mod world in which he dwells". Even film director Ingmar Bergman, who generally disliked Antonioni, acknowledged its significance: "He's done two masterpieces, you don't have to bother with the rest. One is Blow-Up, which I've seen many times, and the other is La Notte, also a wonderful film, although that's mostly because of the young Jeanne Moreau."[17]
Blowup was controversial as the first British film to feature full frontal female nudity.[citation needed] MGM did not gain approval for the film under the MPAA Production Code in the United States.[16] The code's collapse and revision was foreshadowed when MGM released the film through a subsidiary distributor and Blowup was shown widely in North American cinemas.
Brian De Palma's Blow Out (1981), starring John Travolta, which alludes to Blowup, used sound recording rather than photography as its motif. While writing the screenplay of The Conversation, Francis Ford Coppola explained in the DVD commentary to his 1974 film, also about sound recording, that he was inspired by Blow Up. In Mel Brooks's High Anxiety, a minor plot line involves a bumbling chauffeur who takes a picture showing the evil assassin (wearing a latex mask of Brooks's character's face) firing a gun at point-blank range at someone; he makes blow-ups until he can see the real Brooks's character, standing in the elevator in the background. (Technically, the chauffeur does not make blow-ups; the joke is that he simply makes bigger and bigger enlargements until he has one the size of a wall.) The feature I Could Never Be Your Woman pays homage to the iconic scene from Blowup in which David Hemmings's character straddles model Verushka from above while taking her photo, this time with Paul Rudd and Michelle Pfeiffer. Antonioni's film also inspired the Bollywood feature Jaane Bhi Do Yaaron by Naseeruddin Shah, in which two photographers inadvertently capture the murder of a city mayor on their cameras and later discover this when the images are enlarged. The park in which the murder occurs is named "Antonioni Park".[20]
In the last episode of the third series of the BBC program, Monarch of the Glen, Molly MacDonald (Susan Hampshire) clarifies for husband, Hector (Richard Briers), that it was Antonioni who wanted her for Blowup when she was a London model in the 1960s. The music video for Amerie's "Take Control" from the album Because I Love It (2007) was influenced by the film.
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| Blowup | |
|---|---|
| Directed by | Michelangelo Antonioni |
| Produced by | Carlo Ponti |
| Written by | Michelangelo Antonioni Toni Guerra Edward Bond |
| Distributed by | Premiere Productions |
| Running time | 119 |
| Country | England Italy |
| Language | English |
| Budget | $1,800,000 (estimated) |
| IMDb profile | |
Blowup is a 1966 English-Italian drama movie. The movie was nominated for two Academy Award and won a Grand Prix award. It is directed by Italian movie director Michelangelo Antonioni and written by Antonioni, Toni Guerra and Edward Bond. It starred David Hemmings and Vanessa Redgrave. Carlo Ponti produced the movie. This was Antonioni's first English language movie.
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