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L'Eclisse - Criterion Collection dvd movie.
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L'Eclisse - Criterion Collection
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Features
 Black & White
 Closed-captioned
 DVD-Video
 Special Edition
 Subtitled
 Widescreen
 NTSC

In Theaters : 20 December, 1962
DVD Release : 15 March, 2005
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L'Eclisse - Criterion Collection description
Michelangelo Antonioni's L'Eclisse rolls over you and wraps you in its stylish embrace. The plot, such as it is, follows Vittoria (luscious Monica Vitti, The Red Desert) as her engagement falls apart and she slowly falls into a giddy but anxious affair with Piero (Alain Delon, Le Samourai, Purple Noon), a trader in Rome's stock exchange. Like Ingmar Bergman (Scenes from a Marriage, Persona), Antonioni examines the nuances of human relationships--but where Bergman is dense and dialogue-driven, Antonioni is spare and visual (there's maybe a page of dialogue in the first fifteen minutes of L'Eclisse). Every frame is like an exquisite black and white photograph, yet there's nothing static about this movie. It's fluid, sleek, and graceful, achieving its own kind of visual music. L'Eclisse contrasts opposing elements: Light and shadow, noise and silence, laughter and death, love and money, desire and dissatisfaction. Critics often describe the movie as a portrait of modern alienation, but they focus too much on Vittoria herself; while she finds her own life wanting, all around her Antonioni's camera captures a much larger world, full of as much vitality as despair, as much hope as loss. This is a movie essential to anyone's understanding of what movies can be. --Bret Fetzer
L'Eclisse - Criterion Collection Customer Reviews
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♥♥♥♥♥ The film genius of Michelangelo Antonioni: L'eclisse.
L'eclisse (The Eclipse) (1962) is the conclusion of Michelangelo Antonioni's trilogy on malaise and the alienation of man in the modern world. It follows [[ASIN:B00005BHW6 L'Avventura]] (1960) and [[ASIN:B00005AA9S La Notte]] (1961), and tells the story of a young woman, Vittoria (Monica Vitti) who leaves one lover (Francisco Rabal) only to drift into another relationship with a young, materialistic, cocky, stockbroker, Piero (Alain Delon). Their doomed affair is set against the architecture of Rome, and amidst the crowded and chaotic Rome Stock Market. In the end, Vittoria rejects a marriage proposal and chooses to be alone in an uncertain world instead. The point seems to be, if we can't escape from ourselves, how can we ever really be with anyone else. The film explores characteristic Antonioni themes: loneliness, alienation, living in a cold, materialistic world and the inability to communicate.

The Criterion edition of this film features newly a restored high-definition digital transfer, audio commentary by Richard PeA a, program director of the Film Society of Lincoln Center, in New York, "Michelangelo Antonioni: The Eye That Changed Cinema," a 56-minute documentary exploring the director's life and career, "Elements of Landscape," a new, 22-minute video piece about Antonioni and L'eclisse, featuring Italian film critic Adriano AprA and longtime Antonioni friend Carlo di Carlo, new and improved English subtitle translation, and a 32-page booklet featuring new essays by film critics Jonathan Rosenbaum and Gilberto Perez, along with reprinted excerpts from Antonioni's own writings about his work. Highly recommended.
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